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Johannes Vermeer

Johannes Vermeer (/vərˈmɪər, vərˈmɛər/, Dutch: [vərˈmeːr], see below; also known as Jan Vermeer; October 1632 – 15 December 1675) was a Dutch Baroque Period[3] painter who specialized in domestic interior scenes of middle-class life. He is considered one of the greatest painters of the Dutch Golden Age along with Rembrandt. During his lifetime, he was a moderately successful provincial genre painter, recognized in Delft and The Hague. He produced relatively few paintings, primarily earning his living as an art dealer. He was not wealthy at his death, leaving his wife in debt.[4]

Johannes Vermeer
Detail of the painting The Procuress (c. 1656), believed to be a self portrait by Vermeer[1]
Born
Joannis Vermeer

baptised 31 October 1632
Died15 December 1675(1675-12-15) (aged 43)
Delft, Holland, Dutch Republic
Known forPainting
Notable work34 works universally attributed[2]
MovementDutch Golden Age
Baroque
SpouseCatharina Bolnes
Signature

Vermeer worked slowly and with great care, and frequently used very expensive pigments. He is particularly renowned for his masterly treatment and use of light in his work.[5] "Almost all his paintings", Hans Koningsberger wrote, "are apparently set in two smallish rooms in his house in Delft; they show the same furniture and decorations in various arrangements and they often portray the same people, mostly women."[6]

His modest celebrity gave way to obscurity after his death. He was barely mentioned in Arnold Houbraken's major source book on 17th-century Dutch painting (Grand Theatre of Dutch Painters and Women Artists, pub 1718) and was thus omitted from subsequent surveys of Dutch art for nearly two centuries.[7][a] In the 19th century, Vermeer was rediscovered by Gustav Friedrich Waagen and Théophile Thoré-Bürger, who published an essay attributing 66 pictures to him, although only 34 paintings are universally attributed to him today.[2] Since that time, Vermeer's reputation has grown enormously.

Pronunciation of name Edit

In Dutch, Vermeer is pronounced [vərˈmeːr], and Johannes Vermeer as [joːˈɦɑnəs fərˈmeːr], with /v/ assimilating to the preceding voiceless /s/ as [f]. The usual English pronunciation is /vərˈmɪər/, with /vɜːrˈmɪər/, with a long first vowel, also occurring in the UK.[9][10][11] /vərˈmɛər/ is also documented.[9][10][12][13] Another pronunciation, /vɛərˈmɪər/, is attested from the UK.[14]

Life Edit

 
Delft in 1649, by cartographer Willem Blaeu
 
The Jesuit Church on the Oude Langendijk in Delft, c. 1730, brush in gray ink, by Abraham Rademaker, coll. Stadsarchief Delft

Relatively little was known about Vermeer's life until recently.[15] He seems to have been devoted exclusively to his art, living out his life in the city of Delft. Until the 19th century, the only sources of information were a few registers, official documents, and comments by other artists; for this reason, Thoré-Bürger named him "The Sphinx of Delft".[16] John Michael Montias added details on the family from the city archives of Delft in his Artists and Artisans in Delft: A Socio-Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century (1982).

Youth and heritage Edit

Johannes Vermeer was baptized within the Reformed Church on 31 October 1632.[17][18][b] His mother, Digna Baltens (c. 1596–1670)[22][c] was from Antwerp.[20] Digna's father, Balthasar Geerts, or Gerrits, (born in Antwerp in or around 1573) led an enterprising life in metalworking, and was arrested for counterfeiting.[24][20] Vermeer's father, named Reijnier Janszoon, was a middle-class worker of silk or caffa (a mixture of silk and cotton or wool).[d] He was the son of Jan Reyersz and Cornelia (Neeltge) Goris.[e] As an apprentice in Amsterdam, Reijnier lived on fashionable Sint Antoniesbreestraat, a street with many resident painters at the time. In 1615, Reijnier married Digna. The couple moved to Delft and had a daughter named Gertruy who was baptized in 1620.[f] In 1625, Reijnier was involved in a fight with a soldier named Willem van Bylandt who died from his wounds five months later.[26] Around this time, Reijnier began dealing in paintings. In 1631, he leased an inn, which he called "The Flying Fox". In 1635, he lived on Voldersgracht 25 or 26. In 1641, he bought a larger inn on the market square, named after the Flemish town "Mechelen". The acquisition of the inn constituted a considerable financial burden.[27] When Reijnier died in October 1652, Vermeer took over the operation of the family's art business.

Marriage and family Edit

In April 1653, Johannes Reijniersz Vermeer married a Catholic woman, Catharina Bolnes (Bolenes).[28] The blessing took place in the quiet nearby village of Schipluiden.[29] Vermeer's new mother-in-law Maria Thins was initially opposed to the marriage as she was significantly wealthier than he, and it was probably she who insisted that Vermeer convert to Catholicism before the marriage on 5 April.[g] The fact that Vermeer's father was in considerable debt also did not help in discussions on the marriage. Leonaert Bramer, who was Catholic himself, put in a good word for Vermeer and it was this that led Maria to drop her oppositions.[29] According to art historian Walter Liedtke, Vermeer's conversion seems to have been made with conviction.[28] His painting The Allegory of Faith,[30] made between 1670 and 1672, placed less emphasis on the artists' usual naturalistic concerns and more on symbolic religious applications, including the sacrament of the Eucharist. Walter Liedtke in Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art suggests that it was made for a learned and devout Catholic patron, perhaps for his schuilkerk, or "hidden church".[31] At some point, the couple moved in with Catharina's mother, who lived in a rather spacious house at Oude Langendijk, almost next to a hidden Jesuit church.[h] Here Vermeer lived for the rest of his life, producing paintings in the front room on the second floor. His wife gave birth to 15 children, four of whom were buried before being baptized, but were registered as "child of Johan Vermeer".[32] The names of 10 of Vermeer's children are known from wills written by relatives: Maertge, Elisabeth, Cornelia, Aleydis, Beatrix, Johannes, Gertruyd, Franciscus, Catharina, and Ignatius.[33] Several of these names carry a religious connotation, and the youngest (Ignatius) was likely named after the founder of the Jesuit order.[i][j]

Career Edit

 
Replica of the St. Luke Guildhouse on Voldersgracht in Delft

It is unclear where and with whom Vermeer apprenticed as a painter. There is some speculation that Carel Fabritius may have been his teacher, based upon a controversial interpretation of a text written in 1668 by printer Arnold Bon. Art historians have found no hard evidence to support this.[34] Local authority Leonaert Bramer acted as a friend, but their style of painting is rather different.[35] Liedtke suggests that Vermeer taught himself using information from one of his father's connections.[36] Some scholars think that Vermeer was trained under Catholic painter Abraham Bloemaert. Vermeer's style is similar to that of some of the Utrecht Caravaggists, whose works are depicted as paintings-within-paintings in the backgrounds of several of his compositions.[k]

 
A View of Delft after the Explosion of 1654, by Egbert van der Poel

On 29 December 1653, Vermeer became a member of the Guild of Saint Luke, a trade association for painters. The guild's records make clear that Vermeer did not pay the usual admission fee. It was a year of plague, war, and economic crisis; Vermeer was not alone in experiencing difficult financial circumstances. In 1654, the city suffered the terrible explosion known as the Delft Thunderclap, which destroyed a large section of the city.[37] Pieter van Ruijven and Maria de Knuijt were Vermeer's patrons for the better part of the artist's career. In 2023, his wife Maria de Knuijt was identified by the curators of the 2023 exhibition of Vermeer's works at the Rijksmuseum, in Amsterdam as the main patron due to her long-standing and supportive relationship with the artist.[38] It seems that Vermeer turned for inspiration to the art of the fijnschilders from Leiden. Vermeer was responding to the market of Gerard Dou's paintings, who sold his paintings for exorbitant prices. Dou may have influenced Pieter de Hooch and Gabriel Metsu, too. Vermeer also charged higher than average prices for his work, most of which were purchased by an unknown collector.[39]

 
View of Delft (1660–61): "He took a turbulent reality, and made it look like Heaven on earth."[40]

The influence of Johannes Vermeer on Metsu is unmistakable: the light from the left, the marble floor.[41][42][43] (A. Waiboer, however, suggests that Metsu requires more emotional involvement of the viewer.) Vermeer probably competed also with Nicolaes Maes, who produced genre works in a similar style. In 1662, Vermeer was elected head of the guild and was reelected in 1663, 1670, and 1671, evidence that he (like Bramer) was considered an established craftsman among his peers. Vermeer worked slowly, probably producing three paintings a year on order. Balthasar de Monconys visited him in 1663 to see some of his work, but Vermeer had no paintings to show. The diplomat and the two French clergymen who accompanied him were sent to Hendrick van Buyten, a baker who had a couple of his paintings as collateral.

