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Hurdy-Gurdy (detail)

Jacques Pajot II (1847–1897)1889

Cincinnati Art Museum

Cincinnati Art Museum
Cincinnati, United States

The hurdy-gurdy was in widespread use by the Middle Ages, when it was used to play religious and secular music. Artists often depicted hurdy-gurdies in paintings and prints as the instrument of wandering musicians. These musicians engendered its popularity and use by aristocratic and common folk alike.

The hurdy-gurdy can produce a simultaneity of sounds because it has both strings and keys. Players sound its strings by turning the hand crank (at the base of the instrument), which is connected to a wooden wheel located inside the instrument. When activated this way, some of the strings produce a continuous drone. The player presses and releases the keyboard’s keys, which act upon another set of strings, in order to create the melody.

This hurdy-gurdy has a curved back, like a lute. Others are shaped more like a guitar. We see the skillfully carved and painted head of a man at the head of the instrument, while painted and stamped details (note the man and woman depicted on the fret box) and elaborate inlays decorate the body.

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  • Title: Hurdy-Gurdy (detail)
  • Creator: Jacques Pajot II (1847–1897)
  • Date Created: 1889
  • Location Created: France (Jenzat)
  • Credit Line: Gift of William H. Doane
  • Medium: wood, ebony, maple, dye, paint, walnut, bone, ivory, polychrome, possibly pine, copper alloy, iron
  • Art Genre: Bowed keyboard, Chordophone, Musical Instrument
  • Accession Number: 1914.195
Cincinnati Art Museum

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