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FESTIVAL CELEBRATES 2600
YEARS OF THE PIPE ORGAN
Touring exhibit travels to thirteen sites in the United
States and Canada
It was the first keyboard instrument,
with roots extending back to ancient Rome. It can have as many as
30,000 pipes, from the size of a pencil to the length of a trailer
truck. It can play everything from symphonies to jazz. But to many
people, the pipe organ remains a little-known byway of musical and
cultural history.
All that may change when Festival Organ: The King of Instruments
shows at museums and libraries in eleven locations in the United
States and Canada in 1995-99. Festival Organ includes an
interactive exhibition, concerts, and other events designed to give
general audiences the chance to experience first-hand the history,
repertoire, and construction of the pipe organ. Festival Organ's
kaleidoscope of programs will interest music lovers, architects,
scientists, history buffs, engineers, and the curious of every age.
A twenty-four-foot "Timeline of the Organ," depicting
the organ's long and varied history, is part of this unprecedented
touring exhibition. "Today, many people think of the organ
as a sacred instrument. But the first organs were used outdoors,
at large public events such as gladiator games, and even in battle,"
said Lynn Edwards, creator of the exhibition. "There are a
lot of amazing twists and turns to the organ's history, as visitors
to the exhibition will see." The exhibition also dramatically
demonstrates the organ's connection with architecture and the various
materials and methods of construction.
Visitors will be able to see how an organ works and is built,
and can pump bellows, depress keys, watch valves open and close,
and hear pipes sound.
One display includes an array of organ pipes to be heard: metal,
wood, open, stopped, a pipe with a "chimney", cylindrical
pipes, conical pipes, tapered pipes, and pipes named after the musical
instruments that inspired them: Vox Humana, Oboe, Trumpet, Flute,
and Viol da Gamba, to name only a few.
In each of the sites where the exhibition is installed, it is
paired with activities involving local organs and individuals. Collaborators
will present solo recitals and ensemble concerts, and will open
their churches, buildings, and workshops for organ tours, educational
programs, and special events.
The creation of Festival Organ was made possible by a major
grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and by contributions
of collaborators and sponsors nationwide.
The Festival Organ exhibit has now been retired.
FESTIVAL ORGAN
EXHIBITION TOUR SCHEDULE
Chattangooga, Tennesee
Hunter Museum of Art
December 2, 1995 - January 21, 1996
Deerfield, Massachusetts
Powcumtuck Valley Memorial Association
May 4 - July 7, 1996
Provo, Utah
Museum of Art, Brigham Young University
August 1 - October 19, 1996
Richmond, Virginia
Science Museum of Virginia
November 23, 1996 - February 2, 1997
Los Angeles, California
Fowler Museum of Cultural History
University of California at Los Angeles
March 9 - May 18, 1997
Buffalo, New York
Buffalo & Erie County Historical Society
June 20 - September 28, 1997
Boston, Massachusetts
Boston Public Library
October 18 - December 31, 1997
St. Paul, Minnesota
Science Museum of Minnesota
January 31 - June 7, 1998
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Calgary International Organ Festival
July 3 - October 15, 1998
Old Salem, North Carolina
The Gallery at Old Salem (Frank L. Horton Museum Center)
November 4, 1998 - June 13, 1999
Dallas, Texas
Cathedral Gallery, Cathedral Guadalupe
July 1 - October 3, 1999
Rochester, New York
George Eastman House
January 22 - April 16, 2000
For more information, call 716-271-3361
Seattle, Washington
Benaryoa Hall
The Seattle Symphony
June-July 2000
TIMELINE OF THE ORGAN:
2600 YEARS OF HISTORY
The Timeline of the Organ, written by Barbara Owen, traces the organ's
history from 600 B.C.E. to the present. Embellished with dozens of
illustrations, many in color, the Timeline identifies major
developments in the history of the organ and its music; introduces key
events, ideas, and individuals; and places the organ in the context of
related developments-including socio-historic, technical, artistic, and
architectural. The Timeline is a printed version of a large three-panel
display that is part of the Festival Organ exhibit.
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