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美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国纽约大都会艺术博物馆展品查阅
美国大都会艺术博物馆中的24万件展品,图片展示以及中文和英文双语介绍(中文翻译仅供参考)
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品名(中)室内器官
品名(英)Chamber Organ
入馆年号1974年,1974.193
策展部门乐器Musical Instruments
创作者William Crowell【1830 至 1852】【美国人】
创作年份公元 1852
创作地区美国(United States)
分类航空电话风琴(Aerophone-Organ)
尺寸高: 207 厘米 (81-1/2 英寸); 深: 71.5 厘米 (28-5/8 英寸); 宽: 136.5 厘米 (53-3/4 英寸)
介绍(中)腔室风琴是一种中等大小的管道管风琴。它通常只有一本手册,有限的停止次数,以及有限的踏板或根本没有踏板。它通常用于小教堂、家庭或其他私密房间。由于它能够长时间持续音色,因此有时比大键琴作为室内合奏中的连续乐器更可取。

这种乐器也可能用于小教堂,就像十九世纪在美国各地的小城镇和村庄中发现的教堂一样。本世纪中叶以后,室内管风琴在很大程度上被簧管风琴篡夺。

这个室内管风琴的建造者威廉·克罗威尔和他的兄弟塞缪尔是新罕布什尔州蒙特弗农的一个由大约六名管风琴制造商组成的小社区的成员,他们的工作都密切相关。这个美丽的室内风琴具有帝国和罗可可设计风格的元素。


技术描述:洪都拉斯桃花心木橱柜,侧板为美国胡桃木,高207厘米,宽136.5厘米,深71.5厘米:巴西红木在垂直纹理软木上的铭牌; 所有管道都封闭在膨胀箱中,其水平百叶窗隐藏在布背桃花心木格栅后面; 百叶窗由左脚踏板控制; 跟踪器连接弹簧支撑的百叶窗; 没有障碍;一本 58 个音符的手册,范围 C-a3,象牙天然,乌木意外,木背,每个都有一个金属丝支点和导轨,放在键尾上并通过木贴纸压下托盘 65 毫米长,三毫米直径:钥匙坠落和托盘落下 4 毫米;托盘从五和九毫米厚的库存中粘起来,较宽的一块面对单层羊皮,靠网格底部坐下;皮革尾巴粘在57毫米高的网格上,下表面有纸或羊皮纸,纸还密封托盘箱外的网格底部;网格底部的肋骨之间没有海绵;通道长308毫米,第一,第二和第三C分别宽约10毫米,19毫米和12毫米;胸部近似键量表从G以上C到顶部A3;单个大脚趾板20毫米厚;由球员右脚泵送的单个对角线喂食器提供的风;给料器上方的双折储液罐,两个向内折叠;六个金属砝码搁在储液罐的顶板上; 风箱到胸部 45 x 50 毫米内部。

六个巴西红木挡板,左下角一个带有纸标签,上面覆盖着赛璐珞状圆盘,上面写着"主低音"; 其他未标记的塞音可以从上到下阅读,左:"音调低音","杜尔西亚南高音",右:"音调高音","首席高音"和"第十五高音";第十五个C1-C3的指南针(25个音符);C和中C之间的低音/高音划分;迪亚帕森和杜尔西亚纳 8',校长 4',第 15 个 2'; 松管,西部红雪松的盖子略低于块状顶部;风道切入大写字母(英式发声);C-f(18管)的音调低音停止,上唇切在前壁外侧;刻度的上唇是一个相当狭窄的主体,比世纪之交通常的较大开口管在内部切割的上唇小;较小的开放式管道(在音调高音中约1'C以上)的前壁倾斜形成唇,没有耳朵;所有上唇锋利;音调低音的前两个C的切割和块尺寸为16毫米,C为101 x 87;10 毫米和 54 x 49 表示 c;在木工公差范围内,所有站点的开管刻度几乎相同:4' C 64 x 51 mm;2' c 35 x 25 毫米;1' c 19 x 14 毫米;1/2' c 13 x 9 毫米;1/4' c 8 x 6.5 毫米;1/8' c 5 x 4 毫米的音阶是相当窄的校长,比通常的世纪之交的音阶小;开口 4' 管的切口为 12 mm。开口 2' 管的切割长度为 3 毫米,杜尔西亚纳 2 毫米,校长 1 毫米;所有站点的较小管道都有大约 1 毫米的切口,异常低,表明 2 英寸或更小的轻风压,以及细腻的歌声。(杰里米·库珀,1977)
介绍(英)The chamber organ is a moderately-sized piped organ. It typically has a single manual, a limited number of stops, and a limited pedalboard or no pedals at all. It is generally intended for use in small chapels, in homes, or other intimate rooms. As it is capable of long sustained tones, it is sometimes preferable to harpsichord as a continuo instrument in chamber ensembles.

