Mauritshuis – Johannes Vermeer - Girl with a Pearl Earring
c.1665, 44.5×39 cm.
Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675)
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The Girl with a Pearl Earring Movie
Girl with a Pearl Earring, 2003
Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Colin Firth, Essie Davis, Tom Wilkinson.
Watch the movie in Russian
In 2003, a feature film was directed by Peter Webber, thanks to which many people who were not interested in painting learned about the Dutch painter Jan Vermeer and the painting that became the central theme of the film.
The film, based on Tracy Chevaliers book, takes considerable liberties with the story of how Vermeers masterpiece was created. However, such artistic license is easy to forgive, knowing how many mysteries surround the famous painting, nicknamed Dutch Mona Lisa. Girl, or Girl in a Turban, as the painting was originally called, dates back to 1665, and there are far more hypotheses about it than reliable facts.
The painting belongs to the genre of Tronie, which was popular among portrait painters in the Netherlands in the seventeenth century. This genre denoted images of a persons head. In 1881, at the recommendation of Victor de Stuers, who advocated for preserving masterpieces by Dutch masters in their historical homeland, Girl in a Turban was purchased for a pittance at an auction in The Hague in terrible condition and later restored. Donated to the Mauritshuis museum, the painting still resides in its rightful place, in the Netherlands.
The painting depicts a young girl in a dynamic pose: the moment when the model turns her head towards the viewer, as if someone has called her from the other side of the canvas. The lighting emphasizes her wide-open eyes, slightly parted lips, and a large teardrop-shaped pearl earring, thanks to which Vermeers masterpiece later received its name. The large, almost unnaturally large pearl repeats the light reflection in the models eyes, but the painting is centered so that the viewer first notices the jewelry, and then the alluring gaze of the girl. Interestingly, the artist depicted a similar earring on several other of his works (Woman with a Lute, Woman in a Pearl Necklace and six other well-known paintings). The girl looks at the viewer against a dark, almost black background, which further accentuates her pale face and brightly colored turban, concealing her hair. Her slightly parted lips, according to symbolism in painting of that time, indicate an attempt at communication. A lemon-yellow fabric falls from the turban almost vertically, adding dynamism to the painting and emphasizing the turn of her head. The girl is dressed in a dark brown dress, with a bright, almost bold collar made of pure lead white.
Neither the name of the mysterious model, nor the reason why she is wearing a dress and turban that were not fashionable at the time, nor the patron, if he existed, are known. According to one version, this is the daughter of Jan Vermeer, Maria, who was about thirteen years old at the time the painting was created; another hypothesis suggests that the model was the daughter of the patron Ruijven, a supporter of the artist. Tracy Chevaliers book, however, claims that the girl depicted in the painting was a young maid named Griet.
For nearly four hundred years, the painting has stirred the imagination no less than the Mona Lisa hanging in the Louvre. A simple gesture and an attentive gaze convey the silent connection between the model and the artist – an emotion that runs like a red thread through many portraits by the Dutch painter.
В серёжке девушки – жемчужина
большая, что в глаза бросается.
Не зря фантазия разбужена
у всех, кто видел ту красавицу.
beautiful~
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The subtexts of Girl with a Pearl Earring are rich and open to interpretation. The painting is considered a tronie, a type of work popular in the Dutch Golden Age that depicted an idealized representation or character rather than a specific individual. This raises questions about the girls identity and status. Is she a domestic servant, a wealthy woman, or an exoticized fantasy? The simple yet luxurious pearl earring suggests wealth, but her humble clothing and turban, while exotic, could also be associated with lower social strata or the fashion of the time.
Vermeers masterful use of light and shadow, known as chiaroscuro, imbues the painting with a sense of mystery and intimacy. The soft, diffused light creates a dreamlike atmosphere, and the girls direct, yet enigmatic gaze creates a powerful connection with the viewer, inviting speculation about her thoughts and feelings. The paintings enduring appeal lies in its ambiguity, its exquisite rendering, and the enduring mystery of the girls identity and the story Vermeer meant to tell.