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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:45,740 --> 00:00:49,440 To me, it is one of the most beautiful things in Holland. 2 00:00:49,960 --> 00:00:52,620 It is, however, in no sense Dutch. 3 00:00:53,120 --> 00:00:56,800 The painting is Dutch only because it is the work of a Dutchman. 4 00:00:57,220 --> 00:01:02,720 No other Dutch painter could compass such liquid clarity, such cool surfaces. 5 00:01:03,560 --> 00:01:06,100 Indeed, none of the others seem to have tried. 6 00:01:06,540 --> 00:01:08,660 A different ideal was theirs. 7 00:01:09,580 --> 00:01:14,060 Apart, however, from the question of technique, upon which I am not entitled 8 00:01:14,060 --> 00:01:18,620 speak, The picture has to me human interest beyond description. 9 00:01:18,940 --> 00:01:25,200 There is a winning charm in this simple eastern face that no words of mine can 10 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:26,200 express. 11 00:01:31,160 --> 00:01:36,300 All that is hard in the Dutch nature dissolves beneath her reluctant smile. 12 00:01:37,140 --> 00:01:41,840 She symbolizes the fairest and sweetest things in the eleven provinces. 13 00:01:42,380 --> 00:01:43,840 She makes Holland. 14 00:01:44,490 --> 00:01:45,490 Sacred ground. 15 00:02:19,120 --> 00:02:23,560 During a two -year program of building, renovation and reconstruction, the 16 00:02:23,560 --> 00:02:28,040 painting Girl with a Pearl Earring embarked on a global tour with other 17 00:02:28,040 --> 00:02:33,060 treasures from the world -famous Mauritshuis Museum in The Hague. She was 18 00:02:33,060 --> 00:02:37,140 tour's poster girl and attracted enormous crowds wherever she went. 19 00:02:37,940 --> 00:02:43,520 Now she's returning home to a growing sense of excitement as the Mauritshuis, 20 00:02:43,820 --> 00:02:48,140 one of Europe's leading art galleries, reopens to the public once again. 21 00:02:53,640 --> 00:02:58,600 But what is it about this 17th century picture, this mysterious Dutch girl, 22 00:02:58,700 --> 00:03:03,220 painted by Johannes Vermeer, that has projected her to such iconic status? 23 00:03:03,800 --> 00:03:06,720 Who is this Mona Lisa of the North? 24 00:03:37,770 --> 00:03:42,550 Writing in another place some years ago, I ventured to call the marriage house 25 00:03:42,550 --> 00:03:46,710 picture of a girl's head one of the most beautiful things in Holland. 26 00:03:47,510 --> 00:03:54,290 I retract that statement now, and instead I say, quite calmly, that it is 27 00:03:54,290 --> 00:03:56,090 most beautiful thing in Holland. 28 00:03:56,930 --> 00:04:01,980 And to me it is in many ways not only the most beautiful thing in Holland, but 29 00:04:01,980 --> 00:04:06,260 the most satisfying and exquisite product of brush and colour that I have 30 00:04:06,260 --> 00:04:07,260 anywhere seen. 31 00:04:08,260 --> 00:04:14,420 The painting of the lower lip is as much a miracle to me as a Darwin tulip. 32 00:05:06,120 --> 00:05:09,660 We've seen the girl with the pearl earring all over the world recently, 33 00:05:09,660 --> 00:05:13,960 in The Hague, then going to Japan, the U .S., Italy, and she's really captured 34 00:05:13,960 --> 00:05:15,320 everyone's imagination. 35 00:05:16,020 --> 00:05:19,060 I often got the question, what makes her so special? 36 00:05:19,400 --> 00:05:23,220 It was interesting to get this question in various different countries. 37 00:05:23,480 --> 00:05:29,060 You would see that she really has a kind of universal appeal. 38 00:05:29,320 --> 00:05:33,080 I think this comes down to a number of factors. I wish I could give you one 39 00:05:33,080 --> 00:05:34,080 straight answer. 40 00:05:35,260 --> 00:05:38,520 Let's start with the obvious, and she's absolutely gorgeous. She's a beautiful 41 00:05:38,520 --> 00:05:43,060 girl, and she is something you really want to look at. The competition is very 42 00:05:43,060 --> 00:05:48,260 clever. You see a brightly colored figure against a dark background, which 43 00:05:48,260 --> 00:05:53,140 sense projects her into our space and really invites us to engage with her. 44 00:05:53,980 --> 00:05:57,820 That is, of course, only strengthened by her gesture, the way she looks over her 45 00:05:57,820 --> 00:06:00,900 shoulders. Her mouth is slightly parted. 46 00:06:01,900 --> 00:06:05,620 There's a little tiny fleck of paint on the corner of her lips that just 47 00:06:05,620 --> 00:06:07,760 indicates she just is saying something. 48 00:06:07,980 --> 00:06:13,540 Her whole attitude is very much inviting. It invites you to engage with 49 00:06:14,820 --> 00:06:15,820 Simplicity. 50 00:06:16,800 --> 00:06:18,600 Absolutely simple. 51 00:06:18,900 --> 00:06:21,400 Just the head, just the person. 52 00:06:22,540 --> 00:06:25,460 No background, no reference to a place. 53 00:06:25,780 --> 00:06:32,420 I think it's a timelessness that is really rooted in... the relationship 54 00:06:32,420 --> 00:06:35,240 between the artist and the subject. 55 00:06:35,980 --> 00:06:41,020 It gives you this entry, a psychological entry if you like, to the person 56 00:06:41,020 --> 00:06:46,140 without any sort of veils of materialism. 57 00:06:46,380 --> 00:06:51,880 You feel very close physically to her when you look at the painting, which I 58 00:06:51,880 --> 00:06:55,620 think is quite different from the Mona Lisa where I feel extraordinary 59 00:06:55,940 --> 00:06:57,920 like massive amount of space. 60 00:06:58,540 --> 00:07:03,040 emotionally and physically between myself and the image of the Mona Lisa. 61 00:07:03,860 --> 00:07:09,660 With the girl with a pearl earring she seems like somebody who you could afford 62 00:07:09,660 --> 00:07:15,720 to be familiar with and I think she's very sexy actually. She's not 63 00:07:15,720 --> 00:07:22,720 provocatively beautiful but there's something very very attractive about 64 00:07:23,719 --> 00:07:28,440 and I think it's entirely in the way it's painted, not in what she looks 65 00:07:28,720 --> 00:07:34,340 I think what's most alluring about the painting is that it's unresolved and 66 00:07:34,340 --> 00:07:35,340 unresolvable. 67 00:07:36,200 --> 00:07:42,000 I've looked at it for many, many years, and I still don't know what she's 68 00:07:42,000 --> 00:07:46,540 thinking. I still don't know if it's a happy painting or a sad painting. 69 00:07:47,260 --> 00:07:51,000 And that seems like such a basic thing to be able to unpack about a painting. 70 00:07:51,140 --> 00:07:55,820 You ought to be able to know what you're looking at. But actually Vermeer has 71 00:07:55,820 --> 00:08:00,940 somehow managed to capture in her a whole lot of contradictions. 72 00:08:18,060 --> 00:08:22,120 To meet this girl's gaze is to be implicated in its urgency. 73 00:08:22,820 --> 00:08:28,700 It is me at whom she gazes, with real, unguarded human emotions, 74 00:08:28,780 --> 00:08:33,980 and with an intensity that demands something just as real and human in 75 00:08:35,380 --> 00:08:38,980 One grows complicit in the painting's own impossible desires. 76 00:08:39,980 --> 00:08:45,160 Her eyes sharpen the underlying mood into something poignant and piercing. 77 00:08:45,880 --> 00:08:51,920 and focus it on the artist, on the viewer, with a mixture of reproach and 78 00:08:51,920 --> 00:08:52,920 regret. 79 00:08:53,120 --> 00:08:58,160 The act of looking is haunted here by suggestions of violation and betrayal. 80 00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:02,820 Is it our life that makes her real? 81 00:09:03,840 --> 00:09:09,140 Is it her vibrancy of being that we lack and long for? 82 00:09:25,420 --> 00:09:32,400 The painting is marked by this series of specular highlights, and 83 00:09:32,400 --> 00:09:36,260 by that I mean very, very shiny points on shiny things. 84 00:09:36,560 --> 00:09:41,860 And it's her eyes, the one pearl earring, and her lips. 85 00:09:42,100 --> 00:09:46,700 And they have these white dots of paint, and it's like they've been anointed 86 00:09:46,700 --> 00:09:52,420 with paint rather than softly focused. So they look extremely shiny. 87 00:09:52,920 --> 00:09:59,740 But there's a wetness about it. And I think that one of the things that 88 00:09:59,740 --> 00:10:06,560 makes paintings of people look great is if you can make the eyes and the 89 00:10:06,560 --> 00:10:07,560 lips look wet. 90 00:10:07,840 --> 00:10:13,180 And it's funny because everybody, you know, the catch word is earring and 91 00:10:13,460 --> 00:10:19,740 And yet I think what he's done is said these lips, these eyes, they're like 92 00:10:19,740 --> 00:10:21,380 pearls and they shine. 93 00:10:22,010 --> 00:10:23,970 and they're wet and off the water. 94 00:10:24,430 --> 00:10:30,890 And the pearl in 17th and 16th and 15th centuries 95 00:10:30,890 --> 00:10:36,550 was a symbol of virtue and faithfulness and with Dutch painting 96 00:10:36,550 --> 00:10:43,410 symbolism is extremely important and so having a painting that 97 00:10:43,410 --> 00:10:45,010 isn't a portrait. 98 00:10:46,070 --> 00:10:50,230 in the conventional sense that we know who the person is, etc. 99 00:10:51,050 --> 00:10:57,370 It is a painting of a virtuous or faithful person and perhaps Vermeer may 100 00:10:57,370 --> 00:11:04,110 painted it as a symbolic painting rather than a 101 00:11:04,110 --> 00:11:05,470 painting of a person. 102 00:11:06,410 --> 00:11:07,990 So it's all about illusion. 103 00:11:08,470 --> 00:11:13,350 And that's also very smart of an artist like Johannes Vermeer, who must have 104 00:11:13,350 --> 00:11:18,190 been a perfect observer of reality, because first you have to understand 105 00:11:18,190 --> 00:11:20,130 to make an illusion of it, of course. 106 00:11:20,570 --> 00:11:26,050 And he somehow knew when you look at a pearl, it's all about the reflection, 107 00:11:26,050 --> 00:11:29,170 that's all you have to paint, just the reflection, and then you've got a pearl. 108 00:11:29,810 --> 00:11:33,290 Also, when you look at her face, she has no eyebrows, but you don't need them. 109 00:11:34,090 --> 00:11:39,830 And for some reason, the bow of her nose, it's not there. It's all like 110 00:11:39,830 --> 00:11:43,450 out. But you don't notice. When you look at her, it's just beauty. 111 00:11:43,810 --> 00:11:50,710 And you don't think something is missing, not at all. But also working, I 112 00:11:50,770 --> 00:11:56,770 with somehow he understood how the brain works, that you can leave things out 113 00:11:56,770 --> 00:12:00,670 and make it more perfect and more real by leaving it. 114 00:12:01,670 --> 00:12:02,670 We think. 115 00:12:02,910 --> 00:12:07,390 frequently of Dutch paintings, and even my academic colleagues will write like, 116 00:12:07,890 --> 00:12:12,430 you know, what is Vermeer's or Rembrandt's message in this picture? 117 00:12:12,430 --> 00:12:14,210 saying to the people of his time? 118 00:12:14,530 --> 00:12:19,590 For the most part, they're not talking to the people of their time. It's not a 119 00:12:19,590 --> 00:12:21,690 media experience like a broadcast. 120 00:12:21,990 --> 00:12:27,750 It's one picture for one individual that sat in a private collection for a long 121 00:12:27,750 --> 00:12:31,610 time. And so much of what Vermeer does is... 122 00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:38,620 addressed to a voyeur who knows he's a voyeur and is fascinated by what the 123 00:12:38,620 --> 00:12:41,180 picture does to him psychologically. 