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Vermeer Jan | 1632-1675 | [ Back | Photos ]
Dutch painter. He specialized in
domestic interiors, portraits and
city views. His entire life was spent
in Delft, where, it has been suggested,
he may have been trained by Leonaert
Bramer or Carel Fabritius.
His work does indeed show an affinity
with that of Fabritius, but their
relationship remains uncertain. Vermeer
was a Master in the Delft painters'
guild from 1653, was elected Dean
(hoofdman) in 1662-3 and 1670-71,
and was highly regarded in his lifetime,
although he seems to have never been
particularly wealthy, leaving his
wife and 11 children in debt at his
death. His name and reputation were
almost forgotten until 1866 when the
art critic Thoré Burger published
an essay attributing 66 pictures to
him (only 34 paintings are firmly
attributed to him today).
The few contemporary references to
his paintings all relate to surviving
works, so it is unlikely that there
were ever many more - he may have
been a slow worker and probably (like
many Dutch painters of this period)
had another source of income - a trip
to The Hague in 1672 to authenticate
some paintings suggests that he may
have been a picture dealer. A chronology
of Vermeer's work is complicated by
the fact that only three paintings
are dated: The Procuress (1656, Dresden,
Gemäldegalerie), The Astronomer (1668,
private collection), and The Geographer
(1669, Frankfurt, Städelsches). Two
pictures are generally accepted as
earlier than The Procuress; both are
history paintings, painted in a warm
palette and in a relatively large
format for Vermeer - Christ in the
House of Mary and Martha (Edinburgh,
National Gallery) and Diana and her
Companions (The Hague, Mauritshuis).
After The Procuress almost all of
Vermeer's paintings are of contemporary
subjects in a smaller format, with
a cooler palette dominated by blues,
yellows and greys. It is to this period
that practically all of his surviving
works belong.
They are usually domestic interiors
with one or two figures lit by a window
on the left. They are characterized
by a serene sense of compositional
balance and spatial order, unified
by an almost pearly light. Mundane
domestic or recreational activities
become thereby imbued with a poetic
timelessness (e.g. Woman Reading a
Letter at an Open Window, Dresden,
Gemäldegalerie).
To this period also have been allocated
Vermeer's two townscapes, View of
Delft (The Hague, Mauritshuis) and
A Street in Delft (Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum).
A few of his paintings show a certain
hardening of manner and these are
generally thought to represent his
late works. From this period come
The Allegory of Faith (c 1670, New
York, Metropolitan Museum) and The
Letter (c 1670, Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum).
The often discussed sparkling pearly
highlights in Vermeer's paintings
have been linked to his probable use
of a camera obscura, the primitive
lens of which would produce halation
and, even more noticeably, exaggerated
perspective. Such effects can be seen
in Lady at the Virginals with a Gentleman
(London, Royal Collection). Vermeer's
interest in optics is also attested
in this work by the accurately observed
mirror reflection above the lady at
the virginals.
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| Vermeer Jan |
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| Girl with a pearl earing |
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| The milkmaid |
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