In 1671, Gerrit van Uylenburgh organised the auction of Gerrit Reynst's collection and offered 13 paintings and some sculptures to Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg. Frederick accused them of being counterfeits and had sent 12 back on the advice of Hendrick Fromantiou.[44] Van Uylenburg then organized a counter-assessment, asking a total of 35 painters to pronounce on their authenticity, including Jan Lievens, Melchior de Hondecoeter, Gerbrand van den Eeckhout, and Johannes Vermeer.

Wars and death Edit

 
The Little Street (1657–58)
 
Memorial (2007) of Johannes Vermeer in Oude Kerk. Delft, Netherlands

In 1672, a severe economic downturn (the "Year of Disaster") struck the Netherlands, after Louis XIV and a French army invaded the Dutch Republic from the south (known as the Franco-Dutch War). During the Third Anglo-Dutch War, an English fleet attacked by sea, and two allied German bishops invaded the country from the east, causing more destruction. Many people panicked; courts, theaters, shops and schools were closed. Vermeer's sale of a painting[clarify] that year was his last.[29] Five years passed before circumstances improved. In 1674, Vermeer was listed as a member of the civic guards.[45] In the summer of 1675, Vermeer borrowed 1,000 guilders in Amsterdam from Jacob Romboutsz (grandfather of Hendrick Sorgh), an Amsterdam silk trader, using his mother-in-law's property as a surety.[46][47]

On 15 December 1675, Vermeer died after a short illness aged 43. He was buried in the Protestant Old Church on 15 December 1675.[l][m] In a petition to her creditors, Catharina Bolnes attributed her husband's death to the stress of financial pressures, and described his death as follows:

...during the ruinous war with France he not only was unable to sell any of his art but also, to his great detriment, was left sitting with the paintings of other masters that he was dealing in. As a result and owing to the great burden of his children having no means of his own, he lapsed into such decay and decadence, which he had so taken to heart that, as if he had fallen into a frenzy, in a day and a half he went from being healthy to being dead.[48]

Catharina describes how the collapse of the art market had damaged Vermeer's business as both a painter and an art dealer. She had to raise 11 children and therefore asked the High Court to relieve her of debts owed to Vermeer's creditors.[32] Pioneering Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, who worked for the city council as a surveyor, was appointed trustee.[49] The house had eight rooms on the first floor, the contents of which were listed in an inventory taken a few months after Vermeer's death.[50] In his studio, there were two chairs, two painter's easels, three palettes, 10 canvases, a desk, an oak pull table, a small wooden cupboard with drawers, and "rummage not worthy being itemized".[51] Nineteen of Vermeer's paintings were bequeathed to Catharina and her mother. The widow sold two more paintings to Hendrick van Buyten to pay off a substantial debt.[52]

Vermeer had been a respected artist in Delft, but he was almost unknown outside his hometown. A local patron named Pieter van Ruijven had purchased much of his output, which kept Vermeer afloat financially but reduced the possibility of his fame spreading.[n] Several factors contributed to his limited body of work. Vermeer never had any pupils, though one scholar has suggested that Vermeer taught his eldest daughter Maria to paint.[53] Additionally, his family obligations with so many children may have taken up much of his time, as would acting as both an art dealer and inn-keeper in running the family businesses. His time spent serving as head of the guild and his extraordinary precision as a painter may have also limited his output.

Style Edit

 
The Milkmaid (c. 1658), Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam

Vermeer may have first executed his paintings tonally like most painters of his time, using either monochrome shades of grey ("grisaille") or a limited palette of browns and greys ("dead coloring"), over which he would apply more saturated colors (reds, yellows and blues) in the form of transparent glazes. No drawings have been positively attributed to Vermeer, and his paintings offer few clues to preparatory methods.

There is no other 17th-century artist who employed the exorbitantly expensive pigment ultramarine (derived from natural lapis lazuli) either so lavishly or so early in his career. Vermeer used this in not just elements that are naturally of this colour; he also used it early in a work, beneath subsequent earth colours such as umber and ochre, to subtly tint their shade.[54] This working method most probably was inspired by Vermeer's understanding of Leonardo's observations that the surface of every object partakes of the colour of the adjacent object.[55]

An example of Vermeer using ultramarine as an underpaint is in The Girl with the Wine Glass. The shadows of the red satin dress are underpainted in natural ultramarine,[56] and, owing to this underlying blue paint layer, the red lake and vermilion mixture applied over it acquires a slightly purple, cool and crisp appearance.

Even after Vermeer's evident financial breakdown following the so-called rampjaar (year of disaster) in 1672, he continued to employ natural ultramarine generously, such as in Lady Seated at a Virginal. This could suggest that Vermeer was supplied with materials by a collector, and would coincide with John Michael Montias' theory that Pieter van Ruijven was Vermeer's patron.

Vermeer's works are largely genre pieces and portraits, with the exception of two cityscapes and two allegories. His subjects offer a cross-section of seventeenth-century Dutch society, ranging from the portrayal of a simple milkmaid at work, to the luxury and splendour of rich notables and merchantmen in their roomy houses. Besides these subjects, religious, poetical, musical, and scientific comments can also be found in his work.[citation needed]

Painting materials Edit

One aspect of his meticulous painting technique was Vermeer's choice of pigments.[57] He is best known for his frequent use of the very expensive ultramarine (The Milkmaid), and also lead-tin-yellow (A Lady Writing a Letter), madder lake (Christ in the House of Martha and Mary), and vermilion. He also painted with ochres, bone black and azurite.[58] The claim that he used Indian yellow in Woman Holding a Balance[59] has been disproven by pigment analysis.[60]

In Vermeer's oeuvre, only about 20 pigments have been detected. Of these, seven principal pigments that Vermeer commonly employed are lead white, yellow ochre, vermilion, madder lake, green earth, raw umber, and ivory or bone black.[61]

Theories of mechanical aid Edit

Vermeer's painting techniques have long been a source of debate, given their almost photorealistic attention to detail, despite Vermeer's having had no formal training, and despite only limited evidence that Vermeer had created any preparatory sketches or traces for his paintings.[62]

In 2001, British artist David Hockney published the book Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters, in which he argued that Vermeer (among other Renaissance and Baroque artists including Hans Holbein and Diego Velázquez) used optics to achieve precise positioning in their compositions, and specifically some combination of curved mirrors, camera obscura, and camera lucida. This became known as the Hockney–Falco thesis, named after Hockney and Charles M. Falco, another proponent of the theory.

Philip Steadman published the book Vermeer's Camera: Uncovering the Truth behind the Masterpieces in 2001 which specifically claimed that Vermeer had used a camera obscura to create his paintings. Steadman noted that many of Vermeer's paintings had been painted in the same room, and he found six of his paintings that are precisely the right size if they had been painted from inside a camera obscura in the room's back wall.[63]

Supporters of these theories have pointed to evidence in some of Vermeer's paintings, such as the often-discussed sparkling pearly highlights in Vermeer's paintings, which they argue are the result of the primitive lens of a camera obscura producing halation. It was also postulated that a camera obscura was the mechanical cause of the "exaggerated" perspective seen in The Music Lesson (London, Royal Collection).[64]

In 2008, American entrepreneur and inventor Tim Jenison developed the theory that Vermeer had used a camera obscura along with a "comparator mirror", which is similar in concept to a camera lucida but much simpler and makes it easy to match colour values. He later modified the theory to simply involve a concave mirror and a comparator mirror. He spent the next five years testing his theory by attempting to re-create The Music Lesson himself using these tools, a process captured in the 2013 documentary film Tim's Vermeer.[65]

Several points were brought out by Jenison in support of this technique: first was Vermeer's hyper-accurate rendition of light falloff along the wall. Neurobiologist Colin Blakemore, in an interview with Jenison, notes that human vision cannot process information about the absolute brightness of a scene.[66] Another was the addition of several highlights and outlines consistent with matching the effects of chromatic aberration, particularly noticeable in primitive optics. Last, and perhaps most telling, is a noticeable curvature in the original painting's rendition of the scrollwork on the virginal. This effect matched Jenison's technique precisely, caused by exactly duplicating the view as seen from a curved mirror.

