Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume violin, Paris 1828
Remembered by history as much for his richly eventful life and unequaled success as an inventor, entrepreneur, and connoisseur as for his stature as a luthier, Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume (1798-1875) nonetheless is widely regarded as the greatest French violin maker of all time, with over three thousand instruments to his name and only Nicolas Lupot standing as a potential rival to such title.
The second son of luthier Claude-François Vuillaume IV of Mirecourt, the young Jean-Baptiste apprenticed with his father in Mirecourt until 1818, around which time he began to maintain professional contact with key figures in the Parisian violin trade. His reputation grew quickly, and by 1828 he had established his own independent workshop at 46 rue Croix des Petits Champs. He kept many of the greatest French luthiers in his employ, namely his brother Nicolas François and Hippolyte Silvestre, who remained until 1831 and was followed by Paul Bailly, Honoré Derazey, Charles Buthod, Charles Adolphe Maucotel, and George Gemünder to name a few. He also employed many of the greatest bowmakers, including Jean Pierre Persoit, Dominique and Charles Peccatte, Joseph Fonclause, Nicolas Maline, Pierre Simon, François Peccatte, François Nicolas Voirin, Jean-Joseph Martin, Justin Poirson, Hermann Richard Pfretzschner, and Johann Christoph Nürnberger, among others.
In 1836, Vuillaume was entrusted by Nicolò Paganini with the repair of his beloved 1743 Guarneri del Gesù violin, known as "Il Cannone", and he took the opportunity to make a copy of that famous instrument. As tradition has it, upon the completion of the repair, Vuillaume presented his copy to Paganini side by side with the original, challenging Paganini to distinguish between the two, which Paganini was able to do only with great difficulty. After being played by Paganini's only known student, Camillo Sivori, Vuillaume's copy now remains beside the original del Gesù violin in the Genoa town hall.
The list of celebrity violinists who have owned and played Vuillaume's instruments is long and illustrious, including names such as Fritz Kreisler, Eugène Ysaÿe, Henri Vieuxtemps, Joseph Joachim, Ferdinand David, Charles de Beriot, Efrem Zimbalist, Toscha Seidel, Joseph Hassid, Isaac Stern, Arthur Grumiaux, Pinchas Zukerman, Andres Cardenes, Hilary Hahn, and Vilde Frang, among many others.
In 1855 Vuillaume had his greatest success as an entrepreneur in his purchase of the collection of the Italian collector Luigi Tarisio, which included the 1716 "Messiah" violin by Antonio Stradivari and many other remarkable Cremonese instruments. This inventory made him the most important dealer of his time and gave his workshop endless inspiration. In terms of his inventive activity, Vuillaume is remembered for the radical cornerless violin designs commissioned by him of François Chanot in 1818, as well as for ambitious ventures such as the gigantic Octo-Bass, now preserved in the Musée de la Musique in Paris. This is all in addition to his many innovations in bow making, including the hollow steel bows made c.1834-1850, and the self-hairing bow, which he patented in 1835.
As a scholar, Vuillaume cooperated with the acoustician Félix Savart on theoretical approaches and varnish research as well as with the writer François-Joseph Fétis, whose seminal work Antoine Stradivari, luthier célèbre connu sous le nom de Stradivarius Vuillaume both contributed to and published.
Vuillaume was awarded numerous medals at Paris in 1829, 1833, 1839, and 1844. He also received the Council Medal at the London exposition in 1851 and was elected to the Légion d'Honneur by the French Government.