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Jeune dame au collier de perles
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A young woman stands at a table and looks attentively into a mirror that hangs on the wall opposite her. She is engaged in putting on a pearl <a href="/entity/m01llwg" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">necklace</a>, which she is holding on yellow ribbons. Cool light enters through a leaded <a href="/entity/m0d4v4" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">window</a>. On the table is an arrangement like a still-life of a <a href="/entity/m02s195" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">vase</a> with lid, fabrics, a powder box, <a href="/entity/m0404d" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">jewellery</a> case and comb. Here, by means of differentiated tonal gradations, Vermeer created masterly, finely nuanced colouring, which is further enhanced by oppositions such<br>as the yellow of the curtain and the fur-trimmed jacket against the dark, blue-black foreground. By placing the vanishing point of the painting a little above the <a href="/entity/m04bcr3" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">table top</a>, he succeeds in imparting a monumental quality to the figure and the objects. With the <a href="/entity/m01mzpv" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">chair</a>, cropped by the edge of the painting at the front right, he achieves the effect of depth and at the same time increases the impression of intimacy. At first glance, it appears that Vermeer, like a number of painters, has represented the subject of the morning toilet that was so popular in the 1650s and 1660s. Painters such as <a href="/entity/m03j8p3" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">Gerard Ter Borch</a> and <a href="/entity/m03k9mn" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">Frans Mieris</a> (fig. p. 271) indeed found comparably intimate solutions, which may have served as an impulse for Vermeer in his own works. However, Vermeer’s depiction does not include, as was long assumed, the simple beauty and attractiveness of a young woman at her toilet. Nor is the hidden meaning revealed here primarily a moral admonition, a warning against devotion to earthly luxury (vanitas) or excessive pride (superbia). On the contrary, through his reduction of the narrative, objects and colouring, Vermeer achieves a shift in content. The depiction becomes ambiguous. In contrast to thematically related works by his contemporaries, the centre of attention here is the sensual complexity of processes of visual perception rather than moralising adages.<br>In this context, the corrections, visible in technical screening, that Vermeer made during the painting process are highly illuminating. On the chair in the foreground, for example, a string instrument like a lute originally lay. On the wall behind the woman’s figure hung a <a href="/entity/m04_tb" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">map</a>, already sketched in broad brushstrokes, of the kind that can be seen in various other paintings by <a href="/entity/m0bw2x" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">Vermeer</a>. For reasons of aesthetics and composition, however, the artist removed both of these motifs from the picture by overpainting them. Whereas the composition was previously densely crowded and busy due to the large number of objects portrayed, now the viewer’s interest is directed immediately to the woman, whose gaze bridges the wall, which is shaded in the finest gradations, and draws the beholder’s eye to the mirror on the left. Now all attention is guided to the interaction between the figure of the young woman and her mirror image, which is not visible to the viewer. The viewer’s eyes follow hers to the mirror opposite, and are guided back in a kind of circular movement via the fabrics on the table to the crooked fingers of her left hand and her face. Narrative chronology is banished here. Concentration on the sensuality of the process of looking predominates. This stroke of artistic genius required an empty wall that does not divert attention and is now the centre of the picture. For a good reason, therefore, the items discernible in the foreground were depicted in reduced form and in dense shadow. Katja Kleinert | 200 Masterpieces of European Painting - Gemäldegalerie <a href="/entity/m0156q" data-gacategory="annotation" data-gaaction="clicked" data-galabel="assetpage_injected_link_v1">Berlin</a>, 2019
Créateur : Jan Vermeer
Nationalité : Néerlandais
Contexte personnel : Vers 1664, Vermeer trente-deux ans apogée maturité crée scènes intimistes domestiques caractéristiques. Maître lumière diffuse révélant intériorité psychologique sujets.
Mouvement artistique : Âge d'or néerlandais
Période de création : 1664
Lieu de création : Delft
Dimensions : h56.1 x w47.1cm
Type d'œuvre : Picture
Matériaux utilisés : Huile sur toile
Thème principal : Jeune femme essayant collier
Provenance : Gemäldegalerie Berlin
Jeune femme essaie collier perles devant miroir. Instant suspendu coquetterie féminine. Lumière latérale sculpte volumes. Vermeer transforme geste banal en méditation lumineuse beauté éphémère. Symbolisme moral ambigu typique peinture hollandaise.
Incarne génie Vermeer transformant domestique en métaphysique. Redécouvert XIXe. Symbole perfection technique artisanale.
Glacis translucides, empâtements sélectifs, camera obscura, pigments coûteux, patience extrême, pointillé caractéristique.
55x45 cm. Lumière latérale sculpte délicatement. Palette restreinte jaune/blanc/brun. Facture méticuleuse glacis translucides. Camera obscura probable. Pointillé perles anticipant impressionnisme.
« Vermeer capture éternité dans instant : collier devient icône beauté suspendue lumière. »
1. WHEELOCK, Vermeer Complete Works, Yale, 1997\n2. LIEDTKE, Vermeer Complete Paintings, 2008