The University of Oxford is home to some of the world’s most significant historical musical instruments, from Renaissance masterworks like the Stradivari violins in the Ashmolean Museum’s Hill Collection to the rare Bassano Basset recorder in the Bate Collection of Musical Instruments. Preserving these fragile material objects while enhancing their accessibility for scholarly research and public engagement presents an ongoing challenge. Dr Vai has been leading the digitisation of the University of Oxford’s musical instrument collections.
Digital technologies, such as 3D scanning and printing, photogrammetry, and augmented and virtual reality, offer new ways of seeing, playing, experiencing, and interacting with the material culture of music history.
Dr Vai’s projects with the Hill Collection and Bate Collection (Ashmolean Museum and Faculty of Music, respectively) are using state-of-the-art photogrammetry to develop high-resolution, interactive digital models of selected instruments. This digitisation process forms a vital part of the preservation of these objects, while also opening up new possibilities for researching and teaching with these renowned Oxford collections.