124 00:12:41,860 --> 00:12:47,440 I'm holding this thing in my hand. I can't put it down. And yet I know it's a 125 00:12:47,440 --> 00:12:52,540 work of art. It's a brilliant invention by another person and isn't that 126 00:12:52,540 --> 00:12:53,540 fascinating. 127 00:12:53,900 --> 00:12:58,720 And in our world of media bombardment, it's hard to realize how powerful a 128 00:12:58,720 --> 00:13:01,360 picture like this could be in its own day. 129 00:13:03,880 --> 00:13:08,440 The conundrum that revolves around the girl with a pearl earring is that 130 00:13:08,440 --> 00:13:13,220 Vermeer's model has never been identified, and there is no evidence to 131 00:13:13,220 --> 00:13:14,220 who she is. 132 00:13:14,920 --> 00:13:21,920 Could she be his daughter, his wife, a servant, or someone from the street, a 133 00:13:21,920 --> 00:13:22,920 neighbor perhaps? 134 00:13:23,420 --> 00:13:28,920 Many debate this issue, but the lack of evidence adds to her mystery and allure. 135 00:13:30,700 --> 00:13:32,720 I was lying in bed one morning. 136 00:13:33,480 --> 00:13:40,000 and the painting was on the wall opposite the bed, and I looked at it, 137 00:13:40,000 --> 00:13:45,720 of idling, thinking about it, and I suddenly thought, I wonder what Vermeer 138 00:13:45,720 --> 00:13:48,140 to her to make her look like that. 139 00:13:48,860 --> 00:13:55,160 And it was the first time I had ever thought about the girl's expression 140 00:13:55,160 --> 00:13:58,520 actually being to do with the painter. 141 00:13:59,500 --> 00:14:01,780 before that had been disconnected somehow. 142 00:14:02,040 --> 00:14:08,720 But this time I realized, to myself anyway, that this was not a portrait of 143 00:14:08,720 --> 00:14:12,140 person. It was more like a portrait of a relationship. And everything she felt 144 00:14:12,140 --> 00:14:14,540 about him was right there in her face. 145 00:14:15,320 --> 00:14:22,120 So I got up and I went and got out the exhibition catalog from the show and 146 00:14:22,120 --> 00:14:23,120 about the painting. 147 00:14:24,040 --> 00:14:28,660 and more about Vermeer, and I realized, I discovered that they have no idea who 148 00:14:28,660 --> 00:14:29,439 she is. 149 00:14:29,440 --> 00:14:32,660 They don't know who any of the models in his paintings are. 150 00:14:32,880 --> 00:14:37,300 They suspect that they are his, mostly women, they're probably his wife and 151 00:14:37,300 --> 00:14:40,900 daughters, because he had a lot of daughters, but they don't know. 152 00:14:41,440 --> 00:14:45,280 And I looked at it and I thought, well, I want to write about this. 153 00:14:45,560 --> 00:14:49,980 And since they don't know, that's great, because I can make up whatever I want. 154 00:14:52,330 --> 00:14:57,270 I tied the blue cloth over my forehead, with the yellow piece wound round and 155 00:14:57,270 --> 00:14:59,950 round, covering the crown of my head. 156 00:15:01,010 --> 00:15:06,250 I tucked the end into a fold at the side of my head, adjusted folds here and 157 00:15:06,250 --> 00:15:11,970 there, smoothed the blue cloth round my head, and stepped back into the studio. 158 00:15:13,930 --> 00:15:18,470 He was looking at a book and did not notice as I slipped into my chair. 159 00:15:19,820 --> 00:15:22,420 I arranged myself as I had been sitting before. 160 00:15:24,120 --> 00:15:28,360 As I turned my head to look over my left shoulder, he glanced up. 161 00:15:29,320 --> 00:15:34,660 At the same time, the end of the yellow cloth came loose and fell over my 162 00:15:34,660 --> 00:15:35,660 shoulder. 163 00:15:35,980 --> 00:15:41,800 Oh, I breathed, afraid that the cloth would fall from my head and reveal all 164 00:15:41,800 --> 00:15:42,800 hair. 165 00:15:43,180 --> 00:15:44,180 But it held. 166 00:15:44,960 --> 00:15:47,560 Only the end of the yellow cloth dangled free. 167 00:15:48,560 --> 00:15:50,080 My hair remained hidden. 168 00:15:51,760 --> 00:15:53,800 Yes, he said then. 169 00:15:54,840 --> 00:15:56,000 That is it, greet. 170 00:15:57,520 --> 00:15:58,520 Yes. 171 00:16:24,970 --> 00:16:29,230 It has often been thought that it is a portrait, either of one of his daughters 172 00:16:29,230 --> 00:16:33,730 or someone who worked in his house, but it could be completely imaginary. 173 00:16:33,970 --> 00:16:38,870 It could very well be, and this is something we don't know, and the only 174 00:16:38,870 --> 00:16:41,850 we know is that it never was meant to be a portrait. 175 00:16:42,330 --> 00:16:47,230 Unfortunately, we have no documentation, so this is all my interpretation, but 176 00:16:47,230 --> 00:16:48,650 it could very well be the case. 177 00:16:49,290 --> 00:16:50,990 It's the illusion, maybe. 178 00:16:51,410 --> 00:16:54,330 Maybe that's the main thing. Maybe he could do it all by... 179 00:16:54,540 --> 00:16:59,320 but it's the illusion of having a real person in front of you. And it's all 180 00:16:59,320 --> 00:17:05,640 those very minor details that convince you that it's real, that are meant to 181 00:17:05,640 --> 00:17:10,640 convince you that this person is real. And that's exactly the highlights, the 182 00:17:10,640 --> 00:17:16,400 small dots of space that suggest the reflection of light, the way he does the 183 00:17:16,400 --> 00:17:22,160 eyes, the way he does the lips, the mouth of the girl, and also the 184 00:17:22,160 --> 00:17:23,160 on the pearl. 185 00:17:23,589 --> 00:17:27,829 And that's all the information that you get together which convinces you as a 186 00:17:27,829 --> 00:17:31,630 viewer that it's the real person that you see in front of you. And that's 187 00:17:31,630 --> 00:17:36,610 exactly what Vermeer wanted to do, to convince you of the reality of this 188 00:17:36,610 --> 00:17:37,610 beautiful girl. 189 00:17:38,700 --> 00:17:44,100 I think my big worry about Vermeer is that there'll be somebody who 190 00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:48,440 they get a letter saying, thank you, Mr. Vermeer, for the painting of my 191 00:17:48,440 --> 00:17:49,660 daughter, signed the baker. 192 00:17:49,900 --> 00:17:54,740 You know, I just don't want that to happen because I really liked her 193 00:17:54,740 --> 00:17:58,600 her mystery. And I think if we could put a name to her, that might take away 194 00:17:58,600 --> 00:17:59,600 from it a little bit. 195 00:18:00,480 --> 00:18:01,820 History is a matter of... 196 00:18:02,140 --> 00:18:04,240 plausible reconstructions frequently. 197 00:18:04,620 --> 00:18:09,900 And just imagine how little we know about other people's lives today, let 198 00:18:09,900 --> 00:18:11,360 people in the past. 199 00:18:11,800 --> 00:18:16,400 If Vermeer went to Amsterdam, even if he went to Italy, he didn't use MasterCard 200 00:18:16,400 --> 00:18:17,680 and check into a hotel. 201 00:18:18,060 --> 00:18:19,520 There's no paper trail. 202 00:18:19,740 --> 00:18:26,620 So much is deduced from the pictures themselves, and that makes a painting 203 00:18:26,620 --> 00:18:29,680 like this all the more mysterious and appealing. 204 00:18:45,870 --> 00:18:49,950 The fame of Girl with a Pearl Earring is a modern phenomenon. 205 00:18:51,070 --> 00:18:55,130 For 200 years, no one even knew where the painting was. 206 00:18:55,590 --> 00:19:01,750 In fact, even its painter, Johannes Vermeer, was essentially forgotten too, 207 00:19:01,930 --> 00:19:07,790 until a French art historian called Théophile Thoreburger wrote several 208 00:19:07,790 --> 00:19:12,790 about Vermeer, which led to his rediscovery in the middle of the 19th 209 00:19:14,410 --> 00:19:19,970 In 1881, a dirt -encrusted painting of a girl came up for auction in The Hague. 210 00:19:20,470 --> 00:19:26,390 Only two experts suspected the picture was of Hermia, A. A. de Tom, and Victor 211 00:19:26,390 --> 00:19:31,790 de Stoes, an influential civil servant, who campaigned for Dutch art to remain 212 00:19:31,790 --> 00:19:32,790 in the Netherlands. 213 00:19:33,570 --> 00:19:38,690 The two men were neighbours in The Hague, and decided to hatch a plan to 214 00:19:38,690 --> 00:19:39,690 the painting. 215 00:19:42,440 --> 00:19:49,180 Victor Justeus and Détente went together to a sale in The Hague and they agreed 216 00:19:49,180 --> 00:19:50,760 not to bid against each other. 217 00:19:52,360 --> 00:19:54,000 They went as friends. 218 00:19:54,500 --> 00:19:56,380 Détente was a collector. 219 00:19:57,180 --> 00:20:03,960 Victor Justeus had produced copious notes about his collection and also a 220 00:20:03,960 --> 00:20:09,740 collection of the arts and Victor Justeus was totally involved in what is 221 00:20:09,740 --> 00:20:10,740 nowadays called heritage. 222 00:20:11,670 --> 00:20:16,870 Detente bought it for two guilders' 30 cents. 223 00:20:17,910 --> 00:20:19,330 It was very dirty. 224 00:20:20,050 --> 00:20:26,810 And Detente had already, at that point, decided, I think, to 225 00:20:26,810 --> 00:20:33,610 give his collection when he died to the Maritzhaus, which, in his will, they 226 00:20:33,610 --> 00:20:34,790 acquired it when he died. 227 00:20:35,610 --> 00:20:37,490 Vigisios never stopped drawing. 228 00:20:38,210 --> 00:20:40,730 This, I think, is probably the earliest one. 229 00:20:41,240 --> 00:20:47,760 I would guess done at the sale, because he's written underneath it, to Detente. 230 00:20:48,100 --> 00:20:53,480 And then there's another sketch in which the inscription says, Detente bought it 231 00:20:53,480 --> 00:20:59,780 for 2 florins 30, and lent it to the Maritz house, which is exactly what he 232 00:20:59,780 --> 00:21:03,860 do. All three drawings that we have were drawn in the same year that it was 233 00:21:03,860 --> 00:21:09,440 bought. The third one is a much more finished drawing, in which it's... 234 00:21:09,850 --> 00:21:16,670 In the catalogue, the entry just says, belongs to MC de 235 00:21:16,670 --> 00:21:23,250 Tombes in The Hague, and it says it's signed and it is attributed to Vermeer. 236 00:21:31,110 --> 00:21:35,610 The girl with the pearl earring may never have come to light if the picture 237 00:21:35,610 --> 00:21:37,210 not been recognised and restored. 238 00:21:38,830 --> 00:21:42,830 It sometimes seems remarkable that any painting survived through the centuries, 239 00:21:43,070 --> 00:21:46,590 with exposure to changing conditions and different owners. 240 00:21:47,490 --> 00:21:52,030 But many things can be learned about a painting and the original intentions of 241 00:21:52,030 --> 00:21:56,750 an artist when highly skilled conservators use technology to examine a 242 00:21:56,950 --> 00:22:02,350 looking beyond what is visible to the naked eye and analysing the material it 243 00:22:02,350 --> 00:22:03,350 made of. 244 00:22:04,310 --> 00:22:07,990 The Goldworth Pearl Earring ended the collection at the end of the 19th 245 00:22:08,670 --> 00:22:14,170 And it wasn't until 1960 that it was treated in the Maritose. 246 00:22:14,470 --> 00:22:20,230 When it was treated again in the 1990s, the natural resin varnish had really 247 00:22:20,230 --> 00:22:27,090 discolored to a point that it was no longer considered presentable. The 248 00:22:27,090 --> 00:22:28,110 was actually quite brown. 