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Vermeer's world.


Vermeer mesmerizes. His paintings cast a spell on present-day audiences, so much so that when a strike disrupted bookings for the comprehensive exhibition of his work at the National Gallery, Washington, five years ago hordes of hardy art lovers lined up before dawn in bitter February weather for a chance to enter. This spring they have been crowding around Vermeer's paintings in preference to almost anything else in the Metropolitan Museum's ambitious survey of the context that formed him and in which he worked, "Vermeer and the Delft School Delft School may be-
  • Delft School (painting), school in 17th century Dutch painting
  • Delft School (architecture), school in 20th century Dutch architecture
."(1) "It's easy to tell where the Vermeers are in any of the galleries" a young artist reported to me. "You just go to where there are twenty people in front of a painting."

That's no casual choice. There have been complaints that the exhibition is not exclusively devoted to Vermeer, mostly from those immune to the charms of the luxury items--tapestries, elaborate gold and silver objects, portraits of the ruling classes, and the occasional elaborately painted tile--included to establish that the city, despite its size, was wealthy and sophisticated in the seventeenth century. (But how could anyone resist an ensemble of elaborate tapestry horse-trappings, neatly tied on the shoulder, which puts anything at Hermes to shame?) Others have expressed their limited tolerance for the large numbers of church interiors (many depicting the Delft Delft (dĕlft), city (1994 pop. 91,941), South Holland prov., W Netherlands. It has varied industries and is noted for its ceramics (china, tiles, and pottery) known as delftware. Founded in the 11th cent.  Nieuwe Kirk's glory, the tomb of William the Silent William the Silent or William of Orange (William I, prince of Orange), 1533–84, Dutch statesman, principal founder of Dutch independence. , the assassinated as·sas·si·nate  
tr.v. as·sas·si·nat·ed, as·sas·si·nat·ing, as·sas·si·nates
1. To murder (a prominent person) by surprise attack, as for political reasons.

2.
 martyr of Dutch resistance The Dutch resistance to the Nazi occupation during World War II developed relatively slowly, but its counterintelligence, domestic sabotage, and communications networks provided key support to Allied forces beginning in 1944 and through the liberation of the country.  to Spanish rule) despite the fine improvisations on pale geometric forms in the best of them and the amusing anecdotal inclusions in almost all. (Seventeenth-century dogs had the run of Dutch churches and according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the paintings, at least, abused the privilege.) There is a perhaps excessive number of images of the city, in prints, drawings, and paintings, though admittedly all good examples and interesting enough in isolation. At least one work, Daniel Vosmaer's limpid view, The Harbor of Delft (c. 1658-60, Museo de Arte de Ponce, Ponce, Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla. ), requires no justification beyond its merits as a painting, and cumulatively the selection sets the stage by conjuring up the streets and the exteriors of those white church interiors and the houses in which Vermeer's pensive pen·sive  
adj.
1. Deeply, often wistfully or dreamily thoughtful.

2. Suggestive or expressive of melancholy thoughtfulness.
 women tune their lutes, read their letters, and admire their necklaces. Yet it is hard to avoid thinking that the painter's regrettably absent iconic view of his home town would have made the point more economically and more satisfyingly.

But these are quibbles. "Vermeer and the School of Delft" brings together a splendid selection of works that allows us to see this most enigmatic of painters not as a unique figure, but as a member of a community of artists in the prosperous little city where he spent his working life. The assembly of Vermeers is impressive--almost half of his surviving thirty-odd works, some of them rarely seen away from the museums that house them, a few not included in the Washington show. But many of Vermeer's most celebrated colleagues are represented no less impressively. The exhibition includes, for example, lively drawings by Paulus Potter--best known for his paintings of large, contemplative cows--done during his short sojourn in Delft, an ample group of Pieter De Hooch's best domestic scenes and streetscapes, and a truly astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 number of the few extant works of Card Fabritius, the superbly gifted pupil of Rembrandt--apparently a crucial influence on the young Vermeer--who died young and tragically. For Vermeer to dominate the field in such company is a clear indicator of the hold he exerts on the viewer's imagination.

