MORRISTOWN, NJ.- The Morris Museum in partnership with the National Music Museum (Vermillion, South Dakota) presents the exhibit Trumpets, Weird and Wonderful: Treasures from the National Music Museum 44 fascinating instruments from five continents, on view at the Morris Museum from October 7, 2018 to March 17, 2019.
Dating from the late 17th to the late 20th centuries, the instruments are on loan from the National Music Museums Joe R. and Joella F. Utley Collection of Brass Instruments, and most of them have never been on public exhibit.
Trumpets, Weird, and Wonderful celebrates the rich audible and visual variety of musical instruments in which sound is generated by buzzing the lips, sometimes called brasswinds. Broadly defined, trumpets come in many different forms and sizes and can be made of many different materials: animal horn, bone, conch, wood, and metals. Horns and trumpets have been in use as signaling instruments since prehistoric times. They play a role in ceremony and religion in many cultures. For centuries they have had a leading function in the military and the hunt. They are not only musical instruments but also objects of artistic expression, often with hidden meaning.
This is an exhibit for us all, says Cleveland Johnson, Executive Director of the Morris Museum. If a bugle playing taps has you tearing up at a veterans funeral, youll discover amazing new dimensions to that simple, dignified instrument. If the call of the shofar holds religious meaning for you, youll discover how brasswind instruments contribute to ritual ceremonies around the world. If youve ever marched in a band or heard a great jazz trumpeter, youll discover the engineering history that led to our modern trumpet. Maybe you just love Ricola cough drops and have never seen an alphorn close up.
Video stations throughout the galleries allow the instruments to be experienced in performance, many in their original context and country of use. A special kids station traces the history of trumpet playing back to early human civilization. Many of the instruments are beautifully ornate. The exhibit allows the visitor to discover almost-hidden symbols, ranging from expressions of power to religious belief.
Guest curator Dr. Sabine Klaus, Curator of Brass at the National Music Museum states, "The question that guided me in preparing this exhibition was how do form and decoration inform us about an instrument's function and use, and ultimately its sound?"
Five highly decorative trumpets by Andy Taylor in Norwich, England, which were commissioned by the collector Joe R. Utley and especially created for the Utley Collection, celebrate the trumpet as art.
The exhibition is shown in two galleries at the Morris Museum and organized in nine themes:
Found in Nature: Horns and Trumpets made of Organic Materials
The Meaning of Décor: The Trumpet in Ceremony and Ritual
Fit for a King or a Queen: Trumpets and Horns for the European Elite
Strange Curves and Clever Keys for More Notes
Liberations: Break-through Technology
Where does the Echo Come From?
Trumpets Big and Small
The Trumpet in Jazz
Cool Looks and Crazy Shapes: The Trumpet as Art
Coinciding with the opening of the Morris Museums exhibit, the National Music Museum (NMM) will be temporarily closing to the public as it prepares for architectural expansion and renovation, reopening by 2021. Patricia Bornhofen, NMM Manager of Communications says, While the NMM is closed for metamorphosis, we will be partnering with other institutions to display some of our extraordinary collections. Were pleased to share these treasures with visitors to the Morris Museum. The NMM, located on the campus of the University of South Dakota, in Vermillion, South Dakota, is home to some of the most historic instruments in the world.