Why is Vermeers Girl with the Pearl Earring considered a masterpiece James Earle

Is she turning towards you
or away from you?

No one can agree.

She’s the mysterious subject
of Dutch master Johannes Vermeer’s

“Girl with the Pearl Earring,”

a painting often referred to
as the ‘Mona Lisa of the North.’

Belonging to a Dutch style of idealized,
sometimes overly expressive paintings

known as tronies,

the “Girl with the Pearl Earring”
has the allure

and subtlety characteristic
of Vermeer’s work.

But this painting stands apart from
the quiet narrative scenes

that we observe from afar in many
of Vermeer’s paintings.

A girl reading a letter.

A piano lesson.

A portrait artist at work.

These paintings give us a sense of
intimacy while retaining their distance,

a drawn curtain often emphasizes
the separation.

We can witness a milkmaid
serenely pouring a bowl of milk,

but that milk isn’t for us.

We’re only onlookers.

The studied composition
in Vermeer’s paintings

invokes a balanced harmony.

With the checkered floor in many
of his works,

Vermeer demonstrates his command
of perspective and foreshortening.

That’s a technique that uses distortion

to give the illusion
of an object receding into the distance.

Other elements, like sight lines,
mirrors, and light sources

describe the moment through space
and position.

The woman reading
a letter by an open window

is precisely placed so the window
can reflect her image back to the viewer.

Vermeer would even hide the leg
of an easel for the sake of composition.

The absence of these very elements brings
the “Girl with the Pearl Earring” to life.

Vermeer’s treatment of light and shadow,
or chiaroscuro,

uses a dark, flat background to further
spotlight her three-dimensionality.

Instead of being like a set piece
in a theatrical narrative scene,

she becomes a psychological subject.

Her eye contact and slightly parted lips,
as if she is about to say something,

draw us into her gaze.

Traditional subjects of portraiture
were often nobility or religious figures.

So why was Vermeer painting
an anonymous girl?

In the 17th century, the city of Delft,
like the Netherlands in general,

had turned against ruling aristocracy
and the Catholic church.

After eight decades of rebellion
against Spanish power,

the Dutch came to favor the idea
of self-rule and a political republic.

Cities like Delft were unsupervised
by kings or bishops,

so many artists like Vermeer
were left without traditional patrons.

Fortunately, business innovation

spearheaded by
the Dutch East India Company

transformed the economic landscape
in the Netherlands.

It created a merchant class
and new type of patron.

Wishing to be represented
in the paintings they financed,

these merchants preferred
middle class subjects

depicted in spaces that looked
like their own homes

surrounded by familiar objects.

The maps that appear in Vermeer’s
paintings, for example,

were considered fashionable and worldly

by the merchant class of what is known
as the Dutch Golden Age.

The oriental turban worn by the “Girl
with the Pearl Earring”

also emphasizes the worldliness
of the merchant class,

and the pearl itself, a symbol of wealth,
is actually an exaggeration.

Vermeer couldn’t have afforded
a real pearl of its size.

It was likely just a glass or tin drop
varnished to look like a pearl.

This mirage of wealth is mirrored
in the painting itself.

In greater context, the pearl appears
round and heavy,

but a detailed view shows that it’s
just a floating smudge of paint.

Upon close inspection, we are reminded
of Vermeer’s power as an illusion maker.

While we may never know the real identity
of the “Girl with the Pearl Earring,”

we can engage with her portrait
in a way that is unforgettable.

As she hangs in her permanent home
in the Mauritshuis Museum in The Hague,

her presence is simultaneously penetrating
and subtle.

In her enigmatic way, she represents
the birth of a modern perspective

on economics, politics, and love.

她是转向你
还是远离你?

没有人能同意。


是荷兰大师约翰内斯·维米尔(Johannes Vermeer)的

“戴珍珠耳环的女孩”

的神秘主题,这幅画通常被
称为“北方的蒙娜丽莎”。 “戴珍珠耳环的女孩”

属于荷兰风格的理想化、
有时过于表现力的

画作,

具有维米尔作品的魅力

和微妙
特征。

但这幅画

与我们在维米尔的许多画作中从远处观察到的安静的叙事场景不同

读信的女孩。

钢琴课。

工作中的肖像画家。

这些画
在保持距离的同时给我们一种亲密感

,拉开的窗帘往往
强调分离。

我们可以看到挤奶女工
平静地倒一碗牛奶,

但那牛奶不适合我们。

我们只是旁观者。

维米尔画作中经过研究的构图

唤起了一种平衡的和谐。 维米尔


他的许多作品中都有方格地板,

展示了他
对透视和透视的掌握。

这是一种使用扭曲


产生物体后退到远处的错觉的技术。

其他元素,如视线、
镜子和光源

,通过空间和位置描述了这一刻


打开的窗户边读信的女人

被精确放置,因此窗户
可以将她的形象反射回观众。 为了构图,

维米尔甚至会隐藏
画架的腿。

这些元素的缺失
使“戴珍珠耳环的女孩”栩栩如生。

维米尔对光影的处理,
或明暗对比,

使用深色、平坦的背景来进一步
突出她的三维度。 她

不再像
戏剧叙事场景中的布景,

而是成为一个心理主题。

她的目光接触和微微张开的嘴唇,
仿佛她要说什么,

将我们吸引到她的视线中。

肖像画的传统主题
通常是贵族或宗教人物。

那么,维米尔为什么要画
一个匿名的女孩呢?

在 17 世纪,代尔夫特市
与整个荷兰一样

,转而反对统治贵族
和天主教会。

在对西班牙政权进行了八年的反抗之后

,荷兰人开始支持
自治和政治共和国的理念。

像代尔夫特这样的城市
不受国王或主教的监督,

因此许多像维米尔这样的艺术家
都没有传统的赞助人。

幸运的是,

由荷兰东印度公司带头的商业创新

改变了荷兰的经济
格局。

它创造了商人阶层
和新型赞助人。 这些商人

希望
在他们资助的画作中表现出来,他们

更喜欢

在看起来
像是

被熟悉的物体包围的自己家的空间中描绘的中产阶级主题。

例如,出现在维米尔
画作中的地图

被称为荷兰黄金时代的商人阶层认为是时尚和世俗的

“戴珍珠耳环的少女”所戴的东方头巾

也强调
了商人阶层的世俗,

而珍珠本身作为财富的象征,
其实是夸张的。

维米尔买不起像它这么大的
一颗真正的珍珠。

它很可能只是一个玻璃或锡滴,
涂上一层漆,看起来像一颗珍珠。

这种财富的幻影反映
在这幅画本身中。

在更大的背景下,珍珠看起来
又圆又重,

但详细的观察表明它
只是漂浮的油漆污迹。

仔细观察后,我们会
想起维米尔作为幻象制造者的力量。

虽然我们可能永远不会知道
“戴珍珠耳环的女孩”的真实身份,但

我们可以
以一种令人难忘的方式与她的肖像互动。

当她挂
在海牙莫瑞泰斯博物馆的永久家中时,

她的存在同时具有穿透力
和微妙性。

以她神秘的方式,她代表
了一种

关于经济、政治和爱情的现代观点的诞生。