Why is this? Partly because his best pictures are, quite simply, so wonderful and partly, I suspect, because they are so convincing and seemingly so transparent. Each of his intimate, meticulously crafted images appears to be a window into a miniature world at once wholly artificial and wholly real. Vermeer's preternaturally pre·ter·nat·u·ral  
adj.
1. Out of or being beyond the normal course of nature; differing from the natural.

2. Surpassing the normal or usual; extraordinary:
 ordered, silent interiors are like subliminal subliminal /sub·lim·i·nal/ (-lim´i-n'l) below the threshold of sensation or conscious awareness.

sub·lim·i·nal
adj.
1. Below the threshold of conscious perception. Used of stimuli.
 demonstrations of an ideal, otherworldly geometry; ordinary furnishings have magically assumed a perfectly harmonious relationship to their setting, to everything else in the picture and to the shape and proportions of the canvas itself. (That perfect harmony makes it especially startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 to learn that Vermeer and his wife raised eleven children in the house in which he lived and painted; perhaps that's why, unlike most of his colleagues, he produced so few pictures--scholars estimate that the surviving works represent about three-quarters of his total oeuvre--although the fact that his wife was a wealthy woman may have also been a factor, since it lessened his need to make work in order to earn his living.)

Perhaps it is the underlying tension between artifice and actuality (despite the effect of harmoniousness) that makes Vermeer's best pictures so compelling. They are clearly made of blocky strokes of pigment, and yet they vividly evoke our visual and tactile experience of the everyday world: its textures, the character of its inanimate objects Inanimate Objects

abiology

the study of inanimate things.

animatism

the assignment to inanimate objects, forces, and plants of personalities and wills, but not souls. — animatistic, adj.
, and above all the particulars of its light and its spaces. Like Velazquez a generation earlier, Vermeer never gets a tone wrong; the best of his mysterious pictures conjure up conjure up
Verb

1. to create an image in the mind: the name Versailles conjures up a past of sumptuous grandeur

2.
 specific times of day, temperatures, and seasons, from the chilly gloom of a brief, Northern winter afternoon to the pale radiance of a spring morning. He allows us to become the unseen observers of a continuous, uneventful present, turns us into witnesses to the quiet domestic rituals enacted within spaces we begin to find familiar: a room lit by tall windows on our left, with geometric tile floors and pale plaster walls hung with maps and paintings. The furnishings vary slightly, from picture to picture, as do certain details--the floor patterns, window mullions, and the tiles that sometimes appear at the base of the wall --but we begin to recognize a particular tapestry curtain or a set of chairs with lion finials. It all seems utterly peaceful and hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air.

her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal
adj.
Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air.
. Time moves slowly, as though its inexorable progression were somehow held in check by the firm verticals and horizontals of Vermeer's compositions. Yet this disciplined pictorial framework is softened, blurred (metaphorically, at times literally) by nearly palpable sheets of light. Nothing of great significance seems to be happening. Whatever drama there is hinges on the contents of a letter or a reaction to a proffered glass of wine.

Vermeer's world appears to be entirely domestic, but that impression quickly evaporates. We don't need to know very much about the conventions of seventeenth-century painting to realize that there is often more implied. If we look attentively at the details of the seemingly anecdotal furnishings of the room, a picture of a woman weighing gold--a miracle of cool gray-blue planes and masses--starts to take on a moral message about vanity, for example. At the same time, it all seems so specific, so faithful to perception, that we become certain that Vermeer is permitting us a glimpse into his reality, that he is presenting us with a faithful record of something that he has scrutinized. Yet the more intently we look, the more unreal it all becomes. Not only do we realize that Vermeer's pictorial structures are so idealized i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 as to verge on abstraction (no, he is not a modernist ahead of his time), but we also become aware of strange discrepancies of scale and inexplicably abrupt shifts in spatial relationships that hint at reliance not on acute observation, but on some intermediary optical device. Paint declares itself almost independently of what it alludes to, in little flickers and patches that are intensely evocative of the play of light on particular surfaces without in any way describing them literally. (That's part of why the Impressionists found Vermeer so exciting when he was rediscovered in the mid-nineteenth century by the French critic Thore-Burger).

