sábado, 7 de febrero de 2015

The Collection Online, Archtop Guitar ,James D'Aquisto (American, New York 1935–1995 Corona, California)

http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/506807

Archtop Guitar

Archtop Guitar

Maker: James D'Aquisto (American, New York 1935–1995 Corona, California)
Date: 1993
Geography: Greenport, New York, United States
Medium: Spruce, maple, ebony
Dimensions: W. 17 in.
Classification: Chordophone-Lute-plucked-fretted
Credit Line: Gift of Steve Miller, 2012
Accession Number: 2012.246

Recent Acquisition: PRS GuitarJayson Dobney, Associate Curator and Administrator, Department of Musical Instruments

Jayson Dobney, Associate Curator and Administrator, Department of Musical Instruments
Posted: Monday, January 13, 2014
Electric guitar
Electric Guitar. PRS Guitars (American). Stevensville, Maryland, United States. 2013. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of Warren and Kateryna Esanu, 2013 (2013.974)
I first met the guitar manufacturer Paul Reed Smith at a NAMM (National Association of Music Merchants) convention in Anaheim, California, several years ago. I had the opportunity to visit with him about his guitars and the company he founded. He began building electric guitars in the 1970s, when he was in college, and showed his instruments to many of the top guitarists of the day, who appreciated his work. In 1985, he founded PRS guitars, and has gone on to have a major influence in the music world.
Electric guitar
The Museum was recently able to accept into its collection of musical instruments a custom-made electric guitar made by PRS Guitars. Like all of PRS guitars, it is made of beautiful wood, in this case a curly red maple top with an African ribbon mahogany back. It is also decorated with beautiful inlaid birds, made of mammoth ivory, for fret markers; and the entire body has paua heart abalone purfling. The instrument has an attractive gold finish, which Paul calls a "Light Tiger Eye Micro Burst" finish.
In the last few decades of the twentieth century, Paul Reed Smith was introducing new models, aesthetic designs, and finishes to electric guitars, even as other large manufacturers such as Gibson and Fender were still building guitars on their traditional—and famed—models dating to the middle of the twentieth century. PRS was pushing forward, and has found success through continuing to introduce new electric guitars for contemporary players of all genres.
The custom electric guitar was given to the Museum by Warren and Kateryna Esanu, supporters of the Museum and friends of Paul Reed Smith. To celebrate the gift, the legendary guitarist John McLaughlin played a short demonstration of the guitar in the Temple of Dendur, accompanied by Gary Husband on the piano. We are extremely pleased to be able to welcome this guitar into the collection.
John McLaughlin demonstrates a custom-made electric guitar by PRS Guitars. Accompanied by Gary Husband.
Department(s): Musical Instruments
FUENTE: http://www.metmuseum.org/about-the-museum/museum-departments/curatorial-departments/musical-instruments/of-note/2014/prs-guitar

Early American Guitars The Instruments of C. F. Martin

Early American Guitars: The Instruments of C. F. Martin

The exhibition is made possible by The Martin Guitar Company.

Early American Guitars

The Instruments of C. F. Martin

January 14–December 7, 2014

Purchase advance tickets to avoid waiting in admission lines. Exhibitions are free with Museum admission.

Christian Frederick Martin, founder of the great American guitar firm C. F. Martin & Co., was the son of a cabinetmaker in Markneukirchen, Saxony. Martin learned to build instruments from the famed Johann Georg Stauffer in Vienna. Due to the restrictive guilds in Markneukirchen, Martin moved to the United States in 1833, settling first in New York City and later moving to Nazareth, Pennsylvania. In the United States, Martin encountered the Spanish-style guitar and incorporated elements from that tradition into his own Viennese style of instrument construction. The result was a new form of the guitar, a style that would become important as a basis for other American makers of the instrument. This exhibition includes approximately thirty-five instruments from the Martin Museum in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and several private collections.
Read related blog posts on Of Note, the Musical Instruments Department's blog.
FUENTE:http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2014/early-guitars

Archtop Guitar John D'Angelico

http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/506815

Archtop Guitar

Maker: John D'Angelico (American, New York 1905–1964 New York)
Date: 1932
Geography: New York, NY, United States
Medium: Spruce, maple, ebony, steel, celluloid, mother-of-pearl
Dimensions: Overall: 41.8 x 14.3 x 106.7 cm (16 7/16 x 5 5/8 x 42 in.)
Classification: Chordophone-Lute-plucked-fretted
Credit Line: Gift of John and Christina Monteleone, 2012
Accession Number: 2012.480