The numbers of men who have carved at Ser Jacopo since the company's
inception in 1982 are legion, and their names could form a virtual
"Who's Who" of the Pesaro Italian pipe world. The Rinaldo brothers,
Bruto Sordini, Massimo Palazzi, Maurizio Tombari, Franco Rossi, and
Gianni Imperatori would be fine examples of the talent that has
crafted Ser Jacopo pipes. But the heart of the operation has always
centered around one man, a man credited with starting a neo-classical
shaping revolution that would rival the Danish movement of earlier
decades. That man, of course, is Giancarlo Guidi, and his school
bears the name of his home: Pesaro.
Maestro Guidi was born in 1944, and studied design at the notable
Mengaroni School of Art in Pesaro. Though Giancarlo started his "hands
on" art working with enamels and ceramics, he found himself quickly
drawn to briar as a medium of expression, and 1970 found him working
for Moretti and Raganella. Giancarlo proved himself to be a prodigy,
learning and then mastering the workaday "nuts and bolts" aspects of
pipe crafting in short order. Once the basics were in place, his
designer's mind started to ask questions. "If striking grain enhances
any shape, why do we carve pipes ignoring that aspect, just letting
the grain of a given pipe fall where it may?" The artist with
Giancarlo could not help but look at standard shapes, and imagine the
other possibilities that could be coaxed out of the classics.
Giancarlo came to one inescapable conclusion. His questions could not
be answered, nor would his visions become reality within a highly
mechanized environment. His present employer was geared toward machine
shaping and high production. Giancarlo's pipes would require hand
shaping, greater time analyzing a block of briar, and the freedom to
experiment with neo-classical takes on standard shapes. In short, he
needed his own place and in 1972, Giancarlo co-founded the
tremendously successful Mastro de Paja firm.
Over the next nine years Giancarlo's neo-classical shaping took wing.
Almost every conceivable English standard shape found a new, eloquent
voice or, in many cases, voices. An example that readily comes into
mind would be that of a rhodesian. By varying bowl to shank ratios,
placement of the shape's signature beading, the height of the bowl, or
length of the bit, one can see a myriad of differing possibilities,
each readily identifiable as a "rhodesian", and yet each displaying
markedly different character than the English shape of old. In 1981,
Guidi was ready for a new pipe venture and, along with master carver
Bruto Sordini, broke from Mastro de Paja and founded his own pipe
company in the very workshop where Mastro de Paja had stood: Ser
Jacopo.
The new company was named after a Renaissance nobleman and, while
maintaining a shaping that was solidly grounded within the now
established Pesaro aesthetic, a new emphasis was placed on the pairing
of briar with a dizzying array of stylized mounts. At the time of this
writing, no less than fourteen different mounts and bands are
available to any given pipe, and the materials used can range from ox
horn to amboyna burl, and that is confined to strictly the standard
series. Ser Jacopo also further differentiated itself from its
predecessor of "series" or "themed" pipes.
To digress a bit, the idea of doing a series of pipes, or pipes with a
group theme was nothing new. Indeed, companies such as Dunhill and
Peterson, have created, and continue to create, many a successful
series. Often, these pipes would center on an event, a rare material
or an historical figure. Perplexing to many, these series seemed to
assign shapes in random, arbitrary manners. Why is the Lestrade that
shape? Did Shackleton smoke a quarter bent billiard, with a
compositionally dominating bowl? If not, why was that pipe assigned to
the man? The brilliance of Giancarlo's idea lay within the fact that
he would not base a series on say, "Heroes of the Ukrainian Famine".
No, his editions would be formed upon the actual pipes that he could
see in the hands of men, or depictions that could be clearly
associated with an individual. They would be homage to the very briars
that he saw smoked by the mariners and fisherman that he met on the
docks of Pesaro. They would be based on pipes that appeared in the
paintings of artists such as Van Gough, Magritte and Picasso. Some of
his pipes would be even be inspired by the smoking instruments of
Native Americans. These ground breaking departure were as appealing as
they were radical, and the La Pipaccia, Picta, and Calumet series,
respectively, met with great success. Indeed The Picta collections are
held in universal acclaim.
Today, Ser Jacopo is a thriving company that employs five full time
carvers, and produces roughly 6,000 pipes a year, These pipes range
from the Geppetto (and sold under that brand name) to the Ser Jacopo
"Gem" series, ultra rare high grades that have fetched up to $12,000.
The pipe world owes a debt of gratitude, both to the 26 year old
visionary with a revolutionary idea in 1971, and the 64 year old
Giancarlo who continues his stewardship today. Thomas Jefferson once
observed, in a letter to William Stephens Smith, that "A little
revolution now and then is a good thing". I think Giancarlo Guidi
might agree.
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