The exhibition at the Met makes clear that Vermeer was very much a man of his time. Each of his pictures in the show is presented among related works by his peers. The first Vermeer we encounter, an early effort completed about the time the twenty-one-year-old artist joined the painter's guild in Delft, is the radiant Diana and Her Companions (c. 1653-54, Mauritshuis, The Hague), hung in the company of works by earlier Delft painters documenting the entire range of subject matter popular at the time: portraits (including a stiff group portrait of an anatomical demonstration that reminds us forcibly of Rembrandt's genius in transforming the genre), religious scenes, church interiors, views of the city and its environs, and so on. Diana was a common motif of the period, it seems, but the luminosity luminosity, in astronomy, the rate at which energy of all types is radiated by an object in all directions. A star's luminosity depends on its size and its temperature, varying as the square of the radius and the fourth power of the absolute surface temperature.  of Vermeer's painting and its subtle modelling of form seem very much his own. So does the ampleness and four-square architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic   also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to architecture or design.

2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture:
 massing of the large-scale figures, the heft of their bodies beneath the silky fabrics. There are some mild infelicities of drawing and proportion, but they seem inconsequential. What transforms the picture--seeming to prefigure pre·fig·ure  
tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures
1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow:
 Vermeer's mature work--is a sense of a private moment observed, of an ordinary event--even among immortals--glimpsed unawares. The absorbed young women in the group turn away from us. One kneels to sponge the feet of the goddess, another studies the sole of her own foot; all seem lost in thought, silent. With the luxury of knowing what was to come, we can see this early mythological scene as prefiguring the motifs with which Vermeer is most closely associated, the domestic interiors populated by introspective in·tro·spect  
intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects
To engage in introspection.



[Latin intr
 women.

The overt Italianate qualities of Diana and Her Companions raise interesting questions about what Vermeer's links with Italian painting might have been throughout his brief career (he died suddenly at the end of 1675, aged forty-three). There's no evidence that he ever went to Italy, but he seems to have been recognized as specially knowledgable about the subject; almost twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 after the Diana was painted, as an established (if atypically non-prolific) member of the art community, Vermeer was one of two Delft painters called to The Hague as experts to examine twelve pictures presumed to be Italian masterpieces. (They testified that the works were "great pieces of rubbish and bad paintings" not worth a fraction of their asking price.) Scholars debate whether the artist's father, a tavern keeper Noun 1. tavern keeper - the keeper of a public house
publican

Britain, Great Britain, U.K., UK, United Kingdom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - a monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England
 cum art dealer, may have dealt in Italian art Italian art, works of art produced in the geographic region that now constitutes the nation of Italy. Italian art has engendered great public interest and involvement, resulting in the consistent production of monumental and spectacular works.  or whether Vermeer himself did, since he seems to have supplemented his activities as a painter by buying and selling pictures. In the Met's installation another link is suggested by the proximity of two paintings by Leonaert Bramer Leonaert/Leonard Bramer alias Nestelghat (Dec 24 1596, Delft - buried Feb 10 1674, Delft) was a Dutch painter, perhaps best known for being one of the teachers of Johannes Vermeer.

He either was the son of or identical to Hendrick Bramer.
, a popular artist a generation older than Vermeer but apparently connected to him and his family; Bramer spent many years in Rome before returning to his native Delft, undoubtedly full of information about the latest developments in the South.

