THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, June 13, 1994 TAG: 9406130228 SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: B03 EDITION: FINAL SOURCE: DAILY PRESS DATELINE: 940613 LENGTH: WILLIAMSBURG
The 18th-century keyboard instrument rests on a simple stand against one wall of the palace ballroom. Its polished brown casing looks like mahogany but is actually oak covered with a walnut veneer. Under the lid, a brass rose embedded in the soundboard is Kirckman's trademark.
{REST} On many evenings, the brilliant sound of the instrument can be heard at palace concerts, just as when Thomas Jefferson played there. The rest of the time, it silently documents the rich history of an earlier century.
Until a month ago, the harpsichord lay in pieces in the foundation's conservation shop. John Watson, Colonial Williamsburg's restorer of musical instruments, labored on it for more than four years. Along the way, he made some groundbreaking discoveries about the instrument-making techniques of the 18th-century London artisan who built it.
Watson's profession is part tradesman, part scientist, part detective. He blends the old-fashioned manual labor of a chisel with the sophisticated sleuthing of a microscope to unravel the secrets of each project.
``It's been said that the most damaging moment in the life of an antique is when it goes into the restoration shop,'' the 41-year-old conservator said.
A Kirckman harpsichord isn't the rarest of antiques. The Englishman, who lived from 1710 to 1792, was the most prolific harpsichord maker in history, Watson said.
Colonial Williamsburg owns three of the 153 Kirckmans in existence. The second is on display at the nearby DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Gallery, and the third is in storage.
Built in 1758, the palace instrument was given to the foundation 11 years ago by Joan Dunning of White Post, near Winchester. It originally was owned by the British Broadcasting Corp., she said. When the BBC offered it for sale, Mrs. Dunning's husband purchased it and had it brought to the United States.
``My husband played the violin and he liked to be accompanied by a harpsichord,'' Mrs. Dunning said.
Watson first saw it six years ago when he came to work at the foundation.
When the restoration work was first completed, said Watson, the harpsichord's bass was rich and powerful while its treble, or upper register, was weak. The more it's played, he said, the better it sounds.
``When an instrument isn't played, the wood almost forgets to vibrate,'' he said.
by CNB