This theory remains disputed. There is no historical evidence regarding Vermeer's interest in optics, and the detailed inventory of the artist's belongings drawn up after his death includes no camera obscura or any similar device.[67][50][o] However, Vermeer was in close connection with pioneer lens maker Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, who was his executor after death.[69]

Works Edit

It is believed Vermeer produced a total of fewer than 50 paintings, of which 34 have survived.[70] Only three Vermeer paintings were dated by the artist: The Procuress (1656; Gemäldegalerie, Dresden); The Astronomer (1668; Musée du Louvre, Paris); and The Geographer (1669; Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt).

Vermeer's mother-in-law Maria Thins owned Dirck van Baburen's 1622 oil on canvas The Procuress (or a copy of it), which appears in the background of two of Vermeer's paintings. The same subject was also painted by Vermeer. Almost all of Vermeer's paintings are of contemporary subjects in a smaller format, with a cooler palette dominated by blues, yellows, and grays. Vermeer painted multiple artworks portraying a pure profile like the painting Woman with a Pearl Necklace, which was uncommon in Dutch art at the time.[71] Practically all of his surviving works belong to this period, usually domestic interiors with one or two figures lit by a window on the left.[72] They are characterized by a sense of compositional balance and spatial order, unified by a pearly light. Mundane domestic or recreational activities are imbued with a poetic timelessness (e.g., Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window, Dresden, Gemäldegalerie). Vermeer's two townscapes have also been attributed to this period: View of Delft (The Hague, Mauritshuis) and The Little Street (Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum).

A few of his paintings show a certain hardening of manner and are generally thought to represent his late works. From this period come The Allegory of Faith (c. 1670; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and The Love Letter (c. 1670; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam).

Legacy Edit

 
Théophile Thoré-Bürger

Originally, Vermeer's works were largely overlooked by art historians for two centuries after his death. A select number of connoisseurs in the Netherlands did appreciate his work, yet even so, many of his works were attributed to then better-known artists such as Metsu or Mieris. The Delft master's modern rediscovery began about 1860, when German museum director Gustav Waagen saw The Art of Painting in the Czernin gallery in Vienna and recognized the work as a Vermeer, though it was attributed to Pieter de Hooch at that time.[73] Research by Théophile Thoré-Bürger culminated in the publication of his catalogue raisonné of Vermeer's works in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts in 1866.[74] Thoré-Bürger's catalogue drew international attention to Vermeer[75] and listed more than 70 works by him, including many that he regarded as uncertain.[74]

Upon the rediscovery of Vermeer's work, several prominent Dutch artists modelled their style on his work, including Simon Duiker. Other artists who were inspired by Vermeer include Danish painter Wilhelm Hammershoi[76] and American Thomas Wilmer Dewing.[77] In the 20th century, Vermeer's admirers included Salvador Dalí, who painted his own version of The Lacemaker (on commission from collector Robert Lehman) and pitted large copies of the original against a rhinoceros in some surrealist experiments. Dali also celebrated the master in The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can Be Used As a Table, 1934.

Han van Meegeren was a 20th-century Dutch painter who worked in the classical tradition. He became a master forger, motivated by a blend of aesthetic and financial reasons, creating and selling many new "Vermeers" before turning himself in for forgery to avoid being charged with capital treason for collaboration with the Nazis, specifically, in selling what had been believed to be original artwork to the Nazis.[78]

On the evening of 23 September 1971, a 21-year-old hotel waiter, Mario Pierre Roymans, stole Vermeer's Love Letter from the Fine Arts Palace in Brussels where it was on loan from the Rijksmuseum for the exhibition Rembrandt and his Age.[79]

To mark the 26th anniversary of the opening of an exhibition at Washington, DC's National Gallery of Art featuring his work, Google honored Vermeer with a Google Doodle on 12 November 2021.[80]

A 2023 exhibition at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam featured 28 of his works, the most ever shown together.[81] Over 650,000 people visited the exhibition, making it the museum’s most visited exhibition.[82] Coinciding with the 2023 exhibition the documentary film Close to Vermeer was released the same year. The film followed curators Gregor J. M. Weber and Pieter Roelofs as they sought loans of Vermeer's artwork from museums around the world.[83] Also released in 2023 was another movie about the exhibition at the Rijkmuseum: "Vermeer: The Greatest Exhibition". (External links to both movies are below.)

In popular culture Edit

Vermeer's reputation and works have been featured in both literature and in films. Tracy Chevalier's novel Girl with a Pearl Earring (1999), and the 2003 film of the same name, present a fictional account of Vermeer's creation of the famous painting and his relationship with the equally fictional model.

Many artists are inspired by the famous painter, for example, culinary photographer Aimee Twigger draws on Vermeer's chiaroscuro for her gustatory journeys through recipes.[84]

Gallery of selected works Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Vermeer was largely unknown to the general public, but his reputation was not totally eclipsed after his death: "While it is true that he did not achieve widespread fame until the 19th century, his work had always been valued and admired by well-informed connoisseurs."[8]
  2. ^ Vermeer was baptized as Joannis.[19][17] Jan was the most popular version of the name among Calvinists. Joannis was a Latinazied form of Jan, which was preferred by Roman Catholics and upper-middle class Protestants.[19][17] However, Vermeer was born into a lower-middle class family.[20][21] Still, according to Montias, it is unlikely that his parents were Catholics "at this time [the time of Vermeer's baptism]," seeing that they "baptized him in the established church."[19] Throughout his life, Vermeer never used the name Jan. Nevertheless, "most Dutch authors, in the century since his rediscovery, have dubbed him Jan, perhaps unconsciously to bring him closer to the mainstream of Calvinist culture."[19][17]
  3. ^ His mother was born in Antwerp. When she married Vermeer's father in 1615, she claimed to be twenty years old, but she may have "exaggerated her age by a year or so."[23] Digna's parents were married in Antwerp in 1596.
  4. ^ His name was Reijnier or Reynier Janszoon, always written in Dutch as Jansz. or Jansz; this was his patronym. As there was another Reijnier Jansz at that time in Delft, it seemed necessary to use the pseudonym "Vos", meaning Fox. From 1640 onward, he had changed his alias to Vermeer.
  5. ^ Neeltge remarried three times, the second time shortly after Jan's death, in October 1597.[25]
  6. ^ In 1647 Geertruy, Vermeer's only sister, married a frame maker. She kept on working at the inn helping her parents, serving drinks and making beds.
  7. ^ Catholicism was not a forbidden religion, but tolerated in the Dutch Republic. They were not allowed to build new churches, so services were held in hidden churches (so-called Schuilkerk). Catholics were restrained in their careers, unable to get high-rank jobs in city administration or civic guard. It was impossible to be elected as a member of the city council; therefore, the Catholics were not represented in the provincial and national assembly.
  8. ^ A Roman Catholic chapel now exists at this spot.
  9. ^ The parish registers of the Delft Catholic church do not exist anymore, so it is impossible to prove but likely that his children were baptized in a hidden church.
  10. ^ The number of children seems inconsistent, but 11 was stated by his widow in a document to get help from the city council. One child died after this document was written.
  11. ^ Identifiable works include compositions by Utrecht painters Baburen and Everdingen.
  12. ^ He was baptized as Joannis, but buried under the name Jan.[relevant?]
  13. ^ When Catharina Bolnes was buried in 1688, she was registered as the "widow of Johan Vermeer".
  14. ^ Van Ruijven's son-in-law Jacob Dissius owned 21 paintings by Vermeer, listed in his heritage in 1695. These paintings were sold in Amsterdam the following year in a much-studied auction, published by Gerard Hoet.
  15. ^ The inventory taken soon after Vermeer’s death does not mention a camera obscura, although it does include easels, palettes, canvases, and a possible maulstick. Gold, silver, jewellery, or musical instruments are not mentioned; it has been suggested that Catharina Bolnes might have removed any valuables from the house to conceal them from her creditors, or pawned the jewels and gold and silver.[68]

