Research

What We Know, and What We still Do Not Understand about the Barberini Harp

Chiara Granata / Dario Pontiggia

Synopsis: Historical harpist and researcher Chiara Granata and renowned luthier Dario Pontiggia opened the Convening around the Barberini Harp, a Harfenlabor symposium (December 14-16, 2016 at the Museo Nazionale degli Strumenti Musicali and the Istituto Storico Austriaco in Roma). Their presentation covered the already established facts about the harp, such as the time period in which it could have been constructed, based on technical data (wood examinations), and corrected against historical and iconographical analyses of the Barberini family’s position and cultural policy under Urbano VIII. Crucially, Granata and Pontiggia presented their discoveries, findings and analysis related to new facts about the Barberini Harp that had recently come to light, which they also published in 2015, in the <i>Recercare</i> journal. By integrating research from their respective fields, Granata and Pontiggia arrive at a series of answers as well as open questions. The Barberini Harp represents a great innovation in harp building, as demonstrated through a comparison with the Estense and earlier harps, and yet Pontiggia’s analysis of the Barberini Harp’s technical data suggests that aspects of it are not musically functional. The harp’s avant-garde status suggests it could have been one of a series—new documents reveal it was built in Geronimo Acciari’s workshop in 1632, but no conclusive evidence has been found of other similar harps. Granata and Pontiggia also compare the Barberini Harp with the one depicted by Giovanni Lanfranco, and propose that they are not the same instrument. One of the inconsistencies concerns the Golden Fleece, present on the harp, yet missing in the painting, and prompts both technical and historical analysis: the former tells us it was probably added later; the latter points to when the order might have been bestowed on the Barberini family. This sumptuous musical instrument was also a symbol of power, and as Granata tells us, the only “window" we have onto a story “much broader than we can imagine."

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Harfenlabor invited the historical harpist and researcher Chiara Granata and renowned luthier Dario Pontiggia to share and present their discoveries, findings and analysis related to new facts about the Barberini Harp that had recently come to light. Granata and Pontiggia collaborated on the analysis of these new documents on the Barberini Harp through the perspective of organology, and published the outcomes of this research in 2015, in the Recercare journal. Their presentation opened Convening around the Barberini Harp, a symposium organised by Harfenlabor that took place on December 14-16, 2016 at the Museo Nazionale degli Strumenti Musicali and at the Istituto Storico Austriaco in Roma.

Granata, Chiara. “‘Un’arpa Grande Tutta Intagliata e Dorata’. New Documents on the Barberini Harp.” Recercare 27, no. 1/2 (2015): 139–64.

Pontiggia, Dario. “Barberini Harp. Data Sheets.” Recercare 27, no. 1/2 (2015): 165–84.


© Armin Linke / Harfenlabor 2020
Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND International 4.0

Cite:&&Chiara Granata and Dario Pontiggia, <i>What We Know, and What We still Do Not Understand about the Barberini Harp</i>, Barberini Harp Project / Convening, by Studio Armin Linke / Harfenlabor, May 19, 2022, Harfenlabor.com, MP4, 51:39, https://www.harfenlabor.com/research/what-we-know-and-what-we-still-do-not-understand-about-the-barberini-harp/.