5. List of collections.
This list includes collections containing 30 or more musical instruments, and occasionally those with smaller numbers of particularly significant instruments or with a specific theme. More archaeology and ethnography museums and mechanical instrument collections are cited than in previous Grove publications. Collections, whether institutional or private, are always in a state of flux: they grow and shrink, are bought and sold or absorbed wholesale into other collections, and they are sometimes dispersed. Information for this article was gathered between 1990 and 2000, and comes from several sources: from questionnaires answered between 1990 and 1995 for the International Directory of Musical Instrument Collections (IDMIC), sponsored by the Comité international des museés et collections d’instruments de musique (CIMCIM), and from a variety of published sources (see bibliography, below). In those instances where collections still known to exist did not respond to the IDMIC survey, the entry has been repeated from Grove6.
Detailed information about collections is also available from organizations such as the Galpin Society (Britain), the Gellschaft der Freunde alter Musikinstrumente (Switzerland), the Kommission für Instrumentenkunde der Gesellschaft für Musikforschung and the American Musical Instrument Society. The IDMIC is published and maintained on the worldwide web.
algeria algiers.
Musée du Bardo, Centre de Recherches Anthropologiques, Préhistoriques et Ethnographiques: 65 North African and Sarahan
angola dundo.
Museu do Dundo, Missão de Recolha do Folcloro Musical: 100 Central African, mainly from the Luanda district.
J. De Vilhena: ‘A Note on the Dundo Museum of the Companhia de Diamantes de Angola’, JIFMC, vii (1955), 41–3
luanda.
Museu Nacional de Antropologia: 40 Angolan
argentina buenos aires.
Museo de Instrumentos Indigenas y Folclorico, Instituto Nacional de Musicologia ‘Carlos Vega’: 300 South American, esp. Argentine.
buenos aires.
Museo Nacional del Hombre: 130 Latin American.
buenos aires.
Museo Teatro Colón: 40 Western art, many string, incl. I.F. Blanco collection.
‘Isaac Fernández Blanco Collection’, Violins, xi (1950), 100
la plata.
Museo de Ciencias Naturales de la Plata: 200 South American.
M.E. Vignati and M.Y. Velo: ‘Los instrumentos musicales del Museo de ciencias naturales de la Plata’, Primeros Jornados Argentinos de Musicologia (1984)
la plata.
Museo Instrumentos Musicales ‘Emilio Azzarini’: 750 Western, native South American, and musical boxes.
Perfil de un museo musical: exposicion (1987); C.E. Rausa: Instrumentos musicales Museo Azzarini, Universidad nacional de la Plata (1994)
san salvador de jujuy.
Museo ‘Carlos Darwin’: 1500 archaeological, ethnological
australia brisbane.
Queensland Museum: 420 Australian, Asian and from the Pacific Rim.
L.M. Bolton: Oceanic Cultural Property in Australia (Sydney, 1980); M.J. Kartomi: Musical Instruments of Indonesia (Melbourne, 1985); L.M. Bolton and J. Specht: Polynesian and Micronesian Artifacts (Sydney, 1984–5)
nedlands.
Department of Music, University of Western Australia: many Asian, and European incl. J. Payton collection.
D. Casson: Collection of Musical Instruments (1974)
sydney.
Powerhouse Museum (formerly Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences): 600 European, some Chinese and Japanese; Australian violins.
B. Griffin and M. Lee: ‘A Brief History of the Musical Instrument Collection of the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney’, CIMCIM Bulletin, no.21 (1994)
austria göttweig.
Musikarchiv Stift Göttweig: 50 European, on loan from Benedictine Abbey, Göttweig.
graz.
Abteilung Kunstgewerbe, Landesmuseum Joanneum: c220 European art and traditional.
graz.
Diozesanmuseum: c40 European art and traditional.
graz.
Institut fur Afführungspraxis, Musikhochschule: bowed string instruments and pianos.
graz.
Landeszeughaus, Landesmuseum Joanneum: c240 military and accessories.
G. Stradner: ‘Die Musikinstrumente im Steiermärkischen Landeszeughaus in Graz’, Trommeln und Pfeifen, vi (1976), 7–36
graz.
Steierisches Volkskundemuseum, Landesmuseum Joanneum: c85 European art and traditional.
H. Sowinski: ‘Steirische Volksmusikinstrumente’, Das Joanneum, iii (1940), 188–102; G. Stradner: ‘Volksmusikinstrumente in Steirischen Sammlungen’, Vorträge Graz und Seggau 1973–1977 (1977), 141–8; G. Stradner: Musikinstrumente in Grazer Sammlungen (1986)
innsbruck.
Kunsthistorische Sammlungen, Schloss Ambras: 11 16th- and 17th-century European art and traditional, 4 non-European.
L. Luchner: Kunsthistorische Sammlungen, Schloss Ambras (1959); A.P. Larson: ‘Visit to Innsbruck’s Schloss Ambras’, AMIS Newsletter, xiv/1 (1985); Für Aug’ und Ohr: Musik in Kunst und Wunderkammern (1999) [exhibition catalogue]
innsbruck.
Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum: c240 European.
F. Waldner: ‘Verzeichnis der Musikinstrumente in der Sammlung des Museum Ferdinandeum’, Zeitschrift des Ferdinandeums für Tirol und Vorarlberg, lix (1915); W. Pass: ‘Die Instrumentensammlung des Tiroler Landesmuseums Ferdinandeum’, ÖMz, xxv (1970), 693–8; ‘Die Musiksammlung’, Tiroler Landesmuseum im Zeughaus (1973)
linz.
Oberösterreiches Landesmuseum: c250 mainly European, incl. early string instruments and winds from Benedictine Abby, Kremsmünster.
O. Wessely: Die Musikinstrumentensammlung des Oberösterreichen Landesmuseums (1952); B. Wied-Heinzel: ‘Die Musikinstrumentensammlung des Oberösterreiches Landesmuseums, eine Ergänzung zu Othmar Wessely’ Jb des Oberösterreichen Landesmuseums, cxvi (1981), 149–70; P.T. Young: Die Holzblasinstrumente im Oberösterreichischen Landesmuseum (1997) [catalogue]
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