249 00:22:28,430 --> 00:22:29,790 And the first thing that... 250 00:22:30,060 --> 00:22:34,240 done after examination of the painting is that they take an x -ray to have a 251 00:22:34,240 --> 00:22:38,000 clear indication of the state of the painting or condition. 252 00:22:38,440 --> 00:22:42,480 And it became immediately clear from the x -ray that there are a multitude of 253 00:22:42,480 --> 00:22:45,760 tiny losses over the entire painting. 254 00:22:46,020 --> 00:22:51,500 But fortunately, they're mostly small in scale and scattered over the surface 255 00:22:51,500 --> 00:22:55,780 and not located in one particular area, for instance, in the face. 256 00:22:56,650 --> 00:23:00,690 I think a lot of people have an idea that paint is actually, you know, very 257 00:23:00,690 --> 00:23:04,330 stable and nothing much can happen to it. But in fact... 258 00:23:04,970 --> 00:23:10,510 paint is pigments bound in an oil binder, in the case of traditional oil 259 00:23:10,510 --> 00:23:14,610 painting. That's applied on top of a ground layer, on top of a support. Now, 260 00:23:14,650 --> 00:23:18,510 that support can be canvas or it can be panel. And, of course, temperature and 261 00:23:18,510 --> 00:23:23,550 relative humidity affect the shrinkage and expansion of those layers 262 00:23:23,550 --> 00:23:27,490 individually, and over time can cause delaminations or tiny losses. 263 00:23:28,050 --> 00:23:32,550 The picture has also been framed, often in many cases, several times. 264 00:23:34,320 --> 00:23:38,840 also have caused cracks in the painting. So we're looking at these tiny damages 265 00:23:38,840 --> 00:23:43,260 and monitoring to making sure that they're not increasing in size, that 266 00:23:43,260 --> 00:23:45,800 no further damage to the painting. 267 00:23:46,020 --> 00:23:48,300 And paint, in fact, is a very sort of dynamic system. 268 00:23:49,880 --> 00:23:54,210 Well, of course, what we see in the X -ray, all the tacks that attack... that 269 00:23:54,210 --> 00:23:57,010 attach the canvas to the stretcher come out very clearly. 270 00:23:57,650 --> 00:23:59,550 They absorb x -rays. 271 00:23:59,930 --> 00:24:04,510 It's very notable that you can actually see the fragmentary nature of the edges 272 00:24:04,510 --> 00:24:05,469 of the painting. 273 00:24:05,470 --> 00:24:09,350 And of course, these black areas are where the paint is actually missing. 274 00:24:09,570 --> 00:24:11,490 So that's what we call paint losses. 275 00:24:12,090 --> 00:24:16,090 But it's fortunate that most of those losses are rather small. 276 00:24:16,870 --> 00:24:18,590 But I think as a conservator... 277 00:24:19,500 --> 00:24:23,600 I think we're rarely tempted to make things more beautiful than they really 278 00:24:23,960 --> 00:24:28,240 When the picture was treated in the 90s, there were details that were uncovered 279 00:24:28,240 --> 00:24:30,920 that had been covered over by a previous restoration. 280 00:24:31,580 --> 00:24:38,000 So you can say that a restoration cannot reveal features of a painting that had 281 00:24:38,000 --> 00:24:39,000 been previously unknown. 282 00:24:39,200 --> 00:24:43,580 For instance, the little highlight on the lip had been covered over by 283 00:24:43,580 --> 00:24:47,840 retouching. So this is a really important feature of the picture because 284 00:24:47,840 --> 00:24:54,010 actually makes her lips, look more fresh and glistening. And that was a feature 285 00:24:54,010 --> 00:24:58,090 that was covered over. And there was an extra highlight on the pearl earring 286 00:24:58,090 --> 00:25:01,110 that, in fact, was an upturned paint flag. 287 00:25:01,430 --> 00:25:05,870 So the process of restoring can actually bring the picture closer to what the 288 00:25:05,870 --> 00:25:06,870 artist intended. 289 00:25:23,120 --> 00:25:28,040 The man who painted Girl with a Pearl Earring was born in Delft in 1632. 290 00:25:29,080 --> 00:25:34,040 Johannes Vermeer was the son of a silk merchant who also ran an inn and dealt 291 00:25:34,040 --> 00:25:35,300 the sale of artworks. 292 00:25:36,280 --> 00:25:40,940 Little is known about Vermeer's youth until he asks to marry a local Catholic 293 00:25:40,940 --> 00:25:44,600 girl called Katerina Bollnes in 1653. 294 00:25:46,200 --> 00:25:50,340 Her mother, Maria Thins, seems to have opposed the marriage. 295 00:25:50,830 --> 00:25:53,070 until Vermeer converted to Catholicism. 296 00:25:53,910 --> 00:25:58,670 Vermeer and his young wife then moved in with Maria where they set up home. 297 00:25:59,710 --> 00:26:04,930 Katerina would eventually give birth 15 times, with 11 of those children 298 00:26:04,930 --> 00:26:06,090 surviving to adulthood. 299 00:26:07,150 --> 00:26:11,010 Remarkably, Johannes also found time to be a painter. 300 00:26:12,210 --> 00:26:18,190 I find Vermeer intriguing as a painter because apart from 301 00:26:18,190 --> 00:26:19,530 the... 302 00:26:20,380 --> 00:26:26,140 droplets of white paint that bring shine to the very last touches of making the 303 00:26:26,140 --> 00:26:29,880 image. I can't really work out how the rest of the picture is made. 304 00:26:30,400 --> 00:26:36,020 It's extremely clever, and in modern language, it doesn't reveal its process. 305 00:26:36,580 --> 00:26:40,600 If you look at Rembrandt, you can follow the brushstroke. They get more 306 00:26:40,600 --> 00:26:46,100 complicated as they get into the face, but around the clothing, you can see how 307 00:26:46,100 --> 00:26:48,960 he's matching gesture to folds of cloth 308 00:26:51,060 --> 00:26:54,960 wrinkledness to the way a brush is scrubbed around a cheek or something. 309 00:26:55,200 --> 00:27:01,680 But with Vermeer, I really cannot work out how he does it. And so it looks 310 00:27:01,680 --> 00:27:07,720 like a kind of photographic emulsion to me that has been almost 311 00:27:07,720 --> 00:27:10,380 processed wet in a tray. 312 00:27:10,700 --> 00:27:15,000 It hasn't been put on as sticky stuff with a hairy brush. 313 00:27:15,260 --> 00:27:16,800 So there's magic. 314 00:27:17,080 --> 00:27:18,820 It's just a celebration of skill. 315 00:27:19,850 --> 00:27:21,490 I think he must have been a very clever man. 316 00:27:23,210 --> 00:27:29,930 Vermeer has very thin layers that he will blend together, whites over 317 00:27:29,930 --> 00:27:35,910 blues or yellows, and different color relationships he's trying out. When you 318 00:27:35,910 --> 00:27:41,850 look under a microscope at a pearl, you might see a pool of milky paint, 319 00:27:41,990 --> 00:27:48,410 maybe with a blue base behind that, and then he'll drop just a 320 00:27:48,410 --> 00:27:49,410 pinhead, 321 00:27:49,840 --> 00:27:52,460 brilliant white, lead white on top of that. 322 00:27:52,700 --> 00:27:59,340 And it will look from a certain distance, like pearls blurred as if in a 323 00:27:59,340 --> 00:28:04,600 slightly out of focus camera, which is realistic enough. I mean, our eye 324 00:28:04,600 --> 00:28:09,940 take in with sharp focus anybody, but if we're looking at someone, we'll be 325 00:28:09,940 --> 00:28:14,660 focused on a particular area and another area will be somewhat blurred. 326 00:28:14,960 --> 00:28:20,790 Blurring in an illusionistic picture actually makes it look more, realistic, 327 00:28:20,790 --> 00:28:27,570 think. But these things read from a distance as an optical experience that 328 00:28:27,570 --> 00:28:33,750 people say, oh, he must have had some form of camera or some other analogy, 329 00:28:33,750 --> 00:28:39,490 secret trick which describes reality in that way. And he does in a way because 330 00:28:39,490 --> 00:28:43,650 he's been experimenting with different techniques that render daylight. 331 00:28:44,540 --> 00:28:49,540 And the colors being yellow and blue and then a touch of red in the lips, 332 00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:55,660 Vermeer keeps doing the primaries over and over again, red, blue, yellow, or 333 00:28:55,660 --> 00:29:01,760 slight mixtures of them in very careful harmonic relationships. 334 00:29:02,360 --> 00:29:07,200 So there's all of these elements that you could describe as composition, which 335 00:29:07,200 --> 00:29:13,140 makes this picture so easy to look at and so intriguing. 336 00:29:18,940 --> 00:29:24,320 It's not known where Vermeer learned his craft or with whom he studied, but some 337 00:29:24,320 --> 00:29:28,060 scholars think he may have been influenced by Rembrandt, who lived in 338 00:29:28,060 --> 00:29:29,920 and was much older than him. 339 00:29:30,820 --> 00:29:36,000 We do know that he became a respected citizen of Delft and a prominent member 340 00:29:36,000 --> 00:29:40,580 the Guild of St Luke, and, like his father before, he valued and dealt in 341 00:29:40,580 --> 00:29:41,580 selling art. 342 00:29:42,580 --> 00:29:47,020 He was not a prolific painter, and it is thought that he took a long time to 343 00:29:47,020 --> 00:29:48,020 complete a work. 344 00:29:48,490 --> 00:29:51,870 His known output numbers around 36 pictures. 345 00:29:53,970 --> 00:29:59,890 Most people feel he had one particular patron in Delft who bought about half of 346 00:29:59,890 --> 00:30:00,890 what he produced. 347 00:30:01,070 --> 00:30:06,710 And the idea of being a patron sponsoring an artist was a kind of upper 348 00:30:06,710 --> 00:30:12,730 class or patrician parallel to princely patrons that preceded them. 349 00:30:13,120 --> 00:30:19,260 They cost some 500 or 600 guilders apiece at a time that a skilled 350 00:30:19,500 --> 00:30:25,900 for example, a craftsman, skilled laborer, would earn that in a year. So 351 00:30:25,900 --> 00:30:32,300 serious disposable income, what would sound like something like $120 352 00:30:32,300 --> 00:30:36,980 ,000 today, although, of course, they're worth so much more now. 353 00:30:40,750 --> 00:30:47,470 At Delft I saw the painter Vermeer, who had none of his works, but we saw one at 354 00:30:47,470 --> 00:30:53,350 the house of a baker who paid six hundred guilders for it, although it is 355 00:30:53,350 --> 00:30:58,190 single figure, which I would have thought he had paid too much for, even 356 00:30:58,190 --> 00:30:59,310 sixty guilders. 357 00:31:28,380 --> 00:31:32,880 Vermeer lived his whole life in Delft, which was an important centre of trade. 358 00:31:33,400 --> 00:31:38,160 His close relationship with the city is captured in what many believe to be one 359 00:31:38,160 --> 00:31:42,320 of the greatest cityscapes ever painted, View of Delft. 360 00:31:44,820 --> 00:31:49,440 The French writer Marcel Proust thought it was the most beautiful painting he'd 361 00:31:49,440 --> 00:31:50,339 ever seen. 362 00:31:50,340 --> 00:31:56,990 In his monumental novel In Search of Lost Time, published in 1913, He created 363 00:31:56,990 --> 00:32:01,610 character, an art critic, who is fatally overcome by Vermeer's genius. 364 00:32:06,010 --> 00:32:10,650 He was in front of that Vermeer which he remembered as dazzling, more different 365 00:32:10,650 --> 00:32:11,810 than all that he had known. 366 00:32:12,070 --> 00:32:16,930 But where, thanks to the critic's article, he noticed for the first time 367 00:32:16,930 --> 00:32:20,850 blue figures, and he also noticed that the sand was pink. 368 00:32:21,270 --> 00:32:22,510 And finally... 