Such instruments might also be used in small churches, like those found in small towns and villages throughout the United States in the nineteenth century. Chamber organs were largely usurped by reed organs after the middle of the century.

The builder of this chamber organ, William Crowell, along with his brother Samuel, were members of a small community of around half a dozen organ builders in Mont Vernon, New Hampshire whose work was all closely related. This beautiful chamber organ has elements of both Empire and Roccoco design styles.


Technical description: Cabinet of Honduras mahogany with side panels of American walnut, 207cm high, 136.5 cm wide, 71.5 cm in depth: nameboard of Brazilian rosewood on vertical grain softwood; all pipes enclosed in swell box, the horizontal shutters of which are concealed behind a cloth-backed mahogany grille; shutters controlled by left foot pedal; tracker connecting shutters held up by spring; no hitch-down; one manual of 58 notes, range C-a3, ivory naturals, ebony accidentals, wood backfalls, each having a wire fulcrum and guide, rest on key tails and depress pallets by means of wood stickers 65 mm long, three mm Diameter: keyfall and palletfall four mm; pallets glued up from stock five and nine mm thick, the wider piece faced with single layer of sheep leather and seated against grid bottom; leather tails glued to grid 57 mm high and faced with paper or parchment on the lower surface, the paper also sealing grid bottom outside the pallet box; no sponsels between ribs on grid bottom; channels 308 mm long, approximately 10 mm, 19 mm and 12 mm wide for first, second and third c's respectively; chest approxroximate keyscale from g above middle c to top a3; single large toeboard 20 mm thick; wind provided by single diagonal feeder pumped by player's right foot; double fold reservoir above feeder, both folds inwards; six metal weights resting on top board of reservoir; wind trunk to chest 45 x 50 mm inside.

Six Brazilian rosewood stops, one at lower left bearing paper label covered with celluloid-like disk reading "Principal Bass"; other unlabeled stops could read, top to bottom, left: "Diapason Bass," "Dulcianan Treble," right: " Diapason Treble," "Principal Treble," and "Fifteenth Treble"; compass of the Fifteenth c1-c3 (25 notes); bass/treble division between c and middle c; Diapason and Dulciana 8', principal 4', Fifteenth 2'; pine pipes, with caps of western red cedar set slightly below block tops; windways cut in caps (English-style voicing); C-f (18 pipes) of Diapason Bass stopped, the upper lip cut in the outside of the front wall; upper lip of scale is that of a quite narrow principal, smaller than that of usual turn of the century larger open pipes cut in the inside; smaller open pipes (from about e above 1' c in the Diapason Treble) have front wall beveled to form lip, no ears; all upper lips sharp; cutup and block dimensions of the first two c's of the Diapason Bass are 16 mm, and 101 x 87 for C; 10 mm and 54 x 49 for c; scales for open pipes in all stops almost identical within woodworking tolerances: 4' c 64 x 51 mm; 2' c 35 x 25 mm; 1' c 19 x 14 mm; 1/2' c 13 x 9 mm; 1/4' c 8 x 6.5 mm; 1/8' c 5 x 4 mm scale is that of a quite narrow Principal, smaller than that of usual turn of the century Melodia; cutup of open 4' pipe is 12 mm. Cutups of open 2' pipes are three mm for Diapason, two for Dulciana, and one for Principal; smaller pipes in all stops have cutups of approximately one mm which are unusually low and indicate a light wind pressure of 2" or less, and a delicate singing tone. (Jeremy Cooper, 1977)
  大都会艺术博物馆,英文 Metropolitan Museum of Art,是美国最大的艺术博物馆,世界著名博物馆,位于美国纽约第五大道的82号大街。
  大都会博物馆回顾了人类自身的文明史的发展,与中国北京的故宫、英国伦敦的大英博物馆、法国巴黎的卢浮宫、俄罗斯圣彼得堡的艾尔米塔什博物馆并称为世界五大博物馆。