New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art has several Strads
that are played occasionally. But should rare instruments be mostly seen and rarely
heard?
The stringed instruments made by the famed
Cremonese luthier, Antonio Stradivari, have household name recognition, beyond
the sphere of classical music fans and musicians. “Perhaps it’s a
Stradivarius?,” is the question almost anyone will ask when they come upon a
violin in grandmother’s attic.
Such finds are unlikely – of the
approximately 1,100 violins, violas, cellos, harps, and guitars made by
Stradivari, about 650 survived time, accidents, world wars and the French
Revolution. In fact, those that are true Strads are among the most highly
prized musical instruments in the world. Five Stradivarius instruments (the
MacDonald viola, DuPort cello, Lady Blunt violin, Hammer violin, and the Lady
of Tennant violin) rank in the top ten most valuable instruments of all kinds,
globally.
So when museums such as the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York (“The Met”) acquire a Stradivarius and other rare
instruments (they have 5,085 in their collection), it’s a pretty big deal. Many
are donated, of course. Some are purchased at auction. Instruments made by
Amati, Stradivari and Guarneri, to name a few, are extremely unlikely to end up
in a local violin shop’s catalog
of fine
Italian violins for sale.
The four Strads currently in the collection, owned or on loan, are:
The Antonius
violin (1711)
The Francesca
violin (1694)
The Gould violin
(1693)
The
Batta-Piatigorsky Violoncello (1714)
But a perennial question regarding these
instruments is, should rare musical instruments be objects to observe or be
heard? What is the function of instruments in museums?
WQXR radio (105.9 FM in New York City), a
classical music station, considered this question about a decade ago (2011) with
regard to the instrument then in the possession of The Met. The story notes
that the instruments are rarely played – typically, three times a year – and
that instruments that go untouched have diminishing quality when they aren’t
used, similar to the atrophy of human bodies that are sedentary. “The more
instruments are played and the more their molecular structure is resonating,
the better they sound,” the Julliard School curator of string instruments,
violinist Eric Grossman, told WQXR.
But The Met curator of musical instruments,
Ken Moore, sees the role of the museum is to preserve instruments that show how
the instruments were originally constructed. He believes such evidence informs
preservation and future violinmaking. He also notes the occasional playing revives
the instrument, describing it as being akin to waking from a period of sleep.
To this discussion it’s important to know
that even the preserved versions of these instruments aren’t always what left
Stradivarius’ shop 300-odd years ago. The Francesca violin, for example had its
fingerboard lengthened, which extended its upper range. It’s had a chin rest
added, wire strings replaced gut strings, and the sound post and bass bar were
replaced with larger versions thereof, the better to project a stronger sound in
larger concert halls. The Gould had undergone some changes as well, but was
subsequently restored to the original, Baroque configuration as a means to return
to the maker’s intent and the (smaller) concert venues of that time.
So when someone visits a Strad at The Met,
the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, the US Library of
Congress, the Canada Council for the Arts, the Chimei Museum (China), the
Nippon Music Foundation (Japan), or the Musée de la Musique (France), it’s
useful to understand the interplay between preservation and playing. As well as
what the cello virtuoso Mstislav Rostropovich’s secretary told The Met when
declining their invitation to visit and play the “Servais” Strad, then in the
institution’s possession: “Maestro Rostropovich does not believe in the
incarceration of musical instruments.”
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