369 00:32:22,910 --> 00:32:26,250 The precious matter of that small patch of yellow wall. 370 00:32:27,150 --> 00:32:28,830 His dizzy spells increased. 371 00:32:29,270 --> 00:32:33,750 Like a child striving to grasp a yellow butterfly, his glance would attach 372 00:32:33,750 --> 00:32:36,410 itself to that precious small patch of wall. 373 00:32:37,370 --> 00:32:40,270 It's thus, he thought, that I should have written. 374 00:32:40,610 --> 00:32:42,610 My last books are too dry. 375 00:32:43,370 --> 00:32:47,950 They should have had several layers of colour, should have rendered my phrase 376 00:32:47,950 --> 00:32:50,910 precious, just like this small patch of yellow wall. 377 00:32:52,710 --> 00:32:56,730 Nevertheless, the seriousness of his dizzy spells would not leave him. 378 00:32:57,570 --> 00:33:02,770 He repeated to himself, Little patch of yellow wall, with a dormer. 379 00:33:03,630 --> 00:33:06,930 But now he let himself fall on a circular city. 380 00:33:07,730 --> 00:33:12,070 He fell to the floor where all the museum visitors and guards rushed to 381 00:33:14,090 --> 00:33:15,150 He was dead. 382 00:33:43,050 --> 00:33:48,890 People have commented on how the shadows in the water have been extended, and 383 00:33:48,890 --> 00:33:51,570 actually in x -rays you see they're extended. 384 00:33:51,850 --> 00:33:56,350 They were in one place, then they're in another place, and other adjustments are 385 00:33:56,350 --> 00:34:02,510 made. And through where the light is passed on a building, Vermeer couldn't 386 00:34:02,510 --> 00:34:07,990 recorded the pattern of light, shade, color, everything else in like an hour, 387 00:34:08,090 --> 00:34:09,230 which he would have to. 388 00:34:09,929 --> 00:34:14,690 given the lighting conditions outside, much less than that. This is the product 389 00:34:14,690 --> 00:34:21,650 of artistic decisions over months. So he's really pointing the viewer in 390 00:34:21,650 --> 00:34:26,670 directions. Another fascinating thing, which is almost never mentioned, is the 391 00:34:26,670 --> 00:34:32,949 clouds above the view of Delft. They are deeply shaded on the underside. 392 00:34:33,880 --> 00:34:39,280 I actually think he probably saw a painting by Jakob van Roussel and lifted 393 00:34:39,280 --> 00:34:41,800 idea, but he's looking at other landscapes. 394 00:34:42,360 --> 00:34:47,659 And quite as the landscape itself recedes over the water and back to the 395 00:34:47,780 --> 00:34:52,480 you could get the same effect turning the picture upside down and feel that 396 00:34:52,480 --> 00:34:53,480 sense of recession. 397 00:34:53,719 --> 00:34:58,320 In other words, the clouds create a ceiling that seems to be going into the 398 00:34:58,320 --> 00:35:01,000 picture and enhancing the depth also. 399 00:35:02,120 --> 00:35:06,740 But look at all details, and especially a detail, for instance, with the boats 400 00:35:06,740 --> 00:35:13,540 in front. I like all the different kinds of colors he used just to suggest it 401 00:35:13,540 --> 00:35:17,640 has probably just rained, so these boats are wet. You see the reflection of the 402 00:35:17,640 --> 00:35:20,060 light because the sun is coming through again. 403 00:35:20,500 --> 00:35:25,800 This is really the mastery of the paint. And how did he do it? It's all kinds of 404 00:35:25,800 --> 00:35:29,580 different colors, different brush strokes, and you believe it. 405 00:35:30,080 --> 00:35:33,880 So when you see the painting, when you would enter the Vermeer Room in the 406 00:35:33,880 --> 00:35:37,640 Mauritshuis, you would see this painting. It's almost like a window, an 407 00:35:37,640 --> 00:35:38,720 window in the room. 408 00:35:38,920 --> 00:35:40,420 Then you come close by. 409 00:35:40,700 --> 00:35:42,140 Then, of course, you see it's a painting. 410 00:35:42,420 --> 00:35:47,360 And if you get even more close by, you really do see the paint. You see the 411 00:35:47,360 --> 00:35:52,040 skin. You are almost inclined to feel it because when you look at the brick 412 00:35:52,040 --> 00:35:57,620 buildings and, for instance, the two city gates, that were there in the 17th 413 00:35:57,620 --> 00:36:02,280 century Vermeer altered their place a little bit but actually also what he did 414 00:36:02,280 --> 00:36:07,620 with the look and feel of these buildings this is something he suggests 415 00:36:07,620 --> 00:36:11,300 buildings are there of course because we are looking at of course a flat canvas 416 00:36:11,300 --> 00:36:17,300 but the texture is so lively there are so many details in just these two gates 417 00:36:17,300 --> 00:36:22,620 think that's really impressive and if you know a little bit about the history 418 00:36:22,620 --> 00:36:29,620 Delft because Vermeer painted his cityscape in the early 1660s, estimated 419 00:36:29,620 --> 00:36:36,180 1661. That's only a few years after a major disaster hit the city, the 420 00:36:36,180 --> 00:36:41,720 gunpowder explosion, which killed a lot of people living in Delft, including 421 00:36:41,720 --> 00:36:44,120 Carl Fabritius, who painted the Goldfinch. 422 00:36:44,540 --> 00:36:49,680 that was actually made in 1654, so before this major explosion. 423 00:36:49,900 --> 00:36:55,500 And nothing of that is to be seen in this cityscape. This is about peace. 424 00:36:55,760 --> 00:36:57,180 This is about... 425 00:36:57,640 --> 00:37:02,800 a nice city that is really prosperous where nothing seems to be happening 426 00:37:02,800 --> 00:37:08,540 besides that the economy is thriving and people are living their healthy lives 427 00:37:08,540 --> 00:37:11,300 and they are safe there. 428 00:37:11,600 --> 00:37:16,780 And so this is something that I often wonder about. He left out any reference 429 00:37:16,780 --> 00:37:17,780 this major disaster. 430 00:37:18,000 --> 00:37:22,440 And so this is sort of like more of an ideal world, perhaps. 431 00:37:22,740 --> 00:37:26,260 And again, this is something he does in The Girl with the Pearl Earring, which 432 00:37:26,260 --> 00:37:32,180 is sort of like... an ideal girl you know whether or not we know about her 433 00:37:32,180 --> 00:37:37,500 identity that's not the issue I think this is sort of like how it could be so 434 00:37:37,500 --> 00:37:42,680 course he painted Delft as it appeared to him but he sort of enhanced it and he 435 00:37:42,680 --> 00:37:46,380 you know perhaps what he didn't like he just left it out and I think that's 436 00:37:46,380 --> 00:37:51,080 something that Vermeer often did actually so perhaps that's a little bit 437 00:37:51,080 --> 00:37:52,080 secret 438 00:37:54,280 --> 00:37:59,240 Vermeer seems to have been affluent enough to support his large family until 439 00:37:59,240 --> 00:38:03,460 broke out in 1672 and France invaded the Netherlands. 440 00:38:04,580 --> 00:38:10,100 He had fewer clients and still only in his forties he sank into debt. 441 00:38:11,100 --> 00:38:14,120 By the age of 43 he was dead. 442 00:38:33,840 --> 00:38:37,820 Think of what has been happening in the world during the years this sweet face 443 00:38:37,820 --> 00:38:39,040 was set upon canvas. 444 00:38:39,580 --> 00:38:41,860 The evolutions and tragedies. 445 00:38:42,220 --> 00:38:44,520 The lives lived and ended. 446 00:38:44,940 --> 00:38:49,160 The whole passionate, fretted progress of the nations. 447 00:39:23,859 --> 00:39:29,000 Vermeer's genius flourished during a period that saw the Netherlands rise to 448 00:39:29,000 --> 00:39:31,200 of the world's first global empires. 449 00:39:32,260 --> 00:39:37,640 The Dutch dominated the world's sea routes and opened up new channels of 450 00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:39,440 especially with the East. 451 00:39:40,360 --> 00:39:45,620 Companies like the powerful and influential Dutch East India Company 452 00:39:45,620 --> 00:39:51,520 huge amounts of wealth, impacting in turn on the affluence of contemporary 453 00:39:51,520 --> 00:39:52,520 society. 454 00:39:53,160 --> 00:39:58,120 It was estimated that five million paintings were produced during a seventy 455 00:39:58,120 --> 00:40:01,320 -five year period known as the Dutch Golden Age. 456 00:40:02,260 --> 00:40:08,060 It was against this background that in 1633 Johan Maurits of Nassau -Ziegen 457 00:40:08,060 --> 00:40:12,640 commissioned the building of the Mauritshuis in a very prominent position 458 00:40:12,640 --> 00:40:15,880 to the Binnenhof in The Hague, the seat of the Dutch Parliament. 459 00:40:16,520 --> 00:40:21,610 The building was designed in a classical style by Jacob van Kampen and was 460 00:40:21,610 --> 00:40:25,850 completed while Johann Maurits was away, performing his duties as the governor 461 00:40:25,850 --> 00:40:26,850 of Dutch Brazil. 462 00:40:27,490 --> 00:40:32,490 On his return, he filled his house with things he'd collected, from feathers to 463 00:40:32,490 --> 00:40:38,850 paintings. After his death in 1679, the house passed to the Maas family, who 464 00:40:38,850 --> 00:40:40,130 leased it to the Dutch government. 465 00:40:41,370 --> 00:40:47,190 In 1704, a fire destroyed most of the interior of the building, which was 466 00:40:47,190 --> 00:40:50,470 restored in an 18th -century style some years later. 467 00:40:52,710 --> 00:40:57,450 The Mauritshuis was bought by the Dutch government in 1820 to house the Royal 468 00:40:57,450 --> 00:41:03,250 Cabinet of Paintings and Curiosities, and officially became a museum in 1822. 469 00:41:05,850 --> 00:41:09,750 The Mauritshuis is sometimes referred to as the Little Jewel Box. 470 00:41:10,270 --> 00:41:15,830 It is unique because it is relatively small in scale, but houses a very high 471 00:41:15,830 --> 00:41:18,410 -quality collection of about 800 paintings. 472 00:41:19,690 --> 00:41:24,950 The collection was amassed by two Princes of Orange, William IV and his 473 00:41:24,950 --> 00:41:29,530 William V, who was the first to allow the general public to see the 474 00:41:29,850 --> 00:41:34,890 With links also to Prince William III of Orange, once King of England, the 475 00:41:34,890 --> 00:41:41,350 collection covers a period from around 1400 to about 1750, and is recognised by 476 00:41:41,350 --> 00:41:46,270 experts to have some of the best examples of Dutch and Flemish art in the 477 00:41:54,860 --> 00:41:59,300 You can go to the gallery of Prince William V, which is actually quite 478 00:41:59,520 --> 00:42:00,520 the Mauritshuis itself. 479 00:42:00,760 --> 00:42:05,520 And people are always astonished when they enter this. It's just one large 480 00:42:05,600 --> 00:42:08,580 which is really filled with paintings, from floor to ceiling. 481 00:42:08,880 --> 00:42:14,040 And that was actually the way it was done in the 18th century, even in the 482 00:42:14,040 --> 00:42:17,460 century. So it was actually made for you to impress. 483 00:42:17,760 --> 00:42:19,720 So instead of... 484 00:42:19,960 --> 00:42:25,400 searching for a Vermeer or a Rembrandt, it was just sea walls filled with 485 00:42:25,400 --> 00:42:31,240 paintings. And the Princes of Orange did that to impress you, but also to say, 486 00:42:31,360 --> 00:42:33,200 you know, we are important people. 487 00:42:33,580 --> 00:42:37,540 And I think the message was understood by visitors to the gallery. 