As we move through the show, we are simultaneously dazzled by individual works and encouraged to make connections between them. Vermeer's transition from the large-scale history paintings of his youth to the smaller, more intimate subjects for which he is best-known is announced by a grouping that begins with the glowing Christ in the House of Mary and Martha (c. 1655, National Gallery of Scotland The National Gallery of Scotland, in Edinburgh, is the national art gallery of Scotland. An elaborate neoclassical edifice, it stands on The Mound, between the two sections of Edinburgh's Princes Street Gardens. , Edinburgh). This trio of generous figures, all intent upon one another even though each occupies a different spatial zone in the picture, is loosely linked by a swirl of hands, each positioned differently in space. Like the Diana, the painting is notably Italianate, yet the bowed, broadly painted figure of Martha, holding a basket of bread and leaning forward across a table draped drape  
v. draped, drap·ing, drapes

v.tr.
1. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds: draped the coffin with a flag; a robe that draped her figure.
 with a white cloth over a Turkish carpet Turkish carpets come in distinct styles, from different regions of Turkey. Important differentiators between the types include the materials, construction and the patterns. , seems to point to what Vermeer's future will be. If we break free of the Edinburgh picture and turn to the left, we see The Procuress Pro`cur´ess

n. 1. A female procurer, or pander.

Noun 1. procuress - a woman pimp
fancy man, pandar, pander, panderer, pimp, procurer, ponce - someone who procures customers for whores (in England they call a
, Vermeer's only dated picture--1656--a thrilling inclusion for those of us who have never made it to the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden. At first glance, it seems a typical enough "merry company" of the period, with its leering leer  
intr.v. leered, leer·ing, leers
To look with a sidelong glance, indicative especially of sexual desire or sly and malicious intent.

n.
A desirous, sly, or knowing look.
 musician and hooded old woman, and its compliant young woman who allows herself to be fondled, for a price, by an assertive type in a red jacket Red Jacket, c.1758–1830, chief of the Seneca, b. probably Seneca co., N.Y. His Native American name was Otetiani, changed to Sagoyewatha when he became a chief.  and a rakishly-angled plumed hat. Yet The Procuress is an odd, inconsistent picture, both because of its compressed spatial qualities and its strange overtones of the Caravaggio-influenced "low life" paintings of the Utrecht School Utrecht school

Principally a group of three Dutch painters from Utrecht—Dirck van Baburen (c. 1590–1624), Gerrit van Honthorst, and Hendrik Terbrugghen—who were greatly influenced by Caravaggio's art during travels to Rome.
. It's so inconsistent, in fact, that its attribution has been debated and so reminiscent of Utrecht School pictures that it has prompted suggestions that Vermeer may have studied there. Set near the exhibitions other (generally smaller scale) "merry company" pictures, The Procuress settles down a little. It still looks young, tentative, and a little unformed--perhaps Vermeer had more solid prototypes to rely on for his early religious and mythological pictures--but it makes sense as a step towards the picture hung beside it: the Met's slightly later interior with a young woman dozing over a wine glass, A Maid Asleep (c. 1656-57). This picture is most seductive for its narrow view into an adjoining room, but the suggestion that the maid is drunk connects this domestic vignette with the tradition of the "merry company" while on a more formal level, the stiff, rucked-up carpet on the table of A Maid Asleep seems like a more rational version of the related, but differently patterned rug apparently draped over a balcony in The Procuress. Where the Met's picture differs most strikingly from Vermeer's earlier works, with their large-scale figures in ambiguous spaces, is in the way the specifics of the setting begin to play a role equal or even more important to that of the figures; that open door, that glimpse into the next room powerfully stir our associations with time and place.

But good as these pictures are, and logical and instructive as this grouping of early Vermeers is, it's hard to understand why visitors are concentrating on these works--especially on A Maid Asleep--at the expense of their near neighbors. It's true that pairing this familiar image with The Procuress makes us see both works freshly, but that's not the only exciting comparison afforded by the wall of this gallery. To the left of The Procuress are two (presumed) self-portraits by the elusive Carel Fabritius Carel Fabritius (bapt. Feb 27 1622, Middenbeemster - Oct 12 1654, Delft) was a Dutch painter and one of Rembrandt's most gifted pupils.