References Edit

  1. ^ Boone, Jon. "The Procuress: Evidence for a Vermeer Self-Portrait". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  2. ^ a b Janson, Jonathan. "Complete Vermeer Catalogue & Tracker". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 16 June 2010.
  3. ^ Courtney, Jennifer; Sanford, Courtney (2018). Marvelous To Behold. Classical Conversations. ISBN 978-0-9995748-4-3.
  4. ^ "Jan Vermeer". The Bulfinch Guide to Art History. Artchive. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  5. ^ Janson, Jonathan (5 February 2003). "An Interview with Jørgen Wadum". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  6. ^ Koningsberger, Hans (1977). The World of Vermeer. New York: Time-Life Books. OCLC 755281576.
  7. ^ Barker, Emma; et al. (1999). The Changing Status of the Artist. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 199. ISBN 0-300-07740-8.
  8. ^ Blankert, Albert (2007). Blankert, Albert; Montias, John Michael; Aillaud, Gilles (eds.). Vermeer and his Public. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-58567-979-9. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  9. ^ a b Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  10. ^ a b Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  11. ^ Upton, Clive; Kretzschmar, William A. Jr. (2017). The Routledge Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-12566-7.
  12. ^ "Vermeer". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  13. ^ "Vermeer". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  14. ^ "Vermeer". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  15. ^ Janson, Jonathan. "Vermeer the Man and Painter". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  16. ^ . The Economist. 1 April 2001. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  17. ^ a b c d Janso, Jonathan. "Vermeer's Name". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  18. ^ "Digital Family Tree of the Municipal Records Office of the City of Delft". Beheersraad Digitale Stamboom. 2004. Archived from the original on 23 February 2013. Retrieved 21 September 2009. The painter is recorded as: Child=Joannis; Father=Reijnier Jansz; Mother=Dingnum Balthasars; Witnesses=Pieter Brammer, Jan Heijndricxsz, Maertge Jans; Place=Delft; Date of baptism=31 October 1632.
  19. ^ a b c d Montias 2018, p. 64–65
  20. ^ a b c Janson, Jonathan. "Vermeer's Life and Art (part one)". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  21. ^ "Johannes Vermeer". The Art Story. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  22. ^ Janson, Jonathan. "Vermeer's Family Tree". Essential Vermeer. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  23. ^ Montias 2018, p. 17
  24. ^ Montias 1989, p. 17–34.
  25. ^ Montias 1989, p. 35–55.
  26. ^ Montias 1989, p. 83.
  27. ^ Huerta 2003, p. 42.
  28. ^ a b Liedtke, Walter; Plomp, Michiel C.; Rüger, Axel (2001). Vermeer and the Delft school: [catalogue ... in conjunction with the exhibition "Vermeer and the Delft School" held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, from 8 March to 27 May 2001, and at The National Gallery, London, from 20 June to 16 September 2001]. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 359. ISBN 0-87099-973-7.
  29. ^ a b c Schneider, Norbert (2000). Vermeer: The Complete Paintings. Taschen. pp. 8, 13.
  30. ^ "Johannes Vermeer: Allegory of the Catholic Faith (32.100.18)". The Met. Metropolitan Museum of Art. 20 July 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  31. ^ Liedtke 2007, p. 893.
  32. ^ a b Montias 1991, pp. 344–345.
  33. ^ Montias 1991, pp. 370–371.
  34. ^ Montias 1991, p. 104.
  35. ^ Liedtke 2007, p. 886.
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Sources Edit

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • 500 pages on Vermeer and Delft
  • Johannes Vermeer, biography at Artble
  • Essential Vermeer, website dedicated to Johannes Vermeer
  • Johannes Vermeer in the Encyclopædia Britannica
  • Vermeer Center Delft, center with tours about Vermeer
  • Vermeer's Mania for Maps, WGBHForum, 30 December 2016
  • Pigment analyses of many of Vermeer's paintings at Colourlex
  • Location of Vermeer's The Little Street 15 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Vermeer exhibition at the Rijkmuseum, 10 February - 4 June 2023, The New York Times review, The New York Times article, The New York Review of Books review, Laura Cumming, "Vermeer review—one of the most thrilling exhibitions ever conceived", The Guardian, 12 February 2023.
  • Seeing Beyond the Beauty of a Vermeer, The New York Times Magazine, May 25, 2023
  • Close to Vermeer 2023 documentary movie directed by Suzanne Raes
  • Vermeer: The Greatest Exhibition 2023 documentary movie directed by David Bickerstaff
  • Vermeer and Music, From the National Gallery, London 2013 documentary movie directed by Phil Grabsky and Ben Harding
  • Vermeer and the Masters of Genre Painting: Inspiration and Rivalry Exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., October 22, 2017 - January 21, 2018.