488 00:42:37,800 --> 00:42:42,580 And even nowadays, it's an annex of the Mauritshuis, so there are still a lot of 489 00:42:42,580 --> 00:42:44,920 paintings worth seeing there. 490 00:42:45,600 --> 00:42:50,220 So unlike many other museums, we're specialists, specialists in paintings, 491 00:42:50,220 --> 00:42:55,160 in paintings in and around the Dutch Golden Age. So think early Netherlandish 492 00:42:55,160 --> 00:42:59,220 paintings, Flemish paintings, and especially Dutch paintings of that 493 00:43:04,680 --> 00:43:09,500 Many paintings of the Dutch Golden Age, like Girl with a Pearl Earring, mix the 494 00:43:09,500 --> 00:43:11,080 exotic with the mysterious. 495 00:43:11,880 --> 00:43:13,360 Trade with the East... 496 00:43:13,580 --> 00:43:17,900 meant that a vast array of sumptuous goods and foreign travelers arrived in 497 00:43:17,900 --> 00:43:18,900 Netherlands. 498 00:43:18,920 --> 00:43:24,640 Everything from spices to textiles, decorative objects and strange animals 499 00:43:24,640 --> 00:43:27,140 to appear in northern Europe through trade. 500 00:43:28,640 --> 00:43:34,780 And in this painting, which was a collaboration between two artists, Peter 501 00:43:34,780 --> 00:43:40,000 Rubens and Jan Bruegel, you see this happening. Now, it's a... 502 00:43:40,270 --> 00:43:44,270 It seems strange to us today, but actually it was pretty common in Antwerp 503 00:43:44,270 --> 00:43:45,610 artists to work together. 504 00:43:46,010 --> 00:43:50,690 So what you see here is Jan Bruegel did the landscape with all the detailed 505 00:43:50,690 --> 00:43:54,310 animals. You even see the fish in the river. 506 00:43:54,590 --> 00:43:58,730 You see exotic animals like an absolutely huge ostrich. 507 00:43:59,070 --> 00:44:03,390 And this panel, he would have done most of it and then brought it to Rubens for 508 00:44:03,390 --> 00:44:07,290 Rubens to fill in the figures of Adam and Eve, the serpents. 509 00:44:08,010 --> 00:44:11,750 And the end was right behind there. And then it went back to Bruegel to finish 510 00:44:11,750 --> 00:44:16,210 off. So what you see here is a collaboration between two artists in an 511 00:44:16,210 --> 00:44:19,390 absolutely wonderful work. It's in perfect condition, as if it were painted 512 00:44:19,390 --> 00:44:20,390 yesterday. 513 00:44:35,560 --> 00:44:40,280 The Mauritshuis collection is not considered encyclopedic, but it serves 514 00:44:40,280 --> 00:44:44,340 important window onto a period of dramatic change in the Netherlands. 515 00:44:44,960 --> 00:44:49,680 With the rise of the Protestant faith over Catholicism and a burgeoning 516 00:44:50,200 --> 00:44:55,440 artists started to specialize in particular genres and went in search of 517 00:44:55,440 --> 00:44:58,040 patrons amongst the affluent middle classes. 518 00:44:58,780 --> 00:45:02,600 This caused a fundamental shift in a flourishing art market. 519 00:45:19,340 --> 00:45:23,640 If there was one painting that announces the change in art during the Dutch 520 00:45:23,640 --> 00:45:27,980 Golden Age, then it is this masterpiece by Hendrik Averkomp. 521 00:45:28,680 --> 00:45:33,380 The decline in Catholic and state patronage gave rise to private 522 00:45:33,380 --> 00:45:38,040 from a growing number of wealthy Dutch citizens from the middle classes, also 523 00:45:38,040 --> 00:45:42,400 known as burghers, who had a desire to fill their homes with fine art. 524 00:45:45,040 --> 00:45:48,300 Averkomp was a painter who specialised in winter scenes. 525 00:45:48,840 --> 00:45:49,738 and was deaf. 526 00:45:49,740 --> 00:45:54,400 The scene and cast of characters displayed in the painting marked a shift 527 00:45:54,400 --> 00:45:59,680 subject matter from history and mythological subjects to the observation 528 00:45:59,680 --> 00:46:00,720 everyday life. 529 00:46:01,660 --> 00:46:07,140 Here you have a painting of a town, probably fictional, that shows all kinds 530 00:46:07,140 --> 00:46:08,820 people outside ice skating. 531 00:46:09,440 --> 00:46:14,460 You can see the entire range of the Dutch population, from the nobleman with 532 00:46:14,460 --> 00:46:17,900 yellow doublet in the foreground to the fisherman in the background. 533 00:46:18,480 --> 00:46:22,300 and even a woman who has fallen over, revealing that she doesn't have anything 534 00:46:22,300 --> 00:46:23,380 on under her skirt. 535 00:46:24,140 --> 00:46:30,100 This kind of anecdotal detail, this observation of life, is something that 536 00:46:30,100 --> 00:46:31,620 Dutch really excelled in. 537 00:46:33,800 --> 00:46:39,820 You also see a transition from largely religious painting that would have been 538 00:46:39,820 --> 00:46:41,180 done in earlier periods. 539 00:46:41,380 --> 00:46:45,340 So think, for example, about our painting by Roger van der Weyden, The 540 00:46:45,340 --> 00:46:46,340 Lamentation of Christ. 541 00:46:47,070 --> 00:46:50,070 These sorts of paintings would have been done for devotional purposes, for 542 00:46:50,070 --> 00:46:51,470 churches or private devotion. 543 00:46:52,610 --> 00:46:57,230 In the 17th century, in the northern Netherlands, people are using paintings 544 00:46:57,230 --> 00:47:00,890 a very different way. They're not necessarily commissions for religious 545 00:47:00,890 --> 00:47:04,070 purposes, but they're often more decorative. 546 00:47:04,550 --> 00:47:09,330 So, for example, someone might have wanted a beautiful Italianate landscape 547 00:47:09,330 --> 00:47:13,250 their wall, which was, as it were, a kind of vacation from the dreary Dutch 548 00:47:13,250 --> 00:47:14,250 climate. 549 00:47:14,750 --> 00:47:18,530 It's a very different idea from something that was done for religious 550 00:47:18,530 --> 00:47:21,290 something that had maybe a different function. 551 00:47:21,630 --> 00:47:25,710 I think that the miracle of the 17th century in the Netherlands, there was 552 00:47:25,710 --> 00:47:31,730 an influx of people coming to the Dutch Republic from present -day Belgium 553 00:47:31,730 --> 00:47:36,510 because of the political situation there. So many people fled to the 554 00:47:36,510 --> 00:47:42,430 Netherlands. And these were talented artists. We already had talented 555 00:47:43,080 --> 00:47:46,140 in the country, so there was sort of a boom in painting. 556 00:47:46,600 --> 00:47:49,800 And of course you can make paintings, but there have to be clients, customers 557 00:47:49,800 --> 00:47:50,479 for that. 558 00:47:50,480 --> 00:47:54,220 The churches, for instance, were whitewashed. There were no commissions 559 00:47:54,220 --> 00:47:55,240 for altarpieces. 560 00:47:55,440 --> 00:47:58,180 So artists had to look for different commissions. 561 00:47:58,640 --> 00:48:04,240 And they thought, well, what do we need to make in order to make a living? 562 00:48:04,500 --> 00:48:08,360 And so they started making a lot of landscapes or still life. 563 00:48:08,680 --> 00:48:13,160 And, of course, many portraits of very proud Dutch burghers who wanted 564 00:48:13,160 --> 00:48:14,880 themselves to be portrayed. 565 00:48:15,240 --> 00:48:19,700 And this is something that is quite unique, that you see, well, they're 566 00:48:19,700 --> 00:48:22,300 painted as being a king or queen themselves. 567 00:48:22,640 --> 00:48:28,180 So this is really very remarkable and very typical also for the situation in 568 00:48:28,180 --> 00:48:31,500 Dutch Republic. That is unique, I think, in Europe of the time. 569 00:48:33,900 --> 00:48:38,560 And as for the art of painting and the affection of the people to pictures, I 570 00:48:38,560 --> 00:48:40,860 think none other country goes beyond them all. 571 00:48:41,260 --> 00:48:46,440 In general, striving to adorn their houses, especially the outer or street 572 00:48:46,500 --> 00:48:51,820 with costly pieces, butchers and bakers are not much inferior in their shops. 573 00:48:52,400 --> 00:48:57,160 Yea, many times blacksmiths, cobblers, and so on, will have some picture or 574 00:48:57,160 --> 00:48:58,980 other by their forge and in their stall. 575 00:48:59,660 --> 00:49:05,220 Such is the general notion, inclination, and delight that this country's natives 576 00:49:05,220 --> 00:49:06,780 have to painting. 577 00:49:09,520 --> 00:49:14,360 Even the baker could buy paintings and I think that's the secret of the Golden 578 00:49:14,360 --> 00:49:19,720 Age is that there was a lot of talent but also there was a lot of demand so 579 00:49:19,720 --> 00:49:25,880 paintings were made and usually when things are made in large amounts the 580 00:49:25,880 --> 00:49:29,840 quality tends to be lesser but that is not the case with 17th century Dutch 581 00:49:29,840 --> 00:49:30,840 painting. 582 00:49:31,500 --> 00:49:34,780 The Netherlands really became known for this. There are a few accounts of 583 00:49:34,780 --> 00:49:38,540 visitors who came to Holland and they remarked how many people actually had 584 00:49:38,540 --> 00:49:40,620 works of art in their own houses. 585 00:49:41,520 --> 00:49:48,300 Clearly, people were using this art and the demand kept going roughly until the 586 00:49:48,300 --> 00:49:50,260 third quarter of the 17th century. 587 00:50:12,620 --> 00:50:18,020 The Bull, by Paulus Potter, is world famous, and the largest painting in the 588 00:50:18,020 --> 00:50:19,020 Mauritshuis collection. 589 00:50:19,360 --> 00:50:24,660 Its impressive scale is matched by Potter's virtuoso technique and 590 00:50:24,760 --> 00:50:28,920 From the flies buzzing around the bull's back to the frog in the foreground, 591 00:50:29,260 --> 00:50:34,400 every part of the painting is carefully rendered in a naturalistic way, with 592 00:50:34,400 --> 00:50:35,840 great attention to detail. 593 00:50:36,380 --> 00:50:38,420 But not all is as it seems. 594 00:50:40,160 --> 00:50:45,580 Here in 17th century Protestant country, they were more focused on what they saw 595 00:50:45,580 --> 00:50:50,740 around them and on things that surrounded them. And I think one of the 596 00:50:50,740 --> 00:50:55,060 characteristics of Dutch 17th century painting is that everything, every 597 00:50:55,060 --> 00:50:59,940 from everyday life was worthwhile to paint. And for instance, in The Bull by 598 00:50:59,940 --> 00:51:06,580 Paulus Potter, you see a cow dung in the corner and painted with such... detail 599 00:51:06,580 --> 00:51:11,760 and with such love for it, you could say, is that everything which a painter 600 00:51:11,760 --> 00:51:14,660 saw, he could include in his work. 601 00:51:14,960 --> 00:51:19,680 And at first it looks like it imitates reality, but it's not photographic 602 00:51:19,680 --> 00:51:25,080 reality. And what painters do is they try to improve what they see. And that's 603 00:51:25,080 --> 00:51:29,480 just what Paulus Potter did. He made a lot of studies of bulls in the field. 604 00:51:29,800 --> 00:51:34,000 He took them to his studio and he combined these studies. 605 00:51:34,400 --> 00:51:38,680 to the bull we now see in the painting, which is not an existing animal because 606 00:51:38,680 --> 00:51:41,660 it consists of parts of different animals. 607 00:51:41,860 --> 00:51:46,840 For instance, the teeth are of an animal of two years old. The horns are of an 608 00:51:46,840 --> 00:51:51,180 even older animal. And the total outlook of the bull is of a very young animal. 