Violin

Joachim Tielke German

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 684

Italy was not the only country that produced fine violins. Germany was the home of many fine makers, including Joachim Tielke of Hamburg. The workshop of Joachim Tielke produced a great variety of instruments (many were richly decorated with ivory, ebony, and tortoiseshell), including lutes, guitars, citterns, and violins. His violins typically have very delicate edgework and corners, pegboxes terminating in human or animal heads, and often bird's eye figured maple backs and sides. This violin retains its original neck, though it has been angled back and reshaped in conformance with modern playing requirements. The back and sides are of bird's-eye maple.

Description: Spruce top of medium grain, one-piece slab-cut back of birdseye maple, matching ribs, pegbox pierced and carved at rear with floral pattern, sides of pegbox and heel of neck carved with foliage on stippled ground, pegbox surmounted by female head, neck original but re-angled, ribs reduced in height, modern fingerboard and fittings and golden-brown varnish, stamped under top "W.E. Hill"

#Jorg Michael Schwarz. A prelude from Nicolini Cosma's "Select Preludes & Vollentarys for the Violin". Recorded February 2010

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    Playlist

  1. Jorg Michael Schwarz. A prelude from Nicolini Cosma's "Select Preludes & Vollentarys for the Violin". Recorded February 2010
  2. Allegro from Sonata No. 2 in a minor by J. S. Bach, performed by Sean Avram Carpenter, 2012.
Violin, Joachim Tielke (German, 1641–1719), Spruce, maple, German

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