Fabritius was born in the ten-year old Beemster polder, where he is thought to have worked as a carpenter.
, one a roughly stroked, strikingly direct image from the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is the main art museum in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Its collection ranges from medieval European art to modern art. Works exhibited
The following works are exhibiited at the museum:
, Rotterdam, thought to have been painted about 1648-50, just before the young painter settled in Delft and not long after he left the studio of Rembrandt--whose influence is palpable in this arresting picture. The second self-portrait, from the National Gallery, London, is dated 1654, the year of Fabritius's death, aged thirty-two, in the horrendous powder-magazine explosion that flattened a considerable part of Delft. Rembrandt's example was obviously invaluable, but being on his own was obviously good for Fabritius. The later self-portrait is no less direct than the first, but the paint handling is notable broader and smoother, the tawny palette more light-struck.

The show includes two more extraordinary paintings by Fabritius from his final year, one the well-known, enchanting little goldfinch goldfinch: see finch.
goldfinch

Any of several species (genus Carduelis, family Carduelidae) of songbirds that have a short, notched tail and much yellow in the plumage.
 chained to its perch, the bird rendered with a dozen assured strokes of reddish brown, beige, black, and dull gold, against an expanse of creamy wall. Miraculously, the picture is installed where it can be seen close up, in good light, which is, alas, not true of how it is usually displayed at the Mauritshuis. The other--perhaps the high point of the exhibition--is the indecipherable masterpiece, The Sentry (Staatliches Museum, Schwerin), on one of its rare trips away from Northern Germany Northern Germany is the geographic area in the north of Germany. The native German concept of northern Germany is called Norddeutschland. Northern German States
Norddeutschland is the geographic area of five German states:
  • Bremen
  • Hamburg
. (Napoleon may have taken it to the Louvre Louvre (l`vrə), foremost French museum of art, located in Paris. The building was a royal fortress and palace built by Philip II in the late 12th cent.  in the early nineteenth century, but it's not certain.) Cumulatively, this remarkable ensemble of potent works, a good portion of the tantalizingly tan·ta·lize  
tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es
To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach.
 small legacy of an amazingly gifted artist, reinforce the exhibition's thesis that Fabritius, ten years older than Vermeer and with the authority of having studied with a celebrated master in Amsterdam, had a powerful influence on the younger painter. (He seems to have had a similar effect on Vermeer's contemporary, De Hooch hooch Substance abuse 1 A street term for marijuana See Marijuana 2 Moonshine, see there .) There's evidence that Vermeer owned works by Fabritius. At the Met, The Sentry makes a forceful case for a connection between the two not only because of its combination of broad and delicate paint-handling, but also because of its virtuoso deployment of the planes of walls, both near and far, and of architectural volumes, from a shadowy stairway to an overhanging arch. Fabritius organized these complex spaces almost symmetrically, anchoring them with a dominant central column and forcing them into spatial coherence with an extraordinarily rich, delicate harmony of grays, creams, ochres, and luminous pale apricot. The setting and space of Fabritius's composition are crucial to the formal and expressive effect of the picture, just as they will be in Vermeer's mature works, while the sprawled figure (asleep? working on his gun?), like the watchful dog, turns away from our gaze, just as Vermeer's figures do; yet the conversation among the rhythmic drawing of the portcullis portcullis (pôrtkŭl`ĭs), grating or framework of strong bars of wood or iron, sharp-pointed at their lower ends, sliding vertically in the grooved jambs of a fortified portal as a protection in case of assault. , the vines and their geometric framework, and the edge of the steps seems Fabritius's own.

