Van Gogh •
Artist Biographies
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Johannes Jan Vermeer
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Johannes Jan Vermeer |
| Birth Year : |
1632 |
| Death Year : |
1675 |
| Country : |
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Learn more about Johannes Vermeer
Johannes Vermeer, the finest genre painter of the seventeenth century, was born and died in Delft. He was the son of a
silk weaver and tavern owner who sold art as well as beer, a combination of wares not unusual for Holland. So very little
is known about Vermeer that it is only presumed that he was at one time an apprentice to Carel
Fabritius,
Rembrandt's pupil. Vermeer married in 1653, had
eight children, kept the tavern that he had inherited from his father, and painted in his spare time. He attracted
very little, if any, attention during his lifetime, and it was not until 1860 that a Parisian art critic published a
monograph on Vermeer and brought him to public notice and belated recognition. Thirty-three canvases have now been
positively identified as Vermeer's work and it is upon these that his fame rests. Vermeer's cool, perfectly balanced
paintings present a world so calm as to be almost breathless. Most of his works present one female figure quietly occupied
at some womanly task: making lace, reading, pouring milk, or playing a lute. Occasionally two figures appear in this
intimate world, and their relationship seems without speech as if all the world were under a spell of silence. Vermeer's
composition seems extremely simple, but is in fact carefully and intricately laid out. In each work, a careful analysis will
show a series of interlocking rectangles filling up the entire surface with volumes rounded by silvery light coming from the
side. The world is turned by Vermeer into a geometric pattern, inhabited by people who seem objects is a still life.
He employed a soft palette, with blues, golds, and soft reds predominating.
US
"We spend our whole lives in unconscious exercise of the art of expressing our thoughts with the help of words."