johannes, vermeer, vermeer, redirects, here, other, uses, vermeer, disambiguation, ɪər, ɛər, dutch, vərˈmeːr, below, also, known, vermeer, october, 1632, december, 1675, dutch, baroque, period, painter, specialized, domestic, interior, scenes, middle, class, l. Vermeer redirects here For other uses see Vermeer disambiguation Johannes Vermeer v er ˈ m ɪer v er ˈ m ɛer Dutch verˈmeːr see below also known as Jan Vermeer October 1632 15 December 1675 was a Dutch Baroque Period 3 painter who specialized in domestic interior scenes of middle class life He is considered one of the greatest painters of the Dutch Golden Age along with Rembrandt During his lifetime he was a moderately successful provincial genre painter recognized in Delft and The Hague He produced relatively few paintings primarily earning his living as an art dealer He was not wealthy at his death leaving his wife in debt 4 Johannes VermeerDetail of the painting The Procuress c 1656 believed to be a self portrait by Vermeer 1 BornJoannis Vermeerbaptised 31 October 1632Delft Holland Dutch RepublicDied15 December 1675 1675 12 15 aged 43 Delft Holland Dutch RepublicKnown forPaintingNotable work34 works universally attributed 2 MovementDutch Golden Age BaroqueSpouseCatharina BolnesSignatureVermeer worked slowly and with great care and frequently used very expensive pigments He is particularly renowned for his masterly treatment and use of light in his work 5 Almost all his paintings Hans Koningsberger wrote are apparently set in two smallish rooms in his house in Delft they show the same furniture and decorations in various arrangements and they often portray the same people mostly women 6 His modest celebrity gave way to obscurity after his death He was barely mentioned in Arnold Houbraken s major source book on 17th century Dutch painting Grand Theatre of Dutch Painters and Women Artists pub 1718 and was thus omitted from subsequent surveys of Dutch art for nearly two centuries 7 a In the 19th century Vermeer was rediscovered by Gustav Friedrich Waagen and Theophile Thore Burger who published an essay attributing 66 pictures to him although only 34 paintings are universally attributed to him today 2 Since that time Vermeer s reputation has grown enormously Contents 1 Pronunciation of name 2 Life 2 1 Youth and heritage 2 2 Marriage and family 2 3 Career 2 4 Wars and death 3 Style 3 1 Painting materials 3 2 Theories of mechanical aid 4 Works 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 Gallery of selected works 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksPronunciation of name EditIn Dutch Vermeer is pronounced verˈmeːr and Johannes Vermeer as joːˈɦɑnes ferˈmeːr with v assimilating to the preceding voiceless s as f The usual English pronunciation is v er ˈ m ɪer with v ɜːr ˈ m ɪer with a long first vowel also occurring in the UK 9 10 11 v er ˈ m ɛer is also documented 9 10 12 13 Another pronunciation v ɛer ˈ m ɪer is attested from the UK 14 Life Edit nbsp Delft in 1649 by cartographer Willem Blaeu nbsp The Jesuit Church on the Oude Langendijk in Delft c 1730 brush in gray ink by Abraham Rademaker coll Stadsarchief DelftRelatively little was known about Vermeer s life until recently 15 He seems to have been devoted exclusively to his art living out his life in the city of Delft Until the 19th century the only sources of information were a few registers official documents and comments by other artists for this reason Thore Burger named him The Sphinx of Delft 16 John Michael Montias added details on the family from the city archives of Delft in his Artists and Artisans in Delft A Socio Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century 1982 Youth and heritage Edit Johannes Vermeer was baptized within the Reformed Church on 31 October 1632 17 18 b His mother Digna Baltens c 1596 1670 22 c was from Antwerp 20 Digna s father Balthasar Geerts or Gerrits born in Antwerp in or around 1573 led an enterprising life in metalworking and was arrested for counterfeiting 24 20 Vermeer s father named Reijnier Janszoon was a middle class worker of silk or caffa a mixture of silk and cotton or wool d He was the son of Jan Reyersz and Cornelia Neeltge Goris e As an apprentice in Amsterdam Reijnier lived on fashionable Sint Antoniesbreestraat a street with many resident painters at the time In 1615 Reijnier married Digna The couple moved to Delft and had a daughter named Gertruy who was baptized in 1620 f In 1625 Reijnier was involved in a fight with a soldier named Willem van Bylandt who died from his wounds five months later 26 Around this time Reijnier began dealing in paintings In 1631 he leased an inn which he called The Flying Fox In 1635 he lived on Voldersgracht 25 or 26 In 1641 he bought a larger inn on the market square named after the Flemish town Mechelen The acquisition of the inn constituted a considerable financial burden 27 When Reijnier died in October 1652 Vermeer took over the operation of the family s art business Marriage and family Edit In April 1653 Johannes Reijniersz Vermeer married a Catholic woman Catharina Bolnes Bolenes 28 The blessing took place in the quiet nearby village of Schipluiden 29 Vermeer s new mother in law Maria Thins was initially opposed to the marriage as she was significantly wealthier than he and it was probably she who insisted that Vermeer convert to Catholicism before the marriage on 5 April g The fact that Vermeer s father was in considerable debt also did not help in discussions on the marriage Leonaert Bramer who was Catholic himself put in a good word for Vermeer and it was this that led Maria to drop her oppositions 29 According to art historian Walter Liedtke Vermeer s conversion seems to have been made with conviction 28 His painting The Allegory of Faith 30 made between 1670 and 1672 placed less emphasis on the artists usual naturalistic concerns and more on symbolic religious applications including the sacrament of the Eucharist Walter Liedtke in Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art suggests that it was made for a learned and devout Catholic patron perhaps for his schuilkerk or hidden church 31 At some point the couple moved in with Catharina s mother who lived in a rather spacious house at Oude Langendijk almost next to a hidden Jesuit church h Here Vermeer lived for the rest of his life producing paintings in the front room on the second floor His wife gave birth to 15 children four of whom were buried before being baptized but were registered as child of Johan Vermeer 32 The names of 10 of Vermeer s children are known from wills written by relatives Maertge Elisabeth Cornelia Aleydis Beatrix Johannes Gertruyd Franciscus Catharina and Ignatius 33 Several of these names carry a religious connotation and the youngest Ignatius was likely named after the founder of the Jesuit order i j Career Edit nbsp Replica of the St Luke Guildhouse on Voldersgracht in DelftIt is unclear where and with whom Vermeer apprenticed as a painter There is some speculation that Carel Fabritius may have been his teacher based upon a controversial interpretation of a text written in 1668 by printer Arnold Bon Art historians have found no hard evidence to support this 34 Local authority Leonaert Bramer acted as a friend but their style of painting is rather different 35 Liedtke suggests that Vermeer taught himself using information from one of his father s connections 36 Some scholars think that Vermeer was trained under Catholic painter Abraham Bloemaert Vermeer s style is similar to that of some of the Utrecht Caravaggists whose works are depicted as paintings within paintings in the backgrounds of several of his compositions k nbsp A View of Delft after the Explosion of 1654 by Egbert van der PoelOn 29 December 1653 Vermeer became a member of the Guild of Saint Luke a trade association for painters The guild s records make clear that Vermeer did not pay the usual admission fee It was a year of plague war and economic crisis Vermeer was not alone in experiencing difficult financial circumstances In 1654 the city suffered the terrible explosion known as the Delft Thunderclap which destroyed a large section of the city 37 Pieter van Ruijven and Maria de Knuijt were Vermeer s patrons for the better part of the artist s career In 2023 his wife Maria de Knuijt was identified by the curators of the 2023 exhibition of Vermeer s works at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam as the main patron due to her long standing and supportive relationship with the artist 38 It seems that Vermeer turned for inspiration to the art of the fijnschilders from Leiden Vermeer was responding to the market of Gerard Dou s paintings who sold his paintings for exorbitant prices Dou may have influenced Pieter de Hooch and Gabriel Metsu too Vermeer also charged higher than average prices for his work most of which were purchased by an unknown collector 39 nbsp View of Delft 1660 61 He took a turbulent reality and made it look like Heaven on earth 40 The influence of Johannes Vermeer on Metsu is unmistakable the light from the left the marble floor 41 42 43 A Waiboer however suggests that Metsu requires more emotional involvement of the viewer Vermeer probably competed also with Nicolaes Maes who produced genre works in a similar style In 1662 Vermeer was elected head of the guild and was reelected in 1663 1670 and 1671 evidence that he like Bramer was considered an established craftsman among his peers Vermeer worked slowly probably producing three paintings a year on order Balthasar de Monconys visited him in 1663 to see some of his work but Vermeer had no paintings to show The diplomat and the two French clergymen who accompanied him were sent to Hendrick van Buyten a baker who had a couple of his paintings as collateral In 1671 Gerrit van Uylenburgh organised the auction of Gerrit Reynst s collection and offered 13 paintings and some sculptures to Frederick William Elector of Brandenburg Frederick accused them of being counterfeits and had sent 12 back on the advice of Hendrick Fromantiou 44 Van Uylenburg then organized a counter assessment asking a total of 35 painters to pronounce on their authenticity including Jan Lievens Melchior de Hondecoeter Gerbrand van den Eeckhout and