609 00:51:51,440 --> 00:51:57,660 So Potter made his own invention out of the details which he saw. So it's very 610 00:51:57,660 --> 00:52:00,020 detailed. It's based on everyday life. 611 00:52:01,020 --> 00:52:05,100 the artist had to make something more out of it, not just imitating it, but 612 00:52:05,100 --> 00:52:06,140 improving it. 613 00:52:06,480 --> 00:52:12,260 They were so well trained in artist studios that the quality was extremely 614 00:52:12,340 --> 00:52:15,480 so that must have been part of the attraction, that it was so well done. 615 00:52:16,360 --> 00:52:23,200 Flower paintings, where they really tried to show all the 616 00:52:23,200 --> 00:52:26,460 different flowers, the smallest insects, the smallest butterfly. 617 00:52:27,700 --> 00:52:31,960 flowers from sometimes from all seasons so it's not really that realistic 618 00:52:31,960 --> 00:52:37,680 because they couldn't have been together in one bouquet but others do become 619 00:52:37,680 --> 00:52:42,600 more realistic and show only flowers of one season but there's so much to be 620 00:52:42,600 --> 00:52:48,680 seen and everything is so nicely depicted with the beautiful colors and 621 00:52:48,680 --> 00:52:55,060 painting technique is so high level that the combination of what you see and how 622 00:52:55,060 --> 00:52:59,830 well it is done how well it is painted Today is the attraction, but I think 623 00:52:59,830 --> 00:53:01,150 have been at that time as well. 624 00:53:05,610 --> 00:53:10,510 It was a feature of Dutch and Flemish art of the time to produce paintings 625 00:53:10,510 --> 00:53:12,650 were immersive and told a story. 626 00:53:13,590 --> 00:53:18,390 Vermeer was considered a master of composing simple scenes full of intrigue 627 00:53:18,390 --> 00:53:19,390 mystery. 628 00:53:19,530 --> 00:53:24,090 His serene compositions always seemed to suggest a more complex narrative. 629 00:53:25,390 --> 00:53:27,810 Who are the central characters in his paintings? 630 00:53:28,150 --> 00:53:29,550 We really don't know. 631 00:53:29,930 --> 00:53:34,710 Which seems to be Vermeer's intention, but he was not alone in conjuring up 632 00:53:34,710 --> 00:53:35,710 illusion. 633 00:53:38,750 --> 00:53:43,730 The girl with the pearl earring is something that specialists now call a 634 00:53:43,730 --> 00:53:49,710 because that's what it's frequently described as in inventories. This is T 635 00:53:49,710 --> 00:53:50,710 -N. 636 00:53:51,469 --> 00:53:57,990 and it is a now defunct Dutch word. I'm told it's still used occasionally in 637 00:53:57,990 --> 00:54:03,630 police stations for mugshots and so on. It goes back to a now defunct French 638 00:54:03,630 --> 00:54:10,610 word, trone, and this refers to simply a head or expression, maybe 639 00:54:10,610 --> 00:54:16,190 suggesting a certain emotion, but it implies 640 00:54:16,190 --> 00:54:20,850 individuality. but at the same time anonymity. 641 00:54:21,410 --> 00:54:27,070 And tronies are frequently based on real people. And in the popular imagination, 642 00:54:27,470 --> 00:54:28,470 that's a portrait. 643 00:54:28,570 --> 00:54:32,530 And this picture has frequently been described as a kind of portrait. 644 00:54:34,720 --> 00:54:37,960 was really important. I think without Rembrandt, Vermeer probably would not 645 00:54:37,960 --> 00:54:42,580 painted his own tronies, because Rembrandt sort of popularized this theme 646 00:54:42,580 --> 00:54:48,700 tronies. So he painted soldiers and young girls or old women as type. 647 00:54:48,940 --> 00:54:53,700 So these were never meant to be recognized as portraits. 648 00:54:55,230 --> 00:54:58,550 Also, if you would make a portrait of someone, someone had to pay you for 649 00:54:58,690 --> 00:55:03,470 So he used models from the street, he would dress them up, or if he didn't 650 00:55:03,470 --> 00:55:07,090 models, he would dress himself up and then copy what he saw in the mirror. 651 00:55:07,330 --> 00:55:11,810 And this dressing up is something that, well, at least painters of the time, 652 00:55:11,870 --> 00:55:12,870 they like to do that. 653 00:55:13,410 --> 00:55:17,450 Clothing actually tells you a lot about what you're seeing. 654 00:55:17,710 --> 00:55:21,850 And sometimes, because we don't live in the time that these works were painted, 655 00:55:21,870 --> 00:55:23,930 we don't necessarily get all the hints. 656 00:55:24,880 --> 00:55:29,840 But what you see in a portrait, for example, one by Van Dyck, is someone 657 00:55:29,840 --> 00:55:31,320 at the very height of fashion. 658 00:55:31,740 --> 00:55:37,260 And it sort of tells you something about the social standing, the wealth, the 659 00:55:37,260 --> 00:55:38,260 taste of a sitter. 660 00:55:38,380 --> 00:55:44,680 He takes these people, wealthy merchants, and elevates them, gives them 661 00:55:44,680 --> 00:55:49,860 of elegance and aristocratic ease that he really became known for. 662 00:55:50,780 --> 00:55:54,240 So, for example, if you look at Anna Wake, she's dressed in the absolute 663 00:55:54,240 --> 00:55:55,240 of fashion. 664 00:55:55,560 --> 00:56:00,420 These sort of bulbous sleeves that she has on, everything in black, very costly 665 00:56:00,420 --> 00:56:01,399 feather fan. 666 00:56:01,400 --> 00:56:05,580 These were the trappings of the most fashionable Antwerp burgers. 667 00:56:06,980 --> 00:56:10,160 The girl with the pearl earring, to give you a very different sort of example, 668 00:56:10,560 --> 00:56:14,940 would have told the 17th century viewer immediately, this isn't a portrait, this 669 00:56:14,940 --> 00:56:17,080 is a figure, an exotic figure. 670 00:56:17,500 --> 00:56:22,600 A figure from history or from mythology. And the reason is that she's wearing a 671 00:56:22,600 --> 00:56:25,840 turban, something that a 17th century woman never would have worn. 672 00:56:26,060 --> 00:56:29,560 So to a viewer at the time, it would have been a very clear signal that what 673 00:56:29,560 --> 00:56:34,240 you're seeing here is not meant to be a portrait of an actual figure, but of a 674 00:56:34,240 --> 00:56:35,560 fictional person. 675 00:56:36,120 --> 00:56:41,160 I mean, this is an age when people are collecting cabinets of curiosities and 676 00:56:41,160 --> 00:56:45,060 exotica from around the world. And the Dutch are sailing. 677 00:56:45,790 --> 00:56:51,910 to New York, South America, China, eventually Japan, South Africa, etc. 678 00:56:52,390 --> 00:56:58,510 So there's a lot of encounter with other people. The girl with the pearl earring 679 00:56:58,510 --> 00:57:04,910 is wearing a silk scarf on her head and a colossal pearl, which probably 680 00:57:04,910 --> 00:57:08,650 couldn't have been a pearl at all, but a glass imitation. 681 00:57:09,680 --> 00:57:14,560 Such things were made in Venice at the time. And the turban vaguely suggests 682 00:57:14,560 --> 00:57:16,880 Orientalism or the Middle East. 683 00:57:17,200 --> 00:57:22,640 And I think if the girl with the pearl earring were described in an inventory 684 00:57:22,640 --> 00:57:28,300 the time, even though she does look like a Dutch face and the jacket itself is 685 00:57:28,300 --> 00:57:34,480 ordinary clothing, she would probably be described something like tronie a la 686 00:57:34,480 --> 00:57:37,780 Turk, head in a Turkish fashion. 687 00:57:39,080 --> 00:57:44,500 Tronies were generally produced for the open market, which allowed artists to be 688 00:57:44,500 --> 00:57:48,500 more creative with their subject matter and experimental with their technique. 689 00:57:49,160 --> 00:57:53,960 The Harlem painter Franz Hals was a master of the looser style of painting, 690 00:57:54,160 --> 00:57:56,680 which he often used when painting tronies. 691 00:57:57,940 --> 00:58:03,880 We have this absolutely amazing round panel with a laughing boy who's one of 692 00:58:03,880 --> 00:58:05,700 darlings of our... 693 00:58:07,180 --> 00:58:13,260 It's a beautiful painting of a small boy who is laughing, is really very gay and 694 00:58:13,260 --> 00:58:18,420 very happy. And you see his yellowish teeth, which are not the best. 695 00:58:19,080 --> 00:58:22,240 And it's done very freely, very brushy. 696 00:58:24,070 --> 00:58:28,490 It's painted very freely. That's a tronie. It's not a portrait. The 697 00:58:28,490 --> 00:58:30,210 the sitter is not of any importance. 698 00:58:30,570 --> 00:58:34,950 But if you compare it with the portrait of Mr. Olican and his wife, they are 699 00:58:34,950 --> 00:58:41,850 painted much more less broad and much more sober and more 700 00:58:41,850 --> 00:58:46,430 restricted. Both ways of painting, the rough manner and the smooth manner, were 701 00:58:46,430 --> 00:58:51,090 appreciated. But I think when people want their own portrait, they want to 702 00:58:51,090 --> 00:58:52,210 a bit dignified. 703 00:58:52,680 --> 00:58:58,100 And that's different from a boy out of the people, out of the crowds, who is 704 00:58:58,100 --> 00:59:01,220 depicted as an image of youthfulness and of youth. 705 00:59:23,950 --> 00:59:29,230 The popularity of tronies and images of everyday characters is partly due to the 706 00:59:29,230 --> 00:59:32,910 rising interest in realistic representation in Dutch art. 707 00:59:33,530 --> 00:59:38,710 The portrait became a powerful medium for rich burghers to express who they 708 00:59:38,710 --> 00:59:40,430 and their position in society. 709 00:59:41,390 --> 00:59:46,030 Unlike Girl with a Pearl Earring, it was important that the image portrayed was 710 00:59:46,030 --> 00:59:49,610 known and recognised as the person who commissioned it. 711 00:59:50,800 --> 00:59:56,020 Great works by artists like Hans Holbein and Memling mark the beginning of a 712 00:59:56,020 --> 01:00:00,540 change in the way portraiture was considered, appreciated and commissioned 713 01:00:00,540 --> 01:00:01,880 during this period. 714 01:00:04,760 --> 01:00:09,560 The miracle of the Dutch Golden Age is still that these paintings were made for 715 01:00:09,560 --> 01:00:14,180 Dutch burghers. They were not made for churches and they were not... 716 01:00:15,100 --> 01:00:18,100 directly connected to religion, and that is, I think, really important. 717 01:00:18,540 --> 01:00:21,500 If you would look at one of the paintings in our collection, which is an 718 01:00:21,500 --> 01:00:25,960 exquisite painting by Hans Memling, it's a portrait of a man from the Lesbinet 719 01:00:25,960 --> 01:00:26,960 family. 720 01:00:27,040 --> 01:00:29,360 It's made at the end of the 15th century. 721 01:00:29,680 --> 01:00:33,620 And if you see it, you think, well, this is a really nice separate portrait. 722 01:00:33,820 --> 01:00:36,620 But you see that he has his hands folded. 723 01:00:36,900 --> 01:00:39,940 And so he was originally praying to the Virgin Mary. 724 01:00:40,200 --> 01:00:44,760 One sees a really nice portrait of a man in front of a Flemish landscape. 725 01:00:45,360 --> 01:00:50,840 It's something that was made for him. It was not meant to be representative in 726 01:00:50,840 --> 01:00:52,100 any way. It was not... 727 01:00:52,480 --> 01:00:57,300 put on display in his house. It was something that he perhaps traveled with, 728 01:00:57,300 --> 01:00:58,480 something that was really personal. 