The maker of the 1681 Vaudry harpsichord:
a case of mistaken identity?
Photo © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
2026-02-19 by Lance Whitehead
The Vaudry harpsichord preserved at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London (BMO-2005) is clearly an important artefact. Made in Paris in 1681, the instrument is one of only 20 or so extant seventeenth-century French harpsichords, and, apparently still in playing order, has been copied by numerous modern makers, including Andrew Garlick, Owen Daly, David Rubio and Matthias Griewisch. For art historians, the outer case chinoiserie decoration is also very interesting. Although it includes Asian-style pagodas and birds, the figures are entirely European in appearance and mostly derived from Pastorales, a suite of 16 engravings produced in Paris in 1667 by Claudine Bouzonnet Stella, and identified as no.9, ‘A Game of Boule’ (on the cheek), as well as no.12, ‘Returning from Work’ and a modified vignette from no.13, ‘A Farmer Seated at the Table with his Family’ (on the bentside). Writers almost invariably report that the instrument was made by Jean-Antoine Vaudry, but given the instrument is signed simply VAUDRY / à Paris / 1681, what is the evidence for this?
Firstly, it should be stressed that there is very little archival evidence concerning Jean-Antoine Vaudry. There is no birth certificate, no burial record and he seems not to be listed in the Registres des jurandes et maîtrises des métiers de la ville de Paris. There is, however, a contract of marriage between Jean-Antoine and Marie Angélique Mathieu, dated 29 September 1706, which gives his occupation as maître et marchand faiseur d’instruments de musique, records his address as rue Saint-Jacques (apparently the oldest street in Paris), and names his brother as Edmé Vaudry, a harpsichordist and organist of Saint-Jean-en-Grève.
Photo © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
Like many Parisian makers, no record of Jean-Antoine’s burial has been uncovered and it has probably been lost. There is circumstantial evidence, however, that he died in c1750. In his volume Les Facteurs de clavecins parisiens: notices biographiques et documents (1550–1793) (Paris, 1966, p.75), Colombe Samoyault-Verlet reports that on 7 April 1750 and following Jean-Antoine’s death, his brother Edmé renounced his inheritance. This is an important piece of the jigsaw, since if we assume Jean-Antoine was about 25 years of age in 1681, when the harpsichord was built, then he must have died at the age of about 94. Although not impossible, is it perhaps more likely that he was born in c1680 and died in 1750 at the age of 70? If so, is there any evidence that his father was a harpsichord maker?
In addition to recording Jean-Antoine’s occupation, his contract of marriage confirms his parents as Jean Vaudry and Marguerite Leroux, and gives his father’s occupation as maître faiseur d’instruments de musique du roi. Although not specifically recorded as a harpsichord maker, other known makers such as Louis Denis, Nicolas Sellier and François-Etienne Blanchet (I) are all similarly documented as maître faiseur d’instruments de musique in the French National Archives. Moreover, it is possible that Jean Vaudry is the same person as ‘Voudry, rue saint Jacques’, listed with other known organ builders and harpsichord makers in a late seventeenth-century address book by Nicolas de Blegny:
Blegny, Nicolas de. Le Livre commode contenant les Adresses de la ville de Paris, et le Tresor des almanachs pour l’année 1692. Paris, chez la Veuve de Denis Nion, 1692, p.62:
Messieurs Denis, sur le Quay neuf, Richard, rue du Paon, Rosée, rue de Clery, Creteil, rue Poupée, Dathene, rue saint Antoine, Voudry [Vaudry], rue saint Jacques, Boudet, rue saint Martin, Thierry, rue sainte Marguerite, du Catel [Ducastel] & l’Esclop [Henry Lesclop], rue Omer, Clico [Clicquot], rue Philippot, & le Febvre [Lefebvre], rue Aubry-Boucher, fabriquent, rajustent & accordent les Orgues & les Clavecins.
No record of marriage between Jean Vaudry and Marguerite Leroux has been identified, but a placard of death for Marguerite le Doux (sic) confirms that Vaudry was instrument maker to the King, and gives his address as rue Saint Jacques:
Placard of death for Marguerite le Doux (28 August 1718):
Vous estes priez d’assister au Convoy & Enterrement de deffunte Marguerite le Doux, épouse de Monsieur Vaudry, seul Maistre Faiseur d’Instrument de Musique du Roy à la suite de son Grand-Conseil, décedee en sa maison ruë Saint Jacques; Qui se sera ce-jourd’huy Dimanche 28. Aoust 1718. À six heures prècises du soir, en l’Eglise de S. Severin sa Paroisse où elle sera inhumé. La Compagnie s’y trouvera s’il luy plaist.
Un De profundis.
Despite the lack of, and sometimes conflicting, evidence, the information provided by Jean-Antoine Vaudry’s contract of marriage, and his brother’s renouncement of his inheritance in 1750, has important implications for the attribution of the 1681 Vaudry harpsichord. Given that two generations of the Vaudry family seem to have been musical instrument makers, it seems more likely that the harpsichord usually attributed to Jean-Antoine Vaudry was made in the workshop of his father Jean Vaudry.







To try and establish the truth, I visited Fenton House in October last year and examined the relevant documents from the 1950s. I did not find any evidence that BMO-301 had ever been on display there. But Raymond Russell did loan a harpsichord to the house, in 1956–7. It was 



There is more evidence with regards Burkat Shudi’s workforce and it is possible to identify the names of six of his journeymen, including two of Swiss heritage: Hans Balthasar Zopfi (1713–50) and Samuel Blumer (1722–60). Zopfi originated from the same hometown as Shudi, and Blumer’s undated trade card states that he was ‘late Foreman to Mr. Shudi’. The names of four other journeymen are known from an affidavit sworn by three of them on 12 January 1767 and published two days later in the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser: Andrew Clark(e), John Broadwood, Thomas Nixon and Joshua Shudi. 















kers appear to have been able to make a living solely from musical instrument making. Some, such as Robert Falkener and Longman & Broderip, combined harpsichord making with music publishing, and there is evidence that makers occasionally let rooms to supplement their income. Mary Shudi (the widow of Joshua Shudi), for example, placed a notice in the Public Advertiser (16 January 1775) confirming her intention of continuing her late husband’s harpsichord making business at 16 Berwick Street, St James Piccadilly, as well as offering a ‘genteel First Floor to lett (sic), with other Conveniences’. The large number of properties owned and let by various members of the Kirkman family probably added significantly to their flourishing harpsichord and piano making business. George Downing, who worked as a harpsichord maker during the 1760s and early 1770s, later concentrated on tuning and the sale of second-hand harpsichords, particularly those by Kirkman. Moreover, he invented a type of lamp, known as a ‘Chamber Lanthorn’, and in c1790 opened a warehouse at 5 New Street, Covent Garden, with a patent Lamp Shop on the ground floor and harpsichord showroom on the first floor (see notice in the World, 8 November 1790).



