| Articles by: Artist |
|
|
| Articles by: Movement |
|
|
| Articles by: Painting Name |
|
|
|
|
|
Jan Vermeer (31 October, 1632- 16 December, 1675)
|
|
 |
|
Johannes
Vermeer also known as Jan Vermeer was a Dutch artist
whose remarkably small oeuvre is counted as amongst the best
and most revered in the art world today.
The 36 paintings that have survived are great
treasures on display in some of the best museums in the world.
Though Vermeer began his artistic career in the 1650s
by painting large-panel mythological/religious scenes, he
is most famous for the ones, which depicted the daily bourgeois
life and domestic interior scenes in the Dutch town of Delft.
Vermeer paintings are highly remarkable for the quality
of work. The forms and purity of light convey a sense of calmness
and serenity that instills a timeless quality to the paintings.
|
|
Jan Vermeer belonged to a prosperous
family and his father owned an inn and an art agency. After
his father demise, young Vermeer inherited the businesses
and in 1653, he married Catherina Bolnes with whom he had
eleven children.
Very little is known about Vermeer's decisions
to become a painter. It is also not known if he traveled to
Italy, France and other places like most artists did. Some
of Jan Vermeer's early mythological paintings like
'Diana and Her Companions' (1665-56) and 'Christ in the House
of Mary and Martha' (1655) reflect influences from Rembrandt's
painting style. Carel Fabritius (1622-1654) who spent the
last years of his life in Delft also influenced Jan Vermeer.
|
In
addition, it is assumed that Fabritius and Gerard Terborchan
artist from Deventer influenced Vermeer's ideas about perspective,
and his tendency to depict scenes from ordinary day-to-day
life. Leonaert Bramer, who was a fellow painter from Delft,
and witness to Vermeer's marriage, also affected the outcome
of Vermeer paintings.
|
|
 |
|
Although most of Vermeer paintings.
are of indoor scenes, he did panting two outdoor scenes, "The
View of Delft" and "Street in Delft," (1660-1661)
that are simply the best landscape paintings of the 17th Century.
Vermeer paintings. have a realistic look with muted
colors having sudden flashes of bright reds and yellows, reflecting
the technical brilliance in the use of light, and shadows
making them very popular with the viewers.
Many art critics believe that Vermeer
painted pictures with the help of 'camera obscura' an
optical device that was capable of projecting a view on a
flat plane, lighting up the background while allowing the
foreground to remain in shadows.
|
 |
|
Vermeer
paintings such as ‘The Girl with the Pearl Earring’
(1665) also known as ‘Mona Lisa of the North’,
‘The Woman with the Lute’ (1663), ‘The Procuress’
(1656) and others have a quality of tranquilness to them.
With the use of subtle lighting, mostly from the side of the
room, shadows are balanced with light while colors and tones
are dense but simple.
|
Vermeer paintings are dominated
by subtle grays, blues, and yellows make the paintings appear
richer and attractive to the naked eye. |
Vermeer
used a technique called 'pointillist' method of painting,
which uses individual points of color and upon viewing; these
individual points make a picture. Paintings that use this
technique appear softer and the lines appear more blurred
giving the paintings a muted, soft appearance.
Though Jan Vermeer died at the young
age of 43, in 1675, he left behind a legacy of some of the
best paintings ever, and has become one of the most celebrated
Dutch painters known for the calm and serene pictorial quality
of daily life in 17th century Delft. |
|
 |
|