Johannes Vermeer Wars and death Edit nbsp The Little Street 1657 58 nbsp Memorial 2007 of Johannes Vermeer in Oude Kerk Delft NetherlandsIn 1672 a severe economic downturn the Year of Disaster struck the Netherlands after Louis XIV and a French army invaded the Dutch Republic from the south known as the Franco Dutch War During the Third Anglo Dutch War an English fleet attacked by sea and two allied German bishops invaded the country from the east causing more destruction Many people panicked courts theaters shops and schools were closed Vermeer s sale of a painting clarify that year was his last 29 Five years passed before circumstances improved In 1674 Vermeer was listed as a member of the civic guards 45 In the summer of 1675 Vermeer borrowed 1 000 guilders in Amsterdam from Jacob Romboutsz grandfather of Hendrick Sorgh an Amsterdam silk trader using his mother in law s property as a surety 46 47 On 15 December 1675 Vermeer died after a short illness aged 43 He was buried in the Protestant Old Church on 15 December 1675 l m In a petition to her creditors Catharina Bolnes attributed her husband s death to the stress of financial pressures and described his death as follows during the ruinous war with France he not only was unable to sell any of his art but also to his great detriment was left sitting with the paintings of other masters that he was dealing in As a result and owing to the great burden of his children having no means of his own he lapsed into such decay and decadence which he had so taken to heart that as if he had fallen into a frenzy in a day and a half he went from being healthy to being dead 48 Catharina describes how the collapse of the art market had damaged Vermeer s business as both a painter and an art dealer She had to raise 11 children and therefore asked the High Court to relieve her of debts owed to Vermeer s creditors 32 Pioneering Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek who worked for the city council as a surveyor was appointed trustee 49 The house had eight rooms on the first floor the contents of which were listed in an inventory taken a few months after Vermeer s death 50 In his studio there were two chairs two painter s easels three palettes 10 canvases a desk an oak pull table a small wooden cupboard with drawers and rummage not worthy being itemized 51 Nineteen of Vermeer s paintings were bequeathed to Catharina and her mother The widow sold two more paintings to Hendrick van Buyten to pay off a substantial debt 52 Vermeer had been a respected artist in Delft but he was almost unknown outside his hometown A local patron named Pieter van Ruijven had purchased much of his output which kept Vermeer afloat financially but reduced the possibility of his fame spreading n Several factors contributed to his limited body of work Vermeer never had any pupils though one scholar has suggested that Vermeer taught his eldest daughter Maria to paint 53 Additionally his family obligations with so many children may have taken up much of his time as would acting as both an art dealer and inn keeper in running the family businesses His time spent serving as head of the guild and his extraordinary precision as a painter may have also limited his output Style Edit nbsp The Milkmaid c 1658 Rijksmuseum in AmsterdamVermeer may have first executed his paintings tonally like most painters of his time using either monochrome shades of grey grisaille or a limited palette of browns and greys dead coloring over which he would apply more saturated colors reds yellows and blues in the form of transparent glazes No drawings have been positively attributed to Vermeer and his paintings offer few clues to preparatory methods There is no other 17th century artist who employed the exorbitantly expensive pigment ultramarine derived from natural lapis lazuli either so lavishly or so early in his career Vermeer used this in not just elements that are naturally of this colour he also used it early in a work beneath subsequent earth colours such as umber and ochre to subtly tint their shade 54 This working method most probably was inspired by Vermeer s understanding of Leonardo s observations that the surface of every object partakes of the colour of the adjacent object 55 An example of Vermeer using ultramarine as an underpaint is in The Girl with the Wine Glass The shadows of the red satin dress are underpainted in natural ultramarine 56 and owing to this underlying blue paint layer the red lake and vermilion mixture applied over it acquires a slightly purple cool and crisp appearance Even after Vermeer s evident financial breakdown following the so called rampjaar year of disaster in 1672 he continued to employ natural ultramarine generously such as in Lady Seated at a Virginal This could suggest that Vermeer was supplied with materials by a collector and would coincide with John Michael Montias theory that Pieter van Ruijven was Vermeer s patron Vermeer s works are largely genre pieces and portraits with the exception of two cityscapes and two allegories His subjects offer a cross section of seventeenth century Dutch society ranging from the portrayal of a simple milkmaid at work to the luxury and splendour of rich notables and merchantmen in their roomy houses Besides these subjects religious poetical musical and scientific comments can also be found in his work citation needed Painting materials Edit One aspect of his meticulous painting technique was Vermeer s choice of pigments 57 He is best known for his frequent use of the very expensive ultramarine The Milkmaid and also lead tin yellow A Lady Writing a Letter madder lake Christ in the House of Martha and Mary and vermilion He also painted with ochres bone black and azurite 58 The claim that he used Indian yellow in Woman Holding a Balance 59 has been disproven by pigment analysis 60 In Vermeer s oeuvre only about 20 pigments have been detected Of these seven principal pigments that Vermeer commonly employed are lead white yellow ochre vermilion madder lake green earth raw umber and ivory or bone black 61 Theories of mechanical aid Edit Vermeer s painting techniques have long been a source of debate given their almost photorealistic attention to detail despite Vermeer s having had no formal training and despite only limited evidence that Vermeer had created any preparatory sketches or traces for his paintings 62 In 2001 British artist David Hockney published the book Secret Knowledge Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters in which he argued that Vermeer among other Renaissance and Baroque artists including Hans Holbein and Diego Velazquez used optics to achieve precise positioning in their compositions and specifically some combination of curved mirrors camera obscura and camera lucida This became known as the Hockney Falco thesis named after Hockney and Charles M Falco another proponent of the theory Philip Steadman published the book Vermeer s Camera Uncovering the Truth behind the Masterpieces in 2001 which specifically claimed that Vermeer had used a camera obscura to create his paintings Steadman noted that many of Vermeer s paintings had been painted in the same room and he found six of his paintings that are precisely the right size if they had been painted from inside a camera obscura in the room s back wall 63 Supporters of these theories have pointed to evidence in some of Vermeer s paintings such as the often discussed sparkling pearly highlights in Vermeer s paintings which they argue are the result of the primitive lens of a camera obscura producing halation It was also postulated that a camera obscura was the mechanical cause of the exaggerated perspective seen in The Music Lesson London Royal Collection 64 In 2008 American entrepreneur and inventor Tim Jenison developed the theory that Vermeer had used a camera obscura along with a comparator mirror which is similar in concept to a camera lucida but much simpler and makes it easy to match colour values He later modified the theory to simply involve a concave mirror and a comparator mirror He spent the next five years testing his theory by attempting to re create The Music Lesson himself using these tools a process captured in the 2013 documentary film Tim s Vermeer 65 Several points were brought out by Jenison in support of this technique first was Vermeer s hyper accurate rendition of light falloff along the wall Neurobiologist Colin Blakemore in an interview with Jenison notes that human vision cannot process information about the absolute brightness of a scene 66 Another was the addition of several highlights and outlines consistent with matching the effects of chromatic aberration particularly noticeable in primitive optics Last and perhaps most telling is a noticeable curvature in the original painting s rendition of the scrollwork on the virginal This effect matched Jenison s technique precisely caused by exactly duplicating the view as seen from a curved mirror This theory remains disputed There is no historical evidence regarding Vermeer s interest in optics and the detailed inventory of the artist s belongings drawn up after his death includes no camera obscura or any similar device 67 50 o However Vermeer was in close connection with pioneer lens maker Antonie van Leeuwenhoek who was his executor after death 69 Works EditSee also List of paintings by Johannes Vermeer and Category Johannes Vermeer It is believed Vermeer produced a total of fewer than 50 paintings of which 34 have survived 70 Only three Vermeer paintings were dated by the artist The Procuress 1656 Gemaldegalerie Dresden The Astronomer 1668 Musee du Louvre Paris and The Geographer 1669 Stadelsches Kunstinstitut Frankfurt Vermeer s mother in law Maria Thins owned Dirck van Baburen s 1622 oil on canvas The Procuress or a copy of it which appears in the background of two of Vermeer s paintings The same subject was also painted by Vermeer Almost all of Vermeer s paintings are of contemporary subjects in a smaller format with a cooler palette dominated by blues yellows and grays Vermeer painted multiple artworks portraying a pure profile like the painting Woman with a Pearl Necklace which was uncommon in Dutch art at the time 71 Practically all of his surviving works