729 01:00:58,960 --> 01:01:03,620 And when you would then look at the Flemish porters by Van Dyck that are in 730 01:01:03,620 --> 01:01:09,000 Mautha's collection or other porters by Dutch artists that were made also in the 731 01:01:09,000 --> 01:01:13,020 17th century, then you see that they are meant to be representative. 732 01:01:13,260 --> 01:01:18,360 So they were put in the hall or in the living room or in the dining room where 733 01:01:18,360 --> 01:01:19,308 people would... 734 01:01:19,310 --> 01:01:23,970 sort of show off even their riches, it became more common to have your portrait 735 01:01:23,970 --> 01:01:29,050 painted. And that was something that was really exquisite because people got 736 01:01:29,050 --> 01:01:33,030 married, got engaged, had portraits made, they got their children, they were 737 01:01:33,030 --> 01:01:37,170 portrayed. So in the end, when you had a large family, you would have a house 738 01:01:37,170 --> 01:01:39,190 filled with portraits and other paintings. 739 01:01:39,970 --> 01:01:43,850 This is completely different from how it started in the 15th century. 740 01:01:44,250 --> 01:01:49,230 And I think also that this is sort of like a carte de visite. It's sort of 741 01:01:49,230 --> 01:01:54,150 when you would have your portrait made in the 17th century, it was also like, 742 01:01:54,250 --> 01:01:56,930 this is who I am or this is who I want to be. 743 01:01:57,190 --> 01:02:01,630 And that's something that is completely new. So it's self -representation. And 744 01:02:01,630 --> 01:02:03,010 the artists will do that for you. 745 01:02:28,780 --> 01:02:33,040 artists of the seventeenth century excelled in telling a story through the 746 01:02:33,040 --> 01:02:38,300 skilful rendering of a moment in time most would agree that the master of this 747 01:02:38,300 --> 01:02:43,940 was rembrandt an artist who had a great influence on painters of the day and we 748 01:02:43,940 --> 01:02:45,980 think also on vermeer 749 01:03:02,970 --> 01:03:07,170 Rembrandt von Rhein is considered one of the pre -eminent stars of the Dutch 750 01:03:07,170 --> 01:03:12,290 Golden Age, and The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicholas Tulp was an early 751 01:03:12,290 --> 01:03:13,290 masterpiece. 752 01:03:13,650 --> 01:03:18,090 It brilliantly displays his great ability to tell a story through clever 753 01:03:18,090 --> 01:03:22,770 composition and the rendering of light, a feature that would mark his career. 754 01:03:23,870 --> 01:03:29,070 Rembrandt wanted to be a history painter and tell stories in his work, and he 755 01:03:29,070 --> 01:03:30,070 was only 25. 756 01:03:30,440 --> 01:03:34,140 when he received the commission from the Guild of Surgeons to paint the leading 757 01:03:34,140 --> 01:03:36,460 surgeon of the day, Dr. Telp. 758 01:03:37,100 --> 01:03:40,980 It was a great honor for such a young artist, but he did something different 759 01:03:40,980 --> 01:03:41,980 with his commission. 760 01:03:43,240 --> 01:03:47,160 And what he did there is very interesting, because it's a portrait, a 761 01:03:47,160 --> 01:03:51,640 portrait, but it's very different from the other group portraits which were 762 01:03:51,640 --> 01:03:56,000 for the Guild of Surgeons, which was the commissioner of this painting. 763 01:03:56,260 --> 01:04:00,320 What Rembrandt did is make a story out of it. So he shows something happening. 764 01:04:00,620 --> 01:04:05,760 He shows the anatomical lesson himself, not really the way it was done in those 765 01:04:05,760 --> 01:04:08,240 days. It's imagination. It's a bit different. 766 01:04:08,460 --> 01:04:09,740 It shows Dr. 767 01:04:10,680 --> 01:04:11,980 Tulp. He is the instructor. 768 01:04:12,240 --> 01:04:16,400 The other doctors are around it. And they're all reacting to what is 769 01:04:16,400 --> 01:04:18,020 in their own way. They show emotion. 770 01:04:20,540 --> 01:04:26,060 Since there were so many men to include in this picture, I decided to start with 771 01:04:26,060 --> 01:04:27,120 a pyramidal shape. 772 01:04:27,630 --> 01:04:32,290 as I have done with my new composition of Christ's descent from the cross, the 773 01:04:32,290 --> 01:04:34,170 one I'm working on for the Stadtholder. 774 01:04:35,010 --> 01:04:39,210 There is a beautiful cohesion that comes from a pyramidal structure. 775 01:04:40,130 --> 01:04:45,610 If you've got the geometry right, every point in the painting seems to relate to 776 01:04:45,610 --> 01:04:46,610 every other point. 777 01:04:47,150 --> 01:04:51,970 As the viewer, your eye is encouraged to move back and forth between the 778 01:04:51,970 --> 01:04:55,570 elements, before settling directly into a single focus. 779 01:04:56,430 --> 01:05:01,390 You see different characters, and give each of them your visual attention for 780 01:05:01,390 --> 01:05:06,070 long as they interest you, and then your eye moves along to the next character, 781 01:05:06,270 --> 01:05:10,290 knowing that each one plays a role in the unfolding drama. 782 01:05:12,330 --> 01:05:16,310 I think that many people throughout the years have tried to give voice to 783 01:05:16,310 --> 01:05:19,470 Rembrandt, and they've done it in many various ways. 784 01:05:19,670 --> 01:05:24,500 It's impossible to really know what Rembrandt... spoke like or sounded like. 785 01:05:24,500 --> 01:05:29,840 only wrote a handful of written notes and all of them said something like, 786 01:05:30,000 --> 01:05:33,720 here's the painting that I've promised you and you owe me the X amount of 787 01:05:33,720 --> 01:05:34,720 guilders for it. 788 01:05:34,900 --> 01:05:41,380 So we can't hear him. We can imagine what we hear based on looking at his 789 01:05:41,380 --> 01:05:44,860 of art, which of course are also a form of documentation of his life. 790 01:05:45,480 --> 01:05:50,880 I thought that Rembrandt must have been an incredibly erudite man because... 791 01:05:51,520 --> 01:05:56,400 of all the references that he brings to his works and all the things that he 792 01:05:56,400 --> 01:06:01,440 knew about Italian painting and everything about art history, really, 793 01:06:01,440 --> 01:06:02,800 having ever left Holland. 794 01:06:03,280 --> 01:06:07,540 He had a good collection of books as well, which wasn't necessarily common 795 01:06:07,540 --> 01:06:08,940 artists and painters of the day. 796 01:06:10,200 --> 01:06:14,620 Novelists and filmmakers have often been inspired by paintings from the Dutch 797 01:06:14,620 --> 01:06:19,840 Golden Age because of their ability to capture a moment in time and fill it 798 01:06:19,840 --> 01:06:20,840 intriguing narratives. 799 01:06:22,380 --> 01:06:27,160 Paintings like The Anatomy Lesson and Girl with a Pearl Earring construct a 800 01:06:27,160 --> 01:06:30,140 scene that invites the viewer in to complete the story. 801 01:06:30,920 --> 01:06:35,680 This is a feature of Dutch art from this period and something that seems to have 802 01:06:35,680 --> 01:06:36,760 universal appeal. 803 01:06:39,140 --> 01:06:43,140 I'm a journalist and a fiction writer, so for me... 804 01:06:43,820 --> 01:06:48,680 I love to play with the boundaries of fact and fiction, and I did a great deal 805 01:06:48,680 --> 01:06:52,800 of research for this novel, working with Rembrandt scholars and also medical 806 01:06:52,800 --> 01:06:57,440 historians and historians of the 17th century. So it was very important to me 807 01:06:57,440 --> 01:07:02,720 get all the facts right in the sense that there's an underlying basis of 808 01:07:02,720 --> 01:07:05,060 historical reality. 809 01:07:05,660 --> 01:07:11,380 The thing about paintings is that they stop a moment in time. 810 01:07:11,930 --> 01:07:16,190 and they allow you to focus on it and concentrate on it. 811 01:07:16,750 --> 01:07:23,530 And for a writer, writing requires a focus, 812 01:07:23,650 --> 01:07:29,930 and it takes a long time to write a novel, and you have to be quite patient 813 01:07:29,930 --> 01:07:31,230 and slow. 814 01:07:32,150 --> 01:07:33,810 This is my research notebook. 815 01:07:34,590 --> 01:07:38,710 From Girl with a Pearl Earring. It's so tiny, and there's not even that much in 816 01:07:38,710 --> 01:07:42,010 it. I don't know how I managed it. It was like a dream, this book. 817 01:07:45,010 --> 01:07:49,370 It's mostly got notes in it, but there's a little bit, the beginning that I 818 01:07:49,370 --> 01:07:50,370 wrote. 819 01:07:50,759 --> 01:07:55,160 And as is often the case with novels, you start in the wrong place and then 820 01:07:55,160 --> 01:07:59,540 have to cut it out. So I actually had an alternative for a few paragraphs, and 821 01:07:59,540 --> 01:08:03,600 then I realized I got rid of that. I got it out of my system, and then I 822 01:08:03,600 --> 01:08:04,600 started. 823 01:08:09,600 --> 01:08:11,620 My mother did not tell me they were coming. 824 01:08:12,640 --> 01:08:14,980 Afterwards, she said she did not want to make me nervous. 825 01:08:15,480 --> 01:08:19,620 I was surprised, for I thought she knew me well. If I'm nervous... I do not 826 01:08:19,620 --> 01:08:20,620 appear so to strangers. 827 01:08:20,779 --> 01:08:25,319 Only my mother would see the tightness along my jaw, the slight narrowing of my 828 01:08:25,319 --> 01:08:26,319 eyes. 829 01:08:26,560 --> 01:08:31,760 I was in the kitchen chopping vegetables for the soup when I heard voices on the 830 01:08:31,760 --> 01:08:38,420 front stoop. A woman's bright like polished brass and a man's low and dark 831 01:08:38,420 --> 01:08:40,300 the wood of the table I was working on. 832 01:08:41,279 --> 01:08:42,279 That's Vermeer. 833 01:08:43,580 --> 01:08:48,600 You can see gorgeous reproductions all over the place now but there's something 834 01:08:48,600 --> 01:08:53,479 about being in the room with her and knowing that Vermeer touched that canvas 835 01:08:53,479 --> 01:08:57,680 brings you closer to him and I think that the the internet can have you know 836 01:08:57,680 --> 01:09:02,279 computer can have this effect of distancing you or or the painting being 837 01:09:02,279 --> 01:09:06,899 -shirt it kind of distances you from it but when you're when you're actually in 838 01:09:06,899 --> 01:09:11,640 the room it's like everything stops and the world stops and you're with that 839 01:09:12,410 --> 01:09:16,109 real thing. It's really you and it's really the painting. 840 01:09:16,350 --> 01:09:22,910 And it's a feeling that is strong and you just feel really alive. 841 01:09:23,069 --> 01:09:26,609 And I think that that blows everything else out of the water. 842 01:10:18,000 --> 01:10:22,360 In this room, we have a beautiful collection of Jan Steen paintings. 843 01:10:22,780 --> 01:10:26,420 And what's interesting is that we both have the largest painting by Jan Steen, 844 01:10:26,420 --> 01:10:30,480 as the old thing, so Pipe the Young, and also the smallest painting, the Oyster, 845 01:10:30,480 --> 01:10:34,960 either. When you look at paintings from the 17th century, the important thing is 846 01:10:34,960 --> 01:10:40,280 you have to realize they were painted to entertain, for enjoyment, to look. 847 01:10:40,730 --> 01:10:45,750 and see how beautiful they are or how funny the scene is which was depicted. 848 01:10:46,030 --> 01:10:48,210 But often they also contain a message. 849 01:10:48,630 --> 01:10:50,070 They have a deeper meaning. 