Girl with a Pearl Earring, painted by Vermeer in 1665, might just be the most famous and beloved portrait in the world.
But who is the girl?
Well, that's the thing. There was no girl, because this isn't a portrait...
Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675) is one of the greatest painters who ever lived, though in his lifetime he wasn't known beyond his hometown.
He was born in Delft during the Dutch Golden Age, a period of extraordinary cultural, political, and economic flourishing in the Netherlands.
Vermeer, like many of his contemporaries - and unlike artists in Catholic parts of Europe - generally stuck to so-called "genre paintings."
This means a scene from everyday life rather than a religious topic, which had been the dominant theme of art in Europe for centuries:
Hence the proliferation of wonderful Dutch landscape artists during the Golden Age, like Jacob van Ruisdael, who painted the real world unadorned and without the idealising, classical spirit of the Italian Renaissance and its successor movements.
Ordinary beauty.
There had been many extraordinary genre painters, such as Jan van Eyck with his Arnolfini Wedding or Brueghel the Elder and his countryside jollies.
It was the farmer, the maid, and the merchant - rather than figures of Classical and Biblical history - that they depicted:
In this way Vermeer represents the continuation of a rich tradition of genre paintings in Northern Europe, and one which perhaps reached its height during his lifetime.
What made Vermeer special was his mastery of colour and light, his delicacy and his mystery.
Vermeer worked slowly and with quality materials.
He used pigments such as ultramarine (extremely expensive), vermillion, lead-tin yellow, and umber - playing these rich colours off against or over one another - to great effect, combining vivid figures with plain backgrounds:
And, beyond his careful balancing & mixing of colours, Vermeer always held back from introducing too many details.
Once his style had matured, Vermeer kept his interiors simple.
The united effect gives his domestic scenes an air of great refinment and harmony:
Just consider another typical domestic genre painting from the same era.
This is a wonderfully comic scene painted by Jan Steen in 1663 - but it's all action and movement, and even well-composed, the frame is flooded with detail.
Now look at something like this, Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid.
Vermeer's scenes are gentle & uncomical; they *look* quiet.
And there's almost something mysterious about Vermeer, slightly ethereal, in his simple, careful balances of light and colour.
Even his landscapes (of which there are but two) convey the same tranquillity.
This view of his hometown, Delft, is a vision of peace and refined simplicity.
Perhaps Vermeer's greatest painting is the Milkmaid, from 1658, a simple composition with exquisite colours.
It might just be the culmination of "genre painting" - at least, the uncomical type - serenity embodied, a moment captured, a domestic idealism in art.
And that brings us to Girl with a Pearl Earring, which *isn't* a portrait.
How? Well... what is a portrait?
A portrait is a painting of a named individual; a representation of them in art. Before photography, portraits were how people had their likenesses captured.
So what is the Girl with a Pearl Earring, if not a portrait?
It's a "tronie".
This was a popular art form in 17th century Dutch and Flemish painting in which painters portrayed not a specified person, but a *type* of person (often as a so-called "head"):
And beyond types of people they could also be allegories for a particular emotion or human quality.
The tronie could be of youth or old age, of melancholy or greed. And unlike grand neoclassical allegories with all their symbolism, the tronie was straightforward:
They often featured strained or unusual expressions - experiments in human expressiveness, perhaps - and can therefore be amusing, as when depicting surprise or the pain of pulling off a plaster:
Or rather more contemplative, even frightening, as in the many tronies of old age. Dignified musations on mortality, or bitter parodies of the elderly?
So that's why tronies aren't named after people - like portraits - but given generic names based on the figure depicted or idea portrayed: old woman, old man, youth with violin, surprise, contemplation... or girl with a pearl earring.
What we see are ideas represented by faces.
Hence the title - not because we don't know her name, but because it's a tronie.
Because she never had a name, because she might not have even been real, because Vermeer wasn't trying to depict a living person, but a *feeling* in human form.
Indeed, Girl with a Pearl Earring has only been its title for a few decades.
