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Violetta Piccola

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

Violetta piccola was a term used to describe both a small version of the violin and the five-stringed descant viol. This example has only four strings, like the violin, but steeply sloping 'shoulders' like certain 17th- and early 18th-century viols and viole d'amore. It has a broader body than a kit (see Museum no. 166-1872), but like that instrument it may have been used to help teach dancing. Or it may have served as the highest-pitched member of a consort (or ensemble) of viols.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Planed pine, planed and carved sycamore, with painted simulated purfling (bordering).
Brief description
German?, 1700-1800
Physical description
'A small body with steeply sloped shoulders. The belly and the back overlap the sides as on a violin. Belly, with f-holes, has simulated purfling [bordering] in black paint and has been rather coarsely treated at some time so that the grain of the pie shows up markedly. The high-arched back of one piece of sycamore, with an old repair. The small pegbox with a simple scroll and four boxwood pegs.'

Taken from Anthony Baines: Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part II: Non-keyboard instruments. (London, 1998), p. 18.
Dimensions
  • Length: 52.7cm
  • Belly length: 30.2cm
  • Depth: 3.75cm
Width of bouts 12, 7.5, 15cm String length 31.5cm Fingerboard 25cm Nut width 2cm
Object history
This instrument formed part of the collections of Carl Engel and was valued at £4, when acquired by the South Kensington Museum in 1882.
Production
Carl Engel, the previous owner, thought this instrument was 17th-century Italian, whereas Anthony Baines desicribed it as 'Eighteenth century' without assigning it to any particular country. A number of Viols and viole d'amore with steeply sloping 'shoulders' were made in Germany and Austria in the first half of the century, and this example may have been made there as well.
Summary
Violetta piccola was a term used to describe both a small version of the violin and the five-stringed descant viol. This example has only four strings, like the violin, but steeply sloping 'shoulders' like certain 17th- and early 18th-century viols and viole d'amore. It has a broader body than a kit (see Museum no. 166-1872), but like that instrument it may have been used to help teach dancing. Or it may have served as the highest-pitched member of a consort (or ensemble) of viols.
Bibliographic reference
Catalogue of Musical Instruments in the Victoria and Albert Museum - Part II: Non-keyboard instruments. (London, 1998), p. 18. 'This rather coarsely made instrument, to which the name violetta piccola, a term for a small viol mentioned in Praetorius, was given by Engel, is a kind of narrow-bodied three-quarter-size violin rather than a kit.'
Collection
Accession number
165-1882

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Record createdApril 4, 2008
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