All aspects of orchestral music
making – performers, conductors, composers, and instrument makers – have
resisted women’s involvement. Until the 20th century.
The place of women in music and instrument-making
history follows a familiar path. The fairer sex has always been there, playing
instruments, singing in the higher octaves that few men can achieve, composing,
and making the instruments. But of course, they were relegated to subservient
roles, hidden from the mainstream and sometimes heard but not seen.
Fortunately, that’s all changed in the 20th
and 21st centuries. But they had to come a long way, baby.
Women in music: Talented, but largely hidden
With the exception of a female religious music
composer in 12th century Europe (Hildegard of Bingen), women prior
to the 20th century at best were instrumentalists who played for
chambers, not large groups. It was part of being an upper-class woman to learn
the violin, piano, guitar, or harp, or to develop vocal skills. The church,
however, condemned large public performances by women. And where performance on
a small scale was permissible, more complex matters of composition,
counterpoint, and orchestration were denied them in their formal music education.
Thomas Jefferson’s wife, Martha Jefferson,
was a musician but it wasn’t until 1913 that the first major orchestra (Queen’s
Hall in London) hired women musicians. The Philadelphia Orchestra in 1930 was
the first American organization to hire a woman, harpist Edna Phillips.
But one 17th century composer
was a woman, Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre, who hailed from a French family of
harpsichord makers, musicians, composers, and makers of other instruments. Her
father did not deny his daughters a musical education alongside his sons. She
eventually composed and performed for the court of Louis XIV.
Enter the contemporary female bowmakers
A familial relationship with music and
specific segments of music making holds an advantage today for one stringed
instrument bowmaker, Joséphine Thomachot. She is the daughter of Stephane
Thomachot, himself a master of the French method of bow making. Based in Paris,
Joséphine abandoned a career in geologic engineering to follow in her father’s
profession – but she also trained with David Hawthorne (in Boston) and Arthur
Dubroca, Alexandre Aumont, and Emmanuel Carlier (Paris), and Noel Burke
(Ireland). She was awarded a certificate of merit for her workmanship for a
viola bow from the Violin Society of America in 2016.
Another contemporary bowmaker, Peg Joanne
Baumgartel, an American with a long list of accomplishments and awards, might
be associated with her husband (Morgan Andersen), a bowmaker who is also
internationally recognized. But Baumgartel got there on her own, initially
training under Paul Siefried in Los Angeles before establishing her own
bowmaking workshop as a maker and restorer. She participates in the Oberlin Bow
Making Workshops, has written technical articles for professional publications,
and has been the subject of articles in Smithsonian
and Ladies Home Journal magazines.
The connection that yet another notable
female bowmaker, Elizabeth Vander Veer Shaak, is not familial yet familiar: As
did Joséphine Thomachot, she studied under Stephane Thomachot in Paris, among
other fine bowmakers and restorers in multiple cities. One unnamed bowmaker in
Paris told her, “Ah, but women should not be bowmakers. They should be
restorers because they have an eye to detail.” She moved on because she thought
making bows would make her better at restoring, if that was to be her path –
and she was correct.
Vander Veer Shaak thinks beyond her
workbench in Philadelphia. She is an advocate for planning the endangered
pernambuco wood in Brazil, the preferred material of fine
stringed instrument bows. She has her own stockpile of the precious wood
purchased decades ago, but it’s clear this female bowmaker is looking out for
future generations of bowmakers, regardless of their gender.
These three talented women have broken
through the proverbial pernambuco ceiling to be recognized for their superior
craftsmanship and creative vision. Their work can be found featured in catalogs
of fine
violin bows for sale offered by violin shops that deal in fine bows for
violas and cellos as well.
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