After Vermeer's death it was catalogued as "tronie in antique costume" and after its reappearance in the 1880s was called "Girl with a Turban" in Dutch, or "Head of a Young Girl" in the Anglosphere.
Seen as a tronie - an expressive allegory - Girl with a Pearl Earring perhaps makes more sense.
Not a portrait of a specific person but the embodiment of an idea, even the simple feeling of a fleeting glance - or whatever else it is the viewer sees in this allegorical face.
Or in the famous pearl, one of the outstanding examples of Vermeer's love for and attention to light.
A few delicate brushstrokes, a glinting highlight set off against the shadows... and Vermeer captures the imaginations of so many; his colourful genius at its very best.
Girl with a Pearl Earring (or whatever we call it) represents the culmination of the tronie - and more.
Vermeer brought his supreme sensibility for colour and composition to bear on this painting, and so - as with all truly great art - it has surpassed its original context.
Not many paintings have been definitively attributed to Vermeer - he worked slowly and died at just 43 after a moderately successful career had ended in financial troubles.
Upon which Vermeer fell into obscurity for a long time, for neither he nor his art ever left Delft.
And here is Johannes Vermeer himself, in a possible self-portrait; over three centuries later, his paintings have travelled the world.
A master of delicacy, of light and colour, whose frozen moments of simple and harmonious time have enthralled and delighted millions...
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It features seven short lessons every Friday, including art, architecture, history, and rhetoric.
"Hanami" is underway in Japan — the season when people gather to watch cherry blossom trees, or sakura, in bloom.
It is an ancient tradition that has since become globally popular, with similar gatherings all around the world.
But hanami isn't just about pretty flowers...
The place to begin is with an old story about the King of Persia. He supposedly gathered the wisest men in the land and asked them if there was any sentence which would always be true, whenever it was spoken.
They found an answer — this too shall pass.
As Abraham Lincoln said:
The idea that "this too shall pass" — that nothing in life is permanent — is found in cultures all around the world.
But they haven't always drawn the same conclusions from it...
A strange word, one of few that famously cannot be rhymed.
It comes to modern English from Middle English, itself from Old French, via a host of other languages, originating in Sanskrit and before that Dravidian, as a name for the fruit.
So the word orange was originally used in English to refer to the fruit.
From there, at some point in the 16th century, it was adapted to refer to the colour of that fruit.
Before that? The colour orange was simply called red-yellow.
150 years ago today, at precisely 8pm, the world of art changed forever.
What happened? A small, independent art exhibition opened in Paris.
It was a financial failure and barely 3,000 people went — but, in time, these artists would come to be known as "the Impressionists"...
15th April. 1874. Paris.
On the top floor of the studio of a photographer called Nadar, at No. 35 on the Boulevard des Capucines, about 170 works of art have been gathered for an exhibition.
It is hosted by the "Société anonyme des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc."
Some of the artists whose works are being shown might be familiar to you: Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Berthe Morisot (the only female artist), Alfred Sisley, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne, and Claude Monet.
It sounds oddly specific, but 19th century drain pipes were quite something...
You probably wouldn't notice these if you walked past them — we are accustomed to ignore drain pipes, of course — but, stop for a minute, and you'll find peculiar monsters staring back at you.
Perhaps not pretty, but certainly interesting.
Some of these old drain pipes were rather maximalist:
It was made by a Swedish illustrator called John Bauer, one of the most important artists you've never heard of.
His revolutionary art influenced everything from graphic novels to animated films to video games, and here's why...
John Bauer had a short but wonderfully creative life that ended in tragedy.
He died in 1918, at the age of just 36, along with his wife and son in a shipwreck on Lake Vättern.
But, in the time he was given, Bauer gave plenty back to the world.
Bauer, who spent his schooldays doodling caricatures, studied at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts.
There he set himself the goal of finding a new way to illustrate fairy tales, especially for children — he believed they had become conventionalised and lifeless.