Hi everyone,
        Stephen and Sandi have summed up this tragic decision well.  Over
   her in the US, we had a similar event in the early 1980s, when the US
   congress decided to stop funding the Dayton Miller collection of
   historical flutes, and the Library of Congress was forced to put the
   instruments in cardboard boxes in the basement of the library.  I know
   that this is the museum's decision, but I wish that there is some
   pressure that we could put on appropriate folks in the UK government,
   etc.
   John O. Robison
   ------ Forwarded Message
   From: Stephen Barber and Sandi Harris <[1]sb...@lutesandguitars.co.uk>
   Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2009 14:17:38 -0500
   To: "Lute List >" <[2]l...@cs.dartmouth.edu>
   Subject: [LUTE] Closure of V&A Instrument Gallery
   Dear Friends,
   we have just received the sad and very extraordinary news that one of
   the world's major collections of historic musical instruments, that of
   the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, is to permanently close on
   February 22nd 2010. James Yorke, who is the V&A staff member who has
   responsibility for the instruments (he is an expert in Italian
   Renaissance furniture, and ended up looking after the instruments
   because he is a keen amateur lutenist) told us this desperately
   alarming news in an email this afternoon (the text of which is
   reproduced below).
   It may come as a surprise to many that the V&A does not have a
   dedicated organologist, or even conservator who specialises in musical
   instruments, to look after the collection;  the instruments have
   always come under the umbrella of the Department Of Furniture &
   Woodwork. James has for many years struggled on a virtually non-
   existent budget to look after the collection and grant access to
   instrument makers, organologists and scholars, whilst doing the job
   the V&A employs him for - which does not include looking after the
   instruments as part of its remit. He's always taken on the task
   because he loves the instruments and the collection.
   It seems inconceivable that the V&A, one of the world's most
   celebrated and foremost museums, has taken this decision, which will
   consign the collection to various other museums and effectively split
   it up, perhaps forever.
   We don't know what can be done, perhaps a campaign of letter-writing
   to the Director? However, given some of the rather superficial and
   frankly tacky displays that have been mounted in the V&A in the name
   of 'fashion' in recent years, which clearly have the blessing of the
   powers-that-be there, any pleas may well fall on deaf ears and closed
   minds. The instruments seem to be losing out to the unfortunate and
   short-sighted modern disdain for anything other than disposable
   popular culture, and the general dumbing-down that many museums seem
   to feel they must indulge in, simply in order to justify their
   existencies.
   We don't propose to get into arguments about our analysis of the
   cultural mores that seem to have produced this mad decision at the
   V&A, but it seems to us that there is something wrong with the
   judgement of a museum regime that discards an important aspect of
   everybody's musical heritage in favour of a few frocks.
   Our old friend Walter Vermeulen, the Dutch harpsichord maker, called
   while we were writing this message, and was shocked when we told him
   the news about the V&A, but he then told us that something similar has
   happened to the instrument collection of the Geementemuseum, in The
   Hague, which now mostly languishes in a storage depot, unseen and
   neglected.
   This is the relevant part of James Yorke's message:
   "Dear Stephen and Sandi,
   I'm giving advance warning that the Music Galleries will be closing
   for good on Monday 22nd February. The immediate plan is to decant them
   in storage in Blythe House, the V&A's store at Olympia, display the
   sexiest items from a decorative point of view in our various galleries
   and possibly lend the rest to the Horniman Museum, Reid Collection and
   the Royal College of Music. The idea is to convert the area of display
   basically into fashion, fashion and more fashion.
   As you can imagine, I am  pretty miserable about this, but our Dear
   Leader is absolutely set on this idea, and could not be persuaded by
   my keeper. Ph well ...
   I will be drafting a statement for the V&A website and various
   societies informing them that we are closing. On a slightly more
   upbeat note - for me personally - Jakob Lindberg has very kindly
   agreed to give me lute lessons. I played for him the other day. He
   thought I had sufficient potential though my technique had plenty of
   room for improvement. (SB and SH think, "Well, we could have told you
   that!!!") Still, hopefully, I will be eventually able to do full
   justice to your two absolutely beautiful instruments.
   Happy Christmas and lots of love
   James".
   What a way for the first decade of the 21st Century to move towards a
   conclusion!
   Stephen and Sandi.
   To get on or off this list see list information at
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   ------ End of Forwarded Message
   --

References

   1. file://localhost/net/people/lute-arc/sb...@lutesandguitars.co.uk
   2. file://localhost/net/people/lute-arc/lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
   3. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

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