Positive Organ thumbnail 1
Positive Organ thumbnail 2
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Not currently on display at the V&A

Positive Organ

ca. 1700 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This organ was probably built in about 1700, with parts added at later dates. It came from the church of São Salvador, in Santa Cruz, Madeira, and was probably made locally. It has a range of forty-five notes, C/E - c3 and much of its workings are original. The stop nobs on the left of the keyboad are dummy and those on the right were later modified, so that the organ could be controlled by only one knob. The case is decorated with fragments of Gothic carving, which could date from about 1500.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Carved and moulded pine case, planed keys of fruitwood
Brief description
Positive organ, Portuguese (Madeira), painted pinewood case, about 1700, decorated with Flemish carving dating from about 1500.
Physical description
Positive Organ, painted light green, with large, machine-carved moulding at the top, and a case decorated with fretwork and scrolls of gothic carving. The pipes at the front of the case are arranged symmetrically and their function is decorative. There are three knobs on each side of the keyboard, the ones on the left being dummy. The keys are made of stained fruitwood.
Dimensions
  • Length: 129.5cm
  • Width: 122cm
  • Height: 61cm
Credit line
Given to the Museum by Dr. M. Grabham of Madeira
Object history
This instrument was given to the Museum by Dr. M. Grabham of Madeira in 1886.
Production
This organ comes from a church in Madeira, and was probably made by local craftsmen. The carved scrolls on the case could be Flemish and could date from about 1500.
Summary
This organ was probably built in about 1700, with parts added at later dates. It came from the church of São Salvador, in Santa Cruz, Madeira, and was probably made locally. It has a range of forty-five notes, C/E - c3 and much of its workings are original. The stop nobs on the left of the keyboad are dummy and those on the right were later modified, so that the organ could be controlled by only one knob. The case is decorated with fragments of Gothic carving, which could date from about 1500.
Bibliographic reference
Howard Schott: Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part I: Keyboard instruments. (London, 1998), p. 68
Collection
Accession number
26-1886

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Record createdOctober 27, 2008
Record URL
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