Watch a video to find out.
Stay logged in
Go to Navigation Go to Content Go to Search
Back to browse highlights
Fullscreen
Storied Strings: The Art of Violin Collecting (00:29:41) 35 views
From Andrea Amati to Antonio Stradivari (00:22:25) 20 views
Made in Cremona: Twenty-First-Century Violin-Making Traditions (00:19:47) 5 views
Performance by Dan Zhu (00:19:42) 8 views
Teqing
Lo-Tseih
Bell
Rattle
Browse current and upcoming exhibitions and events.
Exhibitions:
Events:
This artwork is currently on display in Gallery 681
Carefully incised veins suggest a downwardly curving lotus leaf of dark nephrite jade. The goqing once sounded to announce the arrival and rank of a guest or to denote the length of a pause following the completion of a musical piece. The great importance of sonorous substances, such as wood and stones, among the percussion instruments of the Far East stems from the religious belief that nature itself speaks to the human ear through this vibrating matter.
Catalogue of the Crosby Brown Collection of Musical Instruments: Asia, Gallery 27. 2. Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1903, vol. II, pg. 21.Catalogue of the Crosby Brown Collection of Musical Instruments: Gallery 27. 1. Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1901, vol. I, pg. 21.
Close