*Jan Vermeer* 
(1632-1675)  

Jan Vermeer was a Dutch painter who excelled in  portraying comfortable interior scenes that are composed   with mathematical clarity and suffused with cool, silvery light.

Vermeer, also called Jan van der Meer van Delft, was  born in Delft and baptized on October 31, 1632. After serving a 6-year apprenticeship, part of it probably  under the Dutch painter Carel Fabritius, he was admitted in 1653 to the guild of Saint Luke of Delft as a master painter. An important member of the guild, he served  four terms on its board of governors and appears to have  been well known to his contemporaries. He made a modest  living as an art dealer rather than as a painter. Only 35 of Vermeer's canvases have survived, and none  appears to have been sold. Their small number is the result of Vermeer's deliberate, methodical work habits, comparatively short life, and the disappearance of many of his paintings during the period of obscurity  following his death in Delft on December 15, 1675. With  a few exceptions, including some landscapes, street  scenes, and portraits, Vermeer painted sunlit domestic interiors in which one or two figures are shown engaged  in reading, writing, or playing musical instruments.  These objectively observed, precisely executed genre paintings of 17th-century Dutch life are characterized  by a geometrical sense of order. 

Vermeer was a master of composition and in the  representation of space. He arranged tonal values and  perspective over the foreground, into the middleground,  and farther into the distance in such works as Girl    Asleep at a Table (circa 1656, Metropolitan Museum of  Art, New York City). In Maidservant Pouring Milk (1660,  Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), Woman with a Water Jug (1663, Metropolitan Museum), View of Delft (circa 1660,  Mauritshuis, The Hague), and other works, he recorded  the effects of light with a subtlety, delicacy, and  purity of color that probably never have been surpassed.   

Among his paintings are Soldier and Laughing Girl (1657,  Frick Collection, New York City), and Girl with a Red  Hat (1667, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.).  Vermeer was forgotten after his death and not   rediscovered until the late 19th century. His reputation steadily increased thereafter. He is today considered  one of the greatest Dutch painters. His work was forged  for a time and sold to the Germans during World War II. 

"Vermeer, Jan," 
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved 
 

*Links*   
Find out more about this  artist. 
Links with a * are  quite comprehensive and highly recommended. 

*CFGA Fine Art's 
Vermeer Page 

Mark Harden's Archive 
Vermeer Page   

*WebMuseum, Paris' 
Vermeer Page 

* Roy Williams Clickery's  
The Paintings of Vermeer Page.  

*Web Gallery of Art's  
Vermeer Page 

* World Art Treasures' 
Vermeer Page

Personal Favourites  
 
 
Click for Larger Image
Girl with a Pearl Earring,  
1665, oil on canvas,  
17 1/2 x 15 3/8 in, 
Mauritshuis, The Hague.  
 
Click for Larger Image
Woman with a Lute  
1663, oil on canvas, 
52 x 46 in, 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
New York, NY. 
 
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Woman Holding a Balance,  
1664, oil on canvas, 
15 7/8 x 14 in, 
National Gallery of Art  
at Washington D.C.  
 

Famous Works  
 
 

Click for Larger Image
Girl Asleep at Table 
1656, oil on canvas, 
34 1/2 x 30 1/8 in., 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art,  
New York, NY. 
 
Click for Larger Image
View of Delft 
1660, oil on canvas, 
38 x 45 9/16 in. 
Mauritshuis, The Hague 
 
Click for Larger Image
Girl with a Red  Hat  
1667, oil on panel,  
9 x 7 1/16 in, 
National Gallery of Art,  
Washington, D.C.
 
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