Fabritius's paintings suggest, like Masaccio's, that had he lived longer the course of painting in his time might have been noticeably different. They suggest, as well, that his example may have helped the younger Vermeer to form his distinctive manner. At the same time, however, the exhibition's large group of pictures by Pieter De Hooch Pieter de Hooch (pronounced [hoːx], also spelled "Hoogh" or "Hooghe") (baptized December 20, 1629 – 1684) was a genre painter during the Dutch Golden Age. , who was just about the same age as his fellow Delft painter, reminds us how much Vermeer's work also owed to his close contemporaries and how much it reflected the desiderata de·sid·er·a·ta  
n.
Plural of desideratum.


desiderata
a list of books sought by a collector or library.
See also: Books
 of his time; his "distinctive manner" had more to do with nuance than with radical reinvention. As the selection at the Met makes plain, De Hooch, a native of Rotterdam who worked in Delft from about 1654 to 1660, painted small-scale domestic interiors and "merry companies" not dissimilar to Vermeer's. There's even evidence that Vermeer followed De Hooch's lead in some compositions, all of which helps to explain why the Delft master's paintings were attributed to those of his colleagues, including De Hooch, whose work remained in favor, during the eclipse of Vermeer's reputation in the eighteenth century, but that's another matter.

The selection of De Hoochs at the Met makes plain, too, that he was capable of wonderful effects of perspective and light, and sometimes of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
: rooms opening into rooms, doors seen edge-on, a view from a courtyard through a passageway and across a canal, a patch of sunshine on a rosy tile floor. But even at their most structurally inventive, De Hooch's pictures always seem more anecdotal, less rigorous than Vermeer's. The exhibition neatly underscores the similarities and differences between the two painters by grouping a pair of De Hooch's most delightful views of figures in the courtyard of a Delft house (both 1658, one from the National Gallery, London, the other from a private collection) with Vermeer's beloved and enchanting Little Street (c. 1658-60, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam). The De Hoochs engagingly contrast a contained, shallow space and a long view through a passage, while giving an apparently faithful record of what you might be likely to find--or do--in the carefully paved and tended precincts behind the narrow, severe facades of Delft houses. Vermeer, typically, suppresses the anecdotal to concentrate on essential relationships of geometric shapes This is a list of geometric shapes. Generally composed of straight line segments
  • polygon
  • concave polygon
  • constructible polygon
 pulled parallel to the surface of the canvas. The Little Street is brilliantly organized in two dimensions, but everything is also located within a larger scheme of things by the welcoming plane of the street, which leads us from our own space outside the canvas to the wall of buildings just within; the women absorbed in their tasks offer delicate punctuation to a variety of spaces, while a large expanse of sky offers another coordinate. Still, the overall effect remains of extreme frontality, just as, despite the wealth of convincing detail (deceptive, since the building is architecturally illogical), despite the powerful illusionism illusionism, in art, a kind of visual trickery in which painted forms seem to be real. It is sometimes called trompe l'oeil [Fr.,=fool the eye]. The development of one-point perspective in the Renaissance advanced illusionist technique immeasurably.  of textures and the uncanny effect of time's being stopped, the picture seems almost abstract, as though the only possible next step was Mondrian.

And there are many more pleasures to be had in "Vermeer and the Delft School" There's The Glass of Wine (c. 1658-59, Gemaldegalerie, Berlin), recently cleaned and glorious in color, with the tender rose pink of the girl's dress competing for attention with the vivid characterization conveyed by the way she raises her glass to drain it. There's the little head of a gift with a fantastic red hat from the National Gallery, Washington, with its startling flicks of paint and broad planes. In this context, we look with fresh eyes at the Met's own treasured Vermeers, pictures we've all grown up with, such as the Young Woman with a Pitcher of Milk (c. 1662), a model of how cool, diffuse sunlight picks out the glitter of well-tended brass, the reds of a Turkish carpet, the crisp folds of white linen, the yellow of a striped jacket, or the ultramarine ultramarine, blue pigment used chiefly as a coloring material and as a bluing agent. A double silicate of sodium and aluminum with some sulfur, it is prepared commercially from kaolin, sulfur, soda ash, and other inexpensive ingredients.  of a skirt. The context also clarifies our view of the Met's cooler, more subdued Woman with a Lute (c. 1662-63), another familiar painting of a wholly engrossed en·gross  
tr.v. en·grossed, en·gross·ing, en·gross·es
1. To occupy exclusively; absorb: A great novel engrosses the reader. See Synonyms at monopolize.