belong to this period usually domestic interiors with one or two figures lit by a window on the left 72 They are characterized by a sense of compositional balance and spatial order unified by a pearly light Mundane domestic or recreational activities are imbued with a poetic timelessness e g Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window Dresden Gemaldegalerie Vermeer s two townscapes have also been attributed to this period View of Delft The Hague Mauritshuis and The Little Street Amsterdam Rijksmuseum A few of his paintings show a certain hardening of manner and are generally thought to represent his late works From this period come The Allegory of Faith c 1670 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York and The Love Letter c 1670 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Legacy Edit nbsp Theophile Thore BurgerOriginally Vermeer s works were largely overlooked by art historians for two centuries after his death A select number of connoisseurs in the Netherlands did appreciate his work yet even so many of his works were attributed to then better known artists such as Metsu or Mieris The Delft master s modern rediscovery began about 1860 when German museum director Gustav Waagen saw The Art of Painting in the Czernin gallery in Vienna and recognized the work as a Vermeer though it was attributed to Pieter de Hooch at that time 73 Research by Theophile Thore Burger culminated in the publication of his catalogue raisonne of Vermeer s works in the Gazette des Beaux Arts in 1866 74 Thore Burger s catalogue drew international attention to Vermeer 75 and listed more than 70 works by him including many that he regarded as uncertain 74 Upon the rediscovery of Vermeer s work several prominent Dutch artists modelled their style on his work including Simon Duiker Other artists who were inspired by Vermeer include Danish painter Wilhelm Hammershoi 76 and American Thomas Wilmer Dewing 77 In the 20th century Vermeer s admirers included Salvador Dali who painted his own version of The Lacemaker on commission from collector Robert Lehman and pitted large copies of the original against a rhinoceros in some surrealist experiments Dali also celebrated the master in The Ghost of Vermeer of Delft Which Can Be Used As a Table 1934 Han van Meegeren was a 20th century Dutch painter who worked in the classical tradition He became a master forger motivated by a blend of aesthetic and financial reasons creating and selling many new Vermeers before turning himself in for forgery to avoid being charged with capital treason for collaboration with the Nazis specifically in selling what had been believed to be original artwork to the Nazis 78 On the evening of 23 September 1971 a 21 year old hotel waiter Mario Pierre Roymans stole Vermeer s Love Letter from the Fine Arts Palace in Brussels where it was on loan from the Rijksmuseum for the exhibition Rembrandt and his Age 79 To mark the 26th anniversary of the opening of an exhibition at Washington DC s National Gallery of Art featuring his work Google honored Vermeer with a Google Doodle on 12 November 2021 80 A 2023 exhibition at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam featured 28 of his works the most ever shown together 81 Over 650 000 people visited the exhibition making it the museum s most visited exhibition 82 Coinciding with the 2023 exhibition the documentary film Close to Vermeer was released the same year The film followed curators Gregor J M Weber and Pieter Roelofs as they sought loans of Vermeer s artwork from museums around the world 83 Also released in 2023 was another movie about the exhibition at the Rijkmuseum Vermeer The Greatest Exhibition External links to both movies are below In popular culture EditSee also Johannes Vermeer in popular culture Vermeer s reputation and works have been featured in both literature and in films Tracy Chevalier s novel Girl with a Pearl Earring 1999 and the 2003 film of the same name present a fictional account of Vermeer s creation of the famous painting and his relationship with the equally fictional model Many artists are inspired by the famous painter for example culinary photographer Aimee Twigger draws on Vermeer s chiaroscuro for her gustatory journeys through recipes 84 Gallery of selected works Edit nbsp The Girl with the Wine Glass c 1659 Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum in Brunswick Germany nbsp The Music Lesson or A Lady at the Virginals with a Gentleman c 1662 1665 Royal Collection in London nbsp Girl with a Pearl Earring 1665 considered a Vermeer masterpiece Mauritshuis in Den Haag nbsp Girl with the Red Hat c 1665 1666 National Gallery of Art in Washington D C nbsp Mistress and Maid 1666 67 Frick Collection in New York City nbsp The Art of Painting or The Allegory of Painting c 1666 1668 Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna nbsp The Astronomer c 1668 Louvre Abu Dhabi nbsp The Geographer 1669 Stadel Museum in Frankfurt am Main nbsp Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid c 1670 71 National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin Ireland nbsp The Allegory of Faith 1670 1672 Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York nbsp Lady Seated at a Virginal c 1670 1672 National Gallery in LondonNotes Edit Vermeer was largely unknown to the general public but his reputation was not totally eclipsed after his death While it is true that he did not achieve widespread fame until the 19th century his work had always been valued and admired by well informed connoisseurs 8 Vermeer was baptized as Joannis 19 17 Jan was the most popular version of the name among Calvinists Joannis was a Latinazied form of Jan which was preferred by Roman Catholics and upper middle class Protestants 19 17 However Vermeer was born into a lower middle class family 20 21 Still according to Montias it is unlikely that his parents were Catholics at this time the time of Vermeer s baptism seeing that they baptized him in the established church 19 Throughout his life Vermeer never used the name Jan Nevertheless most Dutch authors in the century since his rediscovery have dubbed him Jan perhaps unconsciously to bring him closer to the mainstream of Calvinist culture 19 17 His mother was born in Antwerp When she married Vermeer s father in 1615 she claimed to be twenty years old but she may have exaggerated her age by a year or so 23 Digna s parents were married in Antwerp in 1596 His name was Reijnier or Reynier Janszoon always written in Dutch as Jansz or Jansz this was his patronym As there was another Reijnier Jansz at that time in Delft it seemed necessary to use the pseudonym Vos meaning Fox From 1640 onward he had changed his alias to Vermeer Neeltge remarried three times the second time shortly after Jan s death in October 1597 25 In 1647 Geertruy Vermeer s only sister married a frame maker She kept on working at the inn helping her parents serving drinks and making beds Catholicism was not a forbidden religion but tolerated in the Dutch Republic They were not allowed to build new churches so services were held in hidden churches so called Schuilkerk Catholics were restrained in their careers unable to get high rank jobs in city administration or civic guard It was impossible to be elected as a member of the city council therefore the Catholics were not represented in the provincial and national assembly A Roman Catholic chapel now exists at this spot The parish registers of the Delft Catholic church do not exist anymore so it is impossible to prove but likely that his children were baptized in a hidden church The number of children seems inconsistent but 11 was stated by his widow in a document to get help from the city council One child died after this document was written Identifiable works include compositions by Utrecht painters Baburen and Everdingen He was baptized as Joannis but buried under the name Jan relevant When Catharina Bolnes was buried in 1688 she was registered as the widow of Johan Vermeer Van Ruijven s son in law Jacob Dissius owned 21 paintings by Vermeer listed in his heritage in 1695 These paintings were sold in Amsterdam the following year in a much studied auction published by Gerard Hoet The inventory taken soon after Vermeer s death does not mention a camera obscura although it does include easels palettes canvases and a possible maulstick Gold silver jewellery or musical instruments are not mentioned it has been suggested that Catharina Bolnes might have removed any valuables from the house to conceal them from her creditors or pawned the jewels and gold and silver 68 References Edit Boone Jon The Procuress Evidence for a Vermeer Self Portrait Essential Vermeer Retrieved 13 September 2010 a b Janson Jonathan Complete Vermeer Catalogue amp Tracker Essential Vermeer Retrieved 16 June 2010 Courtney Jennifer Sanford Courtney 2018 Marvelous To Behold Classical Conversations ISBN 978 0 9995748 4 3 Jan Vermeer The Bulfinch Guide to Art History Artchive Retrieved 21 September 2009 Janson Jonathan 5 February 2003 An Interview with Jorgen Wadum Essential Vermeer Retrieved 21 September 2009 Koningsberger Hans 1977 The World of Vermeer New York Time Life Books OCLC 755281576 Barker Emma et al 1999 The Changing Status of the Artist New Haven Yale University Press p 199 ISBN 0 300 07740 8 Blankert Albert 2007 Blankert Albert Montias John Michael Aillaud Gilles eds Vermeer and his Public p 164 ISBN 978 1 58567 979 9 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help a b Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 a b Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Upton Clive Kretzschmar William A Jr 2017 The Routledge Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 12566 7 Vermeer Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 6 August 2019 Vermeer The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 6 August 2019 Vermeer Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 6 August 2019 Janson Jonathan Vermeer the Man and Painter Essential Vermeer Retrieved 10 April 2014 Vermeer A View of Delft The Economist 1 April 2001 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 21 September 2009 a b c d Janso Jonathan Vermeer s Name Essential Vermeer