Presenting Sponsor:
The power of music across 6,000 years of history
MIM’s exhibition, Treasures: Legendary Musical Instruments, celebrates some of the world’s most notable musical moments, performance traditions, and musical instrument developments. Eighty exceptional instruments fill the Target Gallery, including some of the finest from MIM’s collection and more than twenty loans from renowned museums, private collections, and musicians around the world.
- November 12, 2021–October 16, 2022
Instruments with extraordinary pasts come together to share the story of music like never before.
Witness humanity’s enduring creativity and inventiveness expressed through music—exclusively at MIM.
In partnership with
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco
Ethnic Art and Culture Limited, Hong Kong S.A.R., China
Interlochen Center for the Arts, Interlochen, Michigan
Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
Museu de la Música de Barcelona, Spain
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts
National Music Museum, Vermillion, South Dakota
Penn Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Pivotal Moments in Music
From the ancient Olympic Games to the unveiling of the Eiffel Tower, history is brought to life by the instruments that forever changed the world. The exclusive exhibition shares global human achievement and musical ingenuity through an Amati violin likely made for a royal marriage, the oldest guitar still in existence, a shell trumpet from the Maya civilization, Jimi Hendrix’s Black Widow guitar, and more historic instruments.
World-Renowned Craftsmanship
Intricate details of engraved brass, carved patterns, and iridescent inlay represent talented craftsmen, companies, and families from around the globe that molded instrument evolution. Throughout the exhibition, original video content uncovers these stories and the instruments’ represented traditions with performances and interviews by museum curators and notable musicians, such as ukulele virtuoso Jake Shimabukuro, guitarist Jiji Kim, and mandolinist David Grisman.
Featured Pieces
Jimi Hendrix’s Black Widow guitar
Used at the height of his fame during recording sessions in late October 1968, this left-handed Black Widow guitar represents one of the exhibition’s iconic stories of contemporary music. Loan courtesy of Collection of Experience Hendrix, L.L.C.
Lyre fragment
This ancient lyre fragment from the cradle of civilization is part of the famous lyres of Ur, the world’s oldest stringed instruments. Loan courtesy of University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Guitarra made by Francisco Sanguino
Only six Sanguino guitars are known to remain today, including this elaborately decorated example with six double courses of strings. MIM Collection
48K Grand Jumbo model sousaphone
To celebrate their fiftieth anniversary and status as the world’s largest manufacturer of band instruments, the Conn company created the world’s largest sousaphone and sent it on a nationwide promotional tour. Loan courtesy of Interlochen Center for the Arts, Interlochen, Michigan
Conch shell trumpet
In ancient Maya culture, conch shells were sacred objects reserved for specialized ritual purposes. This elaborately decorated conch bears the face of a royal ancestor and a headdress portraying the rain god, Chahk. Loan courtesy of Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
Video Spotlights
The First Electric Guitar Used in Public
Chinese Gilt Bronze Bell Made for the Kangxi Emperor
A catalog for the exhibition is available for purchase at the Museum Store or online at theMIMstore.org.
Thank you to our generous donors
Presenting sponsor U.S. Bank
U.S. Bank
Sponsored By
Arizona Office of Tourism
John & Joan D’Addario Foundation, and John & Mary Ann Mangels
Supported by
Christine Lindley
Carolyn & John Friedma
Jan & David Wood
Carolyn & John Friedman
Babette & Richard Burns
Jane & John Guild
Marcia & Jim Lowman, and Ann Phillips
Donor Spotlight: Mary Ann and John Mangels
Celebrating MIM’s special exhibition with a generous donation
When Mary Ann and John Mangels learned of MIM’s newest special exhibition, they were excited to help bring the show to life.