2.
 woman in a setting whose geometry seems at once inevitable and surprising.

These paintings look better than ever in the company of the rather rigidly constructed pair of insipid, self-conscious women playing virginals, from the National Gallery, London, painted about a decade after the Met's pictures. New Yorkers shouldn't gloat, however; the show's brilliant finale is the complex masterwork mas·ter·work  
n.
See masterpiece.
, The Art of Painting (c. 1666-68, Kunsthistorisches Museum The Kunsthistorisches Museum (English: "Museum of Art History") in Vienna, housed in its festive palatial building on Ringstraße, crowned with an octagonal dome, is one of the premier museums of fine arts and decorative arts in the world. , Vienna), and it makes the Met's Allegory of Faith (c. 1670-72), a disconcerting dis·con·cert  
tr.v. dis·con·cert·ed, dis·con·cert·ing, dis·con·certs
1. To upset the self-possession of; ruffle. See Synonyms at embarrass.

2.
 painting at best, appear even more theatrical and problematic than usual. The Art of Painting is one of Vermeer's most intellectually and formally ambitious works (and one of his most achieved), with its elegantly but anachronistically a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
 dressed painter seated at his easel, scrutinizing a model accoutered to symbolize fame, its wash of pale sunlight, and its delicate orchestration of warm grays and creams brought to life by dull oranges and intense blues. Both allegories are triumphs of high illusionism, almost certainly achieved with the aid of a camera obscura, but in The Art of Painting, these technical feats are subsumed by assured paint-handling, inventive color, and evocative light. In the rather inert Allegory of Faith, verisimilitude is forced into a shotgun marriage shotgun marriage
n.
A marriage that is forced or necessitated because of pregnancy. Also called shotgun wedding.
 with elaborately staged symbols, making us grateful that, at least according to the evidence of the majority of the surviving works, Vermeer concentrated on genre rather than history painting.

It's all fascinating and, often, illuminating. Seeing Vermeer in context helps to locate him more firmly within the history of art, but he remains enigmatic, plainly of his time yet fundamentally different from his peers. That we must form our idea of this difficult, appealing painter almost entirely from his art is part of the fascination. Nothing at all is known about his training. He left no record of his method nor did any of his contemporaries comment on it. The fragments that have been pieced together about his life and practice rely a great deal upon informed conjecture, cautious assumption, circumstantial evidence circumstantial evidence

In law, evidence that is drawn not from direct observation of a fact at issue but from events or circumstances that surround it. If a witness arrives at a crime scene seconds after hearing a gunshot to find someone standing over a corpse and holding a
, and intelligent speculation. Even the name "Johannes Vermeer “Vermeer” redirects here. For other uses, see Vermeer (disambiguation).
Johannes Vermeer or Jan Vermeer (baptized October 31 1632, died December 15 1675) was a Dutch painter who specialized in domestic interior scenes of ordinary bourgeois life.
" poses

problems. A definitive overview of the field is provided by the exhaustively researched, copiously illustrated catalogue that accompanies "Vermeer and the Delft School." The question the catalogue, like the exhibition, addresses is "would Vermeer have become the same painter had he lived in Amsterdam, Haarlem, or Leiden?" The conclusion that he would not is reached by a series of essays that provides a vivid picture of the artistic traditions of Delft, including detailed discussions of the work of the city's leading artists--Fabritius, Bramer, De Hooch, and Vermeer. There's also an "Imaginary Walk Through Seventeenth-Century Delft" and a section devoted to plans of the city from the period with "locations of major monuments and addresses of artists and patrons"

