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Storied Strings: The Art of Violin Collecting (00:29:41) 35 views
From Andrea Amati to Antonio Stradivari (00:22:25) 20 views
Made in Cremona: Twenty-First-Century Violin-Making Traditions (00:19:47) 5 views
Performance by Dan Zhu (00:19:42) 8 views
Cor Omnitonique
Tenor (Alto) Ophicleide in E-flat
Fanfare Trumpet
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This artwork is currently on display in Gallery 684
This clarinet in B-flat is marked C. Sax for Charles Joseph Sax (1791–1865) whose son Adolphe invented the saxophone. The quality and form of musical instruments is largely determined by the materials chosen for their construction. Elephant-tusk ivory, a particularly adaptable but exotic material, has long been employed in fashioning instruments of great value.
Marking: Marked: C. Sax, Facteur de Roi, à Bruxelles and bearing the Prince of Orange's motto and arms.
Libin Laurence. "Musical Instruments in The Metropolitan Museum." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin (1978), Vol. XXXV, No. 3, pg. 39, ill.Winternitz Emanuel. Musical Instruments of the Western World. McGraw Hill Book Company. New York, Toronto, 1967, pg. 240-241, fig. 96, ill.
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