Lisa Cristiani Explained

Lisa Cristiani
Birth Date:24 December 1827
Birth Place:Paris, France
Death Place:Tobolsk, Russia
Genre:Classical music
Occupation:Musician
Instrument:Cello
Years Active:1845-1853

Lisa Barbier Cristiani (December 24, 1827 – October 24, 1853), also known as Lise Cristiani or Elise Cristiani, was a French cellist and performer known for being one of the earliest recorded instances of a woman becoming a professional in the field.

Childhood

Born in Paris, it is believed that Cristiani was of Italian descent, though little more is known of her early years.[1] She did eventually become a cello apprentice to Edouard Benazet and had her concert debut on February 14, 1845 at the Salle des Concerts Herz.[2]

Professional life

Cristiani was one of the earliest professional female musical performers of her era[3] and began playing numerous concerts in her late teenage years. The early tours she conducted included stops at Vienna, Linz, Ratisbon, Baden-Baden, and Hamburg. The last in Hamburg resulted in such a popular fervor for her that her portrait (shown above) became a highly sought after item.[2] Her level of play caught the attention of and the support of composer Felix Mendelssohn in 1845 during a concert in Leipzig. A piece for the cello in Mendelssohn's series Songs Without Words was dedicated to her the same year, though would not be publicly revealed until a posthumous publication after Mendelssohn's death.

After this time period, Cristiani began a musical tour of Europe that resulted in further fame and her eventual travel to Russia where she played for a number of concerts. During this time period, the King of Denmark Frederick VII awarded her the title of Chamber Virtuosa.[1]

Several years later, in 1852, while visiting the home of historian Nikolai Markevitch in Kiev, she met fellow cellist Adrien-François Servais. The three of them spent some time in the city practising their music with each other and Cristiani's association with Servais only heightened her fame in the region.[4]

Death

Not long after, in the fall of 1853, she began a new trek across the Siberian wilderness to the Kamchatka Peninsula for another tour in the region, being the first European to give public concerts in the remote cities of the North Asian continent.[2] Her original plan was to finish in Kamchatka and then head to the Caucasus for another concert tour.[2] Before that, she performed in the small town of Tobolsk, but resulted soon after with a case of cholera and had to stay in the village where she died on October 24, 1853.[1] [5]

Influence on cello design and use

Because of how the cello is played, with the large frame between one's legs, the women's fashion of the era of dresses made playing the instrument directly impossible. The alternative, having the frame in a side saddle position, makes the act of play difficult. So it was not until the development of the endpin to lift the frame off the floor that play by women became more common. It has been claimed in various publications that Cristiani may have been a primary early popularizer of the endpin and led to its increased use in Europe and the rise of a new wave of female cellists in the decades after her death.[6]

Cristiani was also well known for the uniqueness of her cello, a 1700 Stradivarius with her name carved into the side.[7] [8] Due to this engraving, the instrument eventually became known specifically as the "Cristiani", along with a general style of Stradivari cello inheriting the name.[9] [10] After her death, the 1700 Stradivarius cello that she played was later obtained by Hugo Becker.[7] It was then bought in 2005 to be returned to the original place of its concert debut in Cremona and displayed at the Walter Stauffer Musicological Foundation of Cremona,[11] before being moved to the Museo del Violino of Cremona.[12]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cristiani, Lisa (Barbier) . MacGregor . Lynda . . 2001 . . 10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.06832 . 978-1-56159-263-0 . January 24, 2020 .
  2. . 1907 . Lady Violoncellists And One In Particular . . 48 . 771 . . 307–308 . 10.2307/903058 . 903058 . January 24, 2020.
  3. Freia Hoffmann, Art. "Cristiani, Lise", in: Lexikon "Europäische Instrumentalistinnen des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts", hrsg. von Freia Hoffmann, 2007/2010.
  4. Book: Deserno, Katharina . 2018 . Cellistinnen: Transformationen von Weiblichkeit in der Instrumentalkunst . Cellists: Transformations of Femininity in Instrumental Art . 201 . de . . 978-3412501129.
  5. 1863 . Lise Cristiani, Voyage dans la Sibérie orientale, 1849-1853 . Lise Cristiani, Journey To Eastern Siberia, 1849-1853 . fr . . 385–400 .
  6. Book: Mercier, Anita . 2017 . Guilhermina Suggia: Cellist . Teachers and Mentors . . 2–3 . 978-1351564762 .
  7. Book: Markevitch . Dimitry . Seder . Florence . 1999 . Cello Story . . 87–88 . 1457402378 .
  8. Book: Seebass, Tilman . 1988 . Imago Musicae IV, 1987, Volume 4 . . 350 . 0822308258 .
  9. . Unbecoming To Females . . 21 . Music Magazine . 1998 . 14 . January 24, 2020.
  10. Web site: Secrets of Stradivari . Mairson . Harry . January 29, 2018 . . . January 24, 2020 .
  11. Web site: Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1700, the 'Cristiani, Stauffer' . . . January 24, 2020 .
  12. Web site: Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1700, the 'Cristiani, Stauffer' . . . July 25, 2022 .