Pochette bow
ALTERNATE NAME(S)
- Kit bow
- Dancing master's fiddle bow
Date1750-1800 ca.
Place MadeFrance, Europe
Serial No.None
SignednoneDescriptionThis elegant pochette bow preserves its original curved tip and recurved stick.
Stick: round; pernambuco or other dark tropical hardwood; uneven faceting at handle
Head: swan tip; extension on back of head; rounded outline to front and back edge
Frog: dark fruitwood; no slide; iron eyelet
Adjuster: bone; decoratively turned outline
Tip plate: none
DimensionsStick length: 526 mm
Head height: 18.5 mm
Head width (bottom): 8.8 mm
Stick width near tip: 5.5 mm (top to bottom); 5.4 mm (side to side)
Stick width near middle: 6.8 mm (top to bottom); 6.8 mm (side to side)
Stick width at end of handle: 7.9 mm (top to bottom); 8.0 mm (side to side)
Frog height: 22.1 mm (front); 18.1 mm (back)
Frog length (top): 40.9 mm
Frog length (bottom): 47.3 mm
Frog width (top): 8.5 mm (front); 8.4 mm (back)
Frog width (bottom): 10.1 mm (front); 9.5 mm (back)
Weight: 30.6 grams
ProvenancePurchased in 1989 from Wurlitzer-Bruck, New York, New York. Previously owned by Baron Armand van Zuylen, Liege, Belgium.
Published ReferencesImportant Musical Instruments Including the Van Zuylen Collection of Early Instruments (London: Christie, Manson & Woods, March 16, 1988), lot 191, p. 43.
"1989 Acquisitions at USD Music Museum," Newsletter of the American Musical Instrument Society 19, No. 1 (February 1990), p. 16.
"It's Been an Incredible Decade . . . Museum Makes Important Acquisitions Again in 1989," Shrine to Music Museum Newsletter 17, No. 2 (January 1990), p. 7.
André P. Larson, Amadeus: His Music and the Instruments of Eighteenth-century Vienna, exhibition catalog, Dahl Fine Arts Center, Rapid City, South Dakota, February 4-March 2, 1990 (Vermillion: National Music Museum, 1990), p. 8.
Paul R. Laird, "That Gut Feeling: The World of Early Strings—The Shrine to Music Museum," Continuo (June 1996), p. 16.
Credit LineArne B. and Jeanne F. Larson Fund, 1989
Object number04652
On View
Not on view1760 ca.
1650-1700 ca.