EVENT DETAILS
Talk
11 May 2022, 11:00 - 12:30, 15:00 - 16:30VENUE INFORMATION
Royal Academy of Music
Marylebone Road
NW1 5HT
From Cremona to London
BOOKING INFORMATION
FREE
Royal Academy of Music curator of instruments Barbara Meyer and luthiers present violin making inspired by the famous Cremonese classical instrument-making community, 1550–1750. A demonstration compares the Academy’s collection of modern and period instruments. A tour of the strings gallery follows.
Tickets booked through LCW website
About
Royal Academy of Music curator of instruments Barbara Meyer and the workshop team present a workshop demonstration that introduces the fascinating history of stringed instrument making.
The event focuses on the violin and the famous classical instrument-making community in Cremona, Italy between 1550 and 1750. During this period, a handful of highly-skilled Cremonese families, among them the Amatis, Guarneris, Rugeris and Stradivaris, created an array of bowed string instruments. Their methods and understanding of proportions and materials have set the precedent for all subsequent instrument makers, up to and including the current generation of luthiers.
With the help of images, wood examples and a small selection of tools, visitors gain an insight into the tradition. The illustrated 30-minute talk about the history of violin making is accompanied by a demonstration from an Academy student playing a few modern and period instruments from the Academy Museum collection.
The talk is followed by a tour of the strings floor at the Academy, which houses their luthier workshop.