Retrieved 21 September 2009 Digital Family Tree of the Municipal Records Office of the City of Delft Beheersraad Digitale Stamboom 2004 Archived from the original on 23 February 2013 Retrieved 21 September 2009 The painter is recorded as Child Joannis Father Reijnier Jansz Mother Dingnum Balthasars Witnesses Pieter Brammer Jan Heijndricxsz Maertge Jans Place Delft Date of baptism 31 October 1632 a b c d Montias 2018 p 64 65 a b c Janson Jonathan Vermeer s Life and Art part one Essential Vermeer Retrieved 27 November 2020 Johannes Vermeer The Art Story Retrieved 16 December 2020 Janson Jonathan Vermeer s Family Tree Essential Vermeer Retrieved 27 November 2020 Montias 2018 p 17 Montias 1989 p 17 34 Montias 1989 p 35 55 Montias 1989 p 83 Huerta 2003 p 42 a b Liedtke Walter Plomp Michiel C Ruger Axel 2001 Vermeer and the Delft school catalogue in conjunction with the exhibition Vermeer and the Delft School held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York from 8 March to 27 May 2001 and at The National Gallery London from 20 June to 16 September 2001 New Haven Yale University Press p 359 ISBN 0 87099 973 7 a b c Schneider Norbert 2000 Vermeer The Complete Paintings Taschen pp 8 13 Johannes Vermeer Allegory of the Catholic Faith 32 100 18 The Met Metropolitan Museum of Art 20 July 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2012 Liedtke 2007 p 893 a b Montias 1991 pp 344 345 Montias 1991 pp 370 371 Montias 1991 p 104 Johannes Vermeer Biography National Gallery of Art Retrieved 27 July 2022 Liedtke 2007 p 886 Janson Jonathan Delft in Johannes Vermeer s Time Essential Vermeer Retrieved 29 September 2009 Bailey Martin 7 February 2023 Revealed Vermeer s patron was in fact a woman and she bought half the artist s entire oeuvre The Art Newspaper Retrieved 26 April 2023 Nash John Malcolm 1972 The age of Rembrandt and Vermeer Dutch painting in the seventeenth century New York Holt Rinehart and Winston p 40 ISBN 978 0 03 091870 4 Graham Dixon Andrew 2002 The Madness of Vermeer Secret Lives of the Artists BBC Four Waiboer Adriaan E 2007 Gabriel Metsu 1629 1667 Life and Work PhD New York University pp 225 230 Curator in the spotlight Adriaan E Waiboer National Gallery of Ireland Dublin Codart Archived from the original on 13 September 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2014 Stamberg Susan 18 May 2011 Gabriel Metsu The Dutch Master You Don t Know Morning Edition NPR Montias 1989 p 207 Janson Jonathan Vermeer s Delft Today Schutterij and the Doelen Essential Vermeer Montias 1991 p 337 A Postscript on Vermeer and His Milieu Auteur John Michael Montias Uitgever Uitgeverij Atlas Contact B V Janson Jonathan Vermeer s Life and Art part four Essential Vermeer Snyder 2015 pp 268 271 a b Janson Jonathan Inventory of movable goods in Vermeer s house in Delft Essential Vermeer Retrieved 19 March 2020 Montias 1991 pp 339 344 Montias 1989 p 217 Binstock Benjamin 2009 Vermeer s family secrets genius discovery and the unknown apprentice New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 96664 1 OCLC 191024081 1 Never to be repeated Vermeer exhibition stuns with scientific revelations CNN Broos Ben Blankert Albert Wadum Jorgen Wheelock Arthur K Jr 1995 Johannes Vermeer Zwolle Waanders Publishers ISBN 978 90 400 9794 2 Gaskell Jonker amp National Gallery of Art U S 1998 p 157 Kuhn 1968 pp 154 202 Pigment Analyses of Paintings Dutch Painters ColourLex Kuhn 1968 pp 191 192 Gifford E M Painting Light Recent Observations on Vermeer s Technique In Gaskell Jonker amp National Gallery of Art U S 1998 pp 185 199 Janson Jonathan Vermeer s Palette Essential Vermeer Retrieved 19 March 2017 Sooke Alastair 25 April 2017 Why Vermeer s paintings are less real than we think BBC Culture Retrieved 26 January 2021 Steadman Philip Vermeer and the Camera Obscura BBC Archived from the original on 29 November 2010 Retrieved 17 October 2010 Steadman Philip 2017 Vermeer and the Problem of Painting Inside the Camera Obscura Berlin Munich Boston Walter de Gruyter pp 76 86 ISBN 978 3 11 054721 4 Andersen Kurt 29 November 2013 Reverse Engineering a Genius Has a Vermeer Mystery Been Solved Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 30 November 2013 Tim s Vermeer 2013 documentary See 40 50 onwards Janson Jonathan Vermeer and the Camera Obscura Essential Vermeer Archived from the original on 25 September 2014 Retrieved 30 July 2014 Roelofs Pieter 2023 Closer to Vermeer A Look Inside the Family Home of the Delft Painter Exhibition for the 2023 exhibition Vermeer at the Rijksmuseum Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Hannibal Books Veurne pp 42 99 ISBN 978 94 6466 616 8 Bryson Bill 2014 A Short History of Nearly Everything Lulu Press ISBN 978 1 312 79256 2 Vermeer was brilliant but he was not without influences The Economist 12 October 2017 Schwartz Gary 2017 Vermeer in Detail Ludion ISBN 978 1419727641 Lania Nicole 21 January 2021 5 Unbelievable Facts About Vermeer s Use of Light Perfect Picture Lights Gaskell Jonker amp National Gallery of Art U S 1998 pp 19 20 a b Gaskell Jonker amp National Gallery of Art U S 1998 p 42 Vermeer J Duparc F J Wheelock A K Mauritshuis Hague Netherlands National Gallery of Art 1995 Johannes Vermeer Washington National Gallery of Art p 59 ISBN 0 300 06558 2 Gunnarsson Torsten 1998 Nordic Landscape Painting in the Nineteenth Century Yale University Press p 227 ISBN 0 300 07041 1 Interpretive Resource Artist Biography Thomas Wilmer Dewing Art Institute Chicago Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Julius Anthony 22 June 2008 The Lying Dutchman The New York Times Retrieved 19 April 2012 Janson Jonathan Vermeer Thefts The Love Letter Essential Vermeer Retrieved 10 December 2017 Celebrating Johannes Vermeer Google Retrieved 12 November 2021 Cumming Laura 12 February 2023 Vermeer review one of the most thrilling exhibitions ever conceived The Observer Retrieved 14 February 2023 Vermeer tentoonstelling Rijksmuseum breekt bezoekersrecord NOS in Dutch 4 June 2023 Sheila O Malley Review of Close to Vermeer Refugee camp image wins food photo contest BBC News 28 April 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2022 Sources Edit Gaskell Ivan Jonker Michiel National Gallery of Art U S 1998 Vermeer Studies Washington National Gallery of Art ISBN 0 300 07521 9 Huerta Robert D 2003 Giants of Delft Johannes Vermeer and the Natural Philosophers the Parallel Search for Knowledge During the Age of Discovery Bucknell University Press ISBN 978 0 8387 5538 9 Kuhn H 1968 A Study of the Pigments and Grounds Used by Jan Vermeer OCLC 888369661 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Liedtke Walter A 2007 Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 300 12028 8 Montias John Michael 1989 Vermeer and His Milieu A Web of Social History Princeton University Press doi 10 2307 j ctv301fz1 ISBN 0 691 00289 4 JSTOR j ctv301fz1 S2CID 242041929 Montias John Michael 1991 Vermeer and His Milieu A Web of Social History reprint illustrated ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00289 7 Montias John Michael 2018 Vermeer and His Milieu A Web of Social History New Haven Connecticut Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 18859 1 Snyder Laura J 2015 Eye of the Beholder Johannes Vermeer Antoni van Leeuwenhoek and the Reinvention of Seeing New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 07746 9 Further reading EditKozloff Max 2011 Vermeer A Study Rome Contrasto ISBN 978 88 6965 279 0 Kreuger Frederik H 2007 New Vermeer Life and Work of Han van Meegeren Rijswijk Quantes pp 54 218 and 220 give examples of Van Meegeren fakes that were removed from their museum walls Pages 220 221 give an example of a non Van Meegeren fake attributed to him ISBN 978 90 5959 047 2 Archived from the original on 29 August 2010 Retrieved 21 September 2009 Liedtke Walter 2009 The Milkmaid by Johannes Vermeer New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 344 9 Liedtke Walter A 2001 Vermeer and the Delft School Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 973 4 Schneider Nobert 1993 Vermeer Cologne Benedikt Taschen Verlag ISBN 3 8228 6377 7 Sheldon Libby Nicola Costaros February 2006 Johannes Vermeer s Young woman seated at a virginal The Burlington Magazine vol CXLVIII ed 1235 Singh Iona 2012 Vermeer Materialism and the Transcendental in Art from the book Color Facture Art amp Design United Kingdom Zero Books pp 18 40 Steadman Philip 2002 Vermeer s Camera the truth behind the masterpieces Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280302 6 Wadum Jorgen Contours of Vermeer In Gaskell Jonker amp National Gallery of Art U S 1998 pp 201 223 Wheelock Arthur K Jr 1988 1981 Jan Vermeer New York Abrams ISBN 0 8109 1737 8 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Johannes Vermeer nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Johannes Vermeer 500 pages on Vermeer and Delft Johannes Vermeer biography at Artble Essential Vermeer website dedicated to Johannes Vermeer Johannes Vermeer in the Encyclopaedia Britannica Vermeer Center Delft center with tours about Vermeer Vermeer s Mania for Maps WGBHForum 30 December 2016 Pigment analyses of many of Vermeer s paintings at Colourlex Location of Vermeer s The Little Street Archived 15 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Vermeer exhibition at the Rijkmuseum 10 February 4 June 2023 The New York Times review The New York Times article The New York Review of Books review Laura Cumming Vermeer review one of the most thrilling exhibitions ever conceived The Guardian 12 February 2023 Seeing Beyond the Beauty of a Vermeer The New York Times Magazine May 25 2023 Close to Vermeer 2023 documentary movie directed by Suzanne Raes Vermeer The Greatest Exhibition 2023 documentary movie directed by David Bickerstaff Vermeer and Music From the National Gallery London 2013 documentary movie directed by Phil Grabsky and Ben Harding Vermeer and the Masters of Genre Painting Inspiration and Rivalry Exhibition at the National Gallery of Art Washington D C October 22 2017 January 21 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Johannes Vermeer amp oldid 1179532965, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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