Étienne Vatelot

Étienne Vatelot (13 November 1925 – 13 July 2013) was a French luthier.

Étienne Vatelot
Born13 November 1925
Died17 July 2013(2013-07-17) (aged 87)
Paris
OccupationLuthier

Biography

Étienne Vatelot is the son of luthier Marcel Vatelot, who opened his workshop in 1909, and Jehane Lauxerrois. He attended high school at the Institution Notre-Dame de Sainte-Croix. From 1942, he learned the craft of luthier in the workshop of his father, located at 11 bis rue Portalis in Paris.[1][2] He perfected his skills in Mirecourt with luthier Amédée-Dominique Dieudonné, in Paris in the studio of Victor Quenoil, then in New York at Rembert Wurlitzer.[2][3] In 1949, he obtained the diploma of honor at the International Violin Competition of The Hague (Netherland). In 1959 he was appointed expert witness by the Court of Appeal of Paris and succeeded his father.[1]

Étienne Vatelot used to compare his profession to that of a doctor. He was renowned for his diagnostic capabilities[2] He regulated the instruments of numerous international soloists that he accompanied on tour, like French violinist Ginette Neveu. During his career, he advised Yehudi Menuhin, Arthur Grumiaux, Isaac Stern, Anne-Sophie Mutter, cellists such as Maurice Gendron and Yo-Yo Ma, as well as Mstislav Rostropovich, whom he has known since the 1960s.[1][4] He advised him to buy the Duport Stradivarius cello which he had appraised. He convinced Yehudi Menuhin to resell his Soil Stradivarius, which he deemed unsuitable for his playing, to Itzhak Perlman. In 1973, he acquired a quartet of stringed instruments made in the same wood by luthier Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume and nicknamed "les Évangélistes". In 2009, he allowed the Swiss Global Artistic Foundation, a patron of the Modigliani quartet, to acquire it so that they could be played together.[5][6]

In 1970, Étienne Vatelot created the national school of lutherie in Mirecourt.[1][6] The luthier Jean-Jacques Rampal, son of the flautist Jean-Pierre Rampal and assistant to Étienne Vatelot, took over his workshop in 1998[1][6] Étienne Vatelot gave numerous lectures and is the author of a book on Archets français ("French bows").[7] A foundation in his name was created to support young luthiers and bowmen by giving them scholarships.[2][4] With the participation of the Paris City Council, he created an international competition for violin and bow making.[6]

Distinctions

gollark: Or, well, could be.
gollark: I'm really quite impressed by how bad LyricTech™ strategies are, really.
gollark: We simulated all possible strategies you could use. They were bad. Really bad.
gollark: Maybe you're naive enough to believe the fake telemetry being transmitted using their keys, but we aren't.
gollark: Yes. They're actually quite bad.

See also

References

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