A trio of more specialized recent publications offers a closer look at Vermeer himself. Anthony Bailey's Vermeer: A View of Delft(2) is an eminently readable, literate compendium of the recent research into the history of his elusive subject. Bailey isn't quite as good as Simon Schama Simon Michael Schama, CBE (born 13 February 1945) is a British professor of history and art history at Columbia University. His many works on history and art include Landscape and Memory, Dead Certainties, Rembrandt's Eyes  at bringing the smells, and sights, and textures of the past to life--to his credit, he is far more concise--and he sometimes is overly literal in his approach to paintings, but the book is an informative gathering of what is currently known about Vermeer, thoughtfully presented.

More arcane aspects of Vermeer's practice are dissected in Philip Steadman's slightly obsessive treatise, Vermeer's Camera: Uncovering the Truth Behind the Masterpieces,(3) which must be the most thorough discussion ever of the history of the camera obscura and of Vermeer's use of the device as an aid to representation. Absent any documentation from the artist, Steadman bases his theories on visible evidence within the paintings--it's complicated, and the book is full of diagrams--corroborating his conclusions by building scale- and full-sized models of the set-ups from which Vermeer is presumed to have worked. It's entertaining and persuasive, although it doesn't explain why Vermeer's pictures, whatever their technology, are so much more resonant and just plain better than those of his colleagues, who presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 had access to whatever tools well-equipped artists of the period had at their disposal.

Vermeer's Wager: Speculations on Art History, Theory, and Art Museums(4) by the Vermeer scholar Ivan Gaskell, curator at the Fogg Art Museum The Fogg Art Museum is the oldest of Harvard University's art museums. It covers the history of western art from the Middle Ages to the present. It opened to the public in 1895 and was originally housed in an Italian Renaissance style building designed by Richard Morris Hunt , Harvard, is described as standing "at the intersection of art history and criticism, philosophy and museology mu·se·ol·o·gy  
n.
The discipline of museum design, organization, and management.



muse·o·log
." Gaskell takes as his starting point one of those bland, late paintings of musicmaking women from the National Gallery, London, and traces, among other things, the history of the perception of its merits and value, and its relationship to other works of its period, examining, along the way, the various factors, techniques, and theories that have influenced such notions. The book is full of provocative ideas, but Gaskell, alas, is a master of impenetrable academic prose; no idea is too simple or straightforward to escape convolution convolution /con·vo·lu·tion/ (-loo´shun) a tortuous irregularity or elevation caused by the infolding of a structure upon itself.  or ponderous pon·der·ous  
adj.
1. Having great weight.

2. Unwieldy from weight or bulk.

3. Lacking grace or fluency; labored and dull: a ponderous speech. See Synonyms at heavy.
 phrasing. Vermeer may have loaded his pictures with subtle meanings that modern-day viewers must work hard to discover, but he also valued clarity and lucidity. If only Gaskell did.

(1) "Vermeer and the Delft School" was on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, from March 8 to May 27, 2001. It will also be seen at The National Gallery, London, from June 20 to September 16. A catalog of the exhibition, edited by Walter Liedtke, has been published by the museum in association with Yale University Press (640 pages, $75).

(2) Vermeer: A View of Delft, by Anthony Bailey; Henry Holt & Co., 256 pages, $27.50.

(3) Vermeer's Camera: Uncovering the Truth Behind the Masterpieces, by Philip Steadman; Oxford University Press, 256 pages, $25.

(4) Vermeer's Wager: Speculations on Art History, Theory, and Art Museums, by Ivan Gaskell; Reaktion Books, 280 pages, $27.

Karen Wilkin's Clement Greenberg: A Critic's Collection will be published in August by Princeton University Press.
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Author:Wilkin, Karen
Publication:New Criterion
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUNE
Date:Jun 1, 2001
Words:4465
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