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Not currently on display at the V&A

Lyre Guitar

1805-1810 (Made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Lyre-guitar first appeared in France in about 1780. The fashion for Ancient Greek motfis like Apollo's lyre, combined with the increasing popularity of the guitar, encouraged the development of this hybrid instrument. By about 1800, guitars with six single strings (like this example) were increasingly adopted by players who until then had mostly used versions with five pairs of strings or 'courses'. This lyre-guitar is very similar to one depicted in Johann Christoph Rincklake's The Coppenrath Family in a Boating Party of 1807 (Münster, Westfälisches Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte).


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Planed and joined pine soundboard; planed and joined mahogany; ebony and mother-of-pearl mosaic edging; ebony fingerboard with ivory frets; gilt wood rods.
Brief description
Lyre guitar, mahogany back and sides, pine belly, French, about 1805-1810.
Physical description
"Lyre-shaped with hollow curving arms and an attached neck between. The back, slightly arched, is of two pieces of mahogany, each of which is continued to form the back of one of the arms. Belly of two pieces of pine, similarly extending up the arms. Two open soundholes with mother-of-pearl and tortoiseshell mosaic edging, as also the edge of the belly. Pin bridge. The base of the body is flat, enabling the instrument to stand upright. The neck is joined to the body as on an ordinary guitar and is faced with a flat ebony fingerboard flush with the belly and with ornamental gilt wooden rods. The flat head is joined to the points of the arms by two ornamental gilt wooden rods. There are six rear pegs, for six gut strings." Anthony Baines, Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part II: Non-keyboard instruments (London, 1998), pp. 64-65.
Dimensions
  • Total length: 87cm
  • Width of belly width: 36cm
  • Below neck depth: 10.5cm
  • Depth of neck depth: 8cm
  • String length length: 67.5cm
Measurements taken from Anthony Baines: Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part II: Non-keyboard instruments. (London, 1998), p. 65
Gallery label
LYRE GUITAR French or German; about 1800 Back of mahogany and front of pine. Non-Keyboard Catalogue No.: 13/1 Lyre Guitars first appeared in about 1780, and were referred to as lyres nouvelles [new lyres]. From about 1800, instructions on how to play this instrument were often included in tutors for the Guitar. The adding of an extra bass note probably influenced guitar makers to do the same, thus giving their instrument six strings. Although this instrument has no label, it is remarkably similar to one depicted in Johann Christoph Rincklake's painting, The Coppenrath Family in a Boating Party (1807). Museum no. 249-1882(pre September 2000)
Object history
This instrument was part of the collections of Carl Engel (1818 - 1882) and was bought by the Museum in 1882 for £2-10-0.
Production
In the opinion of M. Daniel Sinier, author of La Guitare. Paris 1650-1950 (Turin, 2008), this lyre-guitar is French and most likely made in Paris.
Summary
The Lyre-guitar first appeared in France in about 1780. The fashion for Ancient Greek motfis like Apollo's lyre, combined with the increasing popularity of the guitar, encouraged the development of this hybrid instrument. By about 1800, guitars with six single strings (like this example) were increasingly adopted by players who until then had mostly used versions with five pairs of strings or 'courses'. This lyre-guitar is very similar to one depicted in Johann Christoph Rincklake's The Coppenrath Family in a Boating Party of 1807 (Münster, Westfälisches Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte).
Bibliographic reference
Anthony Baines: Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part II: Non-keyboard instruments. (London, 1998), p. 64-65.
Collection
Accession number
249-1882

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Record createdMay 16, 2001
Record URL
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