Max Möller (luthier)


Guillaume Max Möller was a Dutch master luthier from Amsterdam who authored a seminal reference book, The violin-makers of the Low Countries '' Möller also provided the illustrations.

Career highlights

Möller was mentored as a luthier by his father, Paul Max Möller. He also trained at Staatliche Berufsfachschule für Musikinstrumentenbau Mittenwald. Möller was employed by Amédée-Dominique Dieudonné and Charles Enel. He moved to New York 1935 to work with Simone Sacconi in the workshop of Emil Herrmann. Upon the death of his father in 1948, Möller returned to Amsterdam to head his father’s studio, where he worked with continuing craftsmen Karl Rutz, Jan Santmann, and later Hartmut Leonhardt until Möller's retirement 1980. His son, Berend Max Möller, succeeded him at the violin studio until he had been fatally shot in 1989 during a home burglary. Berend's wife, Cornélie, ran the shop until 2006. Luthier Andreas Post, a master violin maker who had trained in Mittenwald and worked for Möller, moved his shop into the same location at :nl:Willemsparkweg in 2008.
Möller won the Coupe du Gouvernment de Liège for a quartet in 1954, and a frequent member of competition juries himself. In addition to writing his seminal book, The Violin-Makers of the Low Countries in 1955, he co-founded of the Entente des Maîtres Luthiers et Archetiers d’Art and the Netherlands.

Selected works