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Maid Dusting a Portrait
Made by Louis Renou, Paris, France
c. 1900
19-1/2"h x 12-1/4"w x 7-5/8"d
The Murtogh D. Guinness Collection |
The Murtogh D. Guinness collection reflects the passion
of its namesake for preserving and sharing the joys of antique
mechanical musical instruments
and automata.
Murtogh D. Guinness (1913-2002) regarded the collection as his life’s
work, and he persistently traveled the globe to search for the finest surviving
instruments
of their kind. He lived day-to-day with these devices, studying and refining
for over 50 years what became a collection of nearly 700 pieces.
Every category of music box from the late 16th century through
the early 20th century is represented in the Murtogh D. Guinness
collection, which was given
to the Morris Museum in 2003. At the core are cylinder and disc music boxes.
Made in Switzerland and France beginning in the late 18th century, cylinder
music boxes stand as living documents of the arias, overtures and waltzes of
the time. The disc music boxes of the late 19th century show a shift to a broader
audience and to more popular music. In the 1890s, disc box production expanded
from Germany to Switzerland and also to the United States, where New Jersey
became the home of American music box production. The collection includes numerous
devices made in Jersey City, Rahway and Bradley Beach.
Like the mechanical musical instruments in the collection, the musical, French-made
automata represent a broad array of styles. Snake charmers, magicians, singing
birds, and other figures in the Murtogh D. Guinness collection showcase the
talents of their makers and constitute one of the largest public holdings of
automata in the United States.
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