850 01:10:50,410 --> 01:10:53,690 We have in Dutch the expression the household of young Stijn where 851 01:10:53,690 --> 01:10:59,010 goes wrong and the children run around and don't listen to the parents and the 852 01:10:59,010 --> 01:11:03,750 parents are smoking and drinking, giving the bad example to the young one. 853 01:11:04,730 --> 01:11:06,410 All of that you see in this painting. 854 01:11:06,690 --> 01:11:12,810 And we see the older generation, for instance, Jan Steen himself. It's a self 855 01:11:12,810 --> 01:11:19,490 -portrait. He often included himself as a funny footnote to his scenes. 856 01:11:20,170 --> 01:11:21,970 Making a young boy smoke. 857 01:11:22,530 --> 01:11:25,690 And they're drinking. And in the middle there's a child. 858 01:11:25,890 --> 01:11:28,030 It's his baptism. 859 01:11:28,790 --> 01:11:33,550 And the man on the left, the older man, is wearing a cap, a hat. 860 01:11:33,960 --> 01:11:39,740 that the young father would actually wear on the party where a young child is 861 01:11:39,740 --> 01:11:43,740 baptised. But he's much too old to be the father. So that's also the world 862 01:11:43,740 --> 01:11:46,380 upside down that you see there. 863 01:11:46,720 --> 01:11:51,260 Genre paintings are paintings which show scenes from everyday life or inspired 864 01:11:51,260 --> 01:11:52,300 by everyday life. 865 01:11:52,560 --> 01:11:57,380 And different from history paintings, which are based on written stories, 866 01:11:57,380 --> 01:12:02,200 paintings are taken from everyday reality, but they do not... 867 01:12:02,570 --> 01:12:04,030 imitate everyday reality. 868 01:12:04,330 --> 01:12:09,470 What painters did is add something to it, put a message in it for people to 869 01:12:09,470 --> 01:12:12,530 understand when they look at a painting. 870 01:12:13,330 --> 01:12:18,430 With genre painting, one of the confusing things for a lot of people 871 01:12:18,430 --> 01:12:22,650 look at such a painting is that they think it's a social document, that it's 872 01:12:22,650 --> 01:12:26,370 exactly the way things were in the 17th century. 873 01:12:26,670 --> 01:12:29,810 And that's true for parts of it. 874 01:12:30,120 --> 01:12:36,040 There were tables like the one you see at Siang Sing, so Pipe de Jong. There 875 01:12:36,040 --> 01:12:39,240 were cans, as you see in this painting. 876 01:12:39,560 --> 01:12:44,760 People were eating fruit like that, but not exactly, because it's all 877 01:12:44,760 --> 01:12:51,000 representing something else, and it's idolized. There's something extra. 878 01:12:51,660 --> 01:12:56,480 The fruit, as it is on a table, is like a filly, so it's not like the way people 879 01:12:56,480 --> 01:12:59,120 would normally eat it. It's improved. 880 01:12:59,980 --> 01:13:05,020 made better with the young same painting sometimes he's referred to as like a 881 01:13:05,020 --> 01:13:11,820 director of a movie with or of a play even with people over acting with 882 01:13:11,820 --> 01:13:18,140 faces grimaces strange laughing and also wearing clothing 883 01:13:18,140 --> 01:13:24,960 that just don't make any sense sometimes i'm pretty sure that You know, all the 884 01:13:24,960 --> 01:13:29,660 paintings that you can see in the Mauritshuis, at least those from the 885 01:13:29,660 --> 01:13:33,240 Golden Age, do tell you a lot about Dutch society. 886 01:13:33,740 --> 01:13:37,320 They liked pretty girls, like the girl with the pearl earrings. 887 01:13:37,580 --> 01:13:42,000 They had a good sense of humor. There was one painted by Frans van Mieris, 888 01:13:42,000 --> 01:13:43,840 used to be called an in -scene. 889 01:13:44,200 --> 01:13:49,620 But if you have a really good look, you see that the man and woman in the 890 01:13:49,620 --> 01:13:51,420 painting, they are sort of like... 891 01:13:52,059 --> 01:13:56,640 interested in one another and there is a bed in the back of the painting. 892 01:13:57,000 --> 01:14:01,820 And there are also, if you haven't got the point yet, two dogs that are really 893 01:14:01,820 --> 01:14:02,880 interested in one another. 894 01:14:03,160 --> 01:14:07,980 So we have renamed that painting actually a brothel theme because 895 01:14:07,980 --> 01:14:11,660 woman in front of the painting is working in the house and the man is one 896 01:14:11,660 --> 01:14:15,040 customers. And this is something people laugh about. They like that. That is 897 01:14:15,040 --> 01:14:16,100 also daily life. 898 01:14:17,190 --> 01:14:20,750 It's like when you walk through the Mauritshuis, you see the beautiful 899 01:14:20,750 --> 01:14:25,530 countryside, you see the Dutch cattle, which is still very important in our 900 01:14:25,530 --> 01:14:31,270 country, you see the nice houses they had, the nice costumes they had, all the 901 01:14:31,270 --> 01:14:32,730 portraits, of course, they had made. 902 01:14:32,970 --> 01:14:36,510 But also, this is another side of their life. They enjoyed one another. 903 01:14:37,200 --> 01:14:41,520 On both sides of the girl with the pearl earring are paintings by a different 904 01:14:41,520 --> 01:14:43,340 artist, Gerard Terborg. 905 01:14:43,680 --> 01:14:50,500 And those are both genre paintings with a subject matter that's really linked to 906 01:14:50,500 --> 01:14:54,640 the work by Vermeer. Because Vermeer is most... 907 01:14:55,130 --> 01:15:01,450 well known of these kind of paintings of interiors with ladies working, sitting, 908 01:15:01,830 --> 01:15:08,510 writing a letter, very intimate pictures of people in their 909 01:15:08,510 --> 01:15:15,050 houses. So that's an important reason why these paintings are next to the 910 01:15:15,270 --> 01:15:19,610 What we see is that both paintings, Girl with the Pearl Earring and the Girl 911 01:15:19,610 --> 01:15:22,550 Writing, they pose some kind of riddle. 912 01:15:22,840 --> 01:15:26,520 to the viewer. You do not know exactly what's going on. The girl with the pearl 913 01:15:26,520 --> 01:15:28,100 earring, we do not know who it is. 914 01:15:28,800 --> 01:15:31,900 She had not everyday clothes. She wears a turban. 915 01:15:32,280 --> 01:15:36,580 She has a very large pearl earring. And at that time, everyone could see that it 916 01:15:36,580 --> 01:15:42,260 wasn't a real pearl earring. Pearls weren't that big in the 17th century. 917 01:15:42,780 --> 01:15:44,180 So it's a fantasy figure. 918 01:15:44,460 --> 01:15:47,280 And it's a figure of which you can think a story. 919 01:15:47,740 --> 01:15:53,020 She could be an excerpt in a story. It's the same with the painting by Tabor. We 920 01:15:53,020 --> 01:15:54,020 see a lady writing. 921 01:15:54,300 --> 01:15:59,140 The writing of letters was a famous pastime in the 17th century, and often 922 01:15:59,140 --> 01:16:00,720 letters of love were written. 923 01:16:00,980 --> 01:16:05,440 And there is a bed behind the girl. We could think that she's waiting for her 924 01:16:05,440 --> 01:16:10,420 lover or even writing to her lover. We can also see that the paper on which 925 01:16:10,420 --> 01:16:12,280 she's writing has been folded. 926 01:16:13,470 --> 01:16:17,010 Is it a letter she's writing again? Or is it a letter she's correcting? 927 01:16:17,230 --> 01:16:22,030 We do not know for sure. I think that was the intention of the artist, that 928 01:16:22,030 --> 01:16:26,050 viewer can make up his own story with what he sees in the painting. 929 01:16:52,200 --> 01:16:59,160 The wonder of Vermeer, the reason that he looks so much like reality, is, I 930 01:16:59,160 --> 01:17:01,700 think, two -sided and kind of contradictory. 931 01:17:02,080 --> 01:17:07,160 One is his absolute absorption in visual experience. 932 01:17:07,440 --> 01:17:13,420 And I think he saw a great number of pictures. His father was an art dealer. 933 01:17:13,420 --> 01:17:17,400 probably traveled more than we knew. I would think he'd gone to... 934 01:17:17,790 --> 01:17:23,170 and visited Rembrandt or had seen Rembrandt's in other collections. 935 01:17:23,450 --> 01:17:29,230 And he certainly knew personally Carol Fabritius, who was perhaps Rembrandt's 936 01:17:29,230 --> 01:17:36,090 most brilliant pupil, who moved to Delft in the late 1640s. I think at 937 01:17:36,090 --> 01:17:41,570 least two tronies by Fabritius are listed in Vermeer's own inventory. 938 01:17:44,060 --> 01:17:47,100 We don't know if he saw the goldfinch, probably. 939 01:18:42,920 --> 01:18:47,760 It was a small picture, the smallest in the exhibition and the simplest. 940 01:18:48,320 --> 01:18:54,340 A yellow finch against a plain, pale ground, chained to a perch by its twig 941 01:18:54,340 --> 01:18:55,340 an ankle. 942 01:18:55,640 --> 01:18:59,960 He was Rembrandt's pupil, Vermeer's teacher, my mother said. 943 01:19:00,300 --> 01:19:04,900 And this one little painting is really the missing link between the two of 944 01:19:05,260 --> 01:19:07,440 The clear, pure daylight. 945 01:19:08,300 --> 01:19:11,320 You can see where Vermeer got his quality of light from. 946 01:19:12,560 --> 01:19:14,560 I stepped back to get a better look. 947 01:19:15,200 --> 01:19:20,500 It was a direct and matter -of -fact little creature, with nothing 948 01:19:20,500 --> 01:19:25,840 about it, and something about the neat, compact way it tucked down inside 949 01:19:25,840 --> 01:19:31,820 itself—its brightness, its alert, watchful expression—made me think of 950 01:19:31,820 --> 01:19:33,980 I'd seen of my mother when she was small. 951 01:19:34,800 --> 01:19:37,980 A dark -capped finch, with steady eyes. 952 01:19:40,880 --> 01:19:45,320 It's a very interesting comparison to the girl with the pearl earring, because 953 01:19:45,320 --> 01:19:52,220 here's this bird who is suddenly turning to the viewer, seen in profile, but the 954 01:19:52,220 --> 01:19:58,000 head is turned, and a close view set against a plain background. In that 955 01:19:58,060 --> 01:20:02,680 it's a brilliant daylight plaster wall, unlike the dark background in the 956 01:20:02,680 --> 01:20:04,180 Vermeer. 957 01:20:05,080 --> 01:20:09,660 There's a contrast of light and shadow which has been used to enhance the sense 958 01:20:09,660 --> 01:20:12,400 of an object in a shallow space. 959 01:20:12,860 --> 01:20:18,020 It's frequently shallow when it's figural, whether it's a bird or a 960 01:20:18,140 --> 01:20:25,020 There's also in the goldfinch these broad strokes that blend together as 961 01:20:25,020 --> 01:20:28,600 feathers and volume and so on at a distance. 962 01:20:29,720 --> 01:20:35,340 create a sense of motion and light and atmosphere playing over the form and 963 01:20:35,340 --> 01:20:39,920 Vermeer's looking at those technical qualities and thinking what can he do 964 01:20:39,920 --> 01:20:46,920 within his own style to also suggest a sense of motion and immediacy and 965 01:20:46,920 --> 01:20:53,660 the real, the dynamic qualities of optical experience which are atmosphere 966 01:20:53,660 --> 01:20:57,180 and focus and the behavior of light itself. 967 01:21:04,040 --> 01:21:08,200 The Goldfinch is fast becoming an iconic painting in the Mauritshuis collection, 968 01:21:08,540 --> 01:21:14,180 and, like Girl with a Pearl Earring, is inspiring not only works of fiction, but 969 01:21:14,180 --> 01:21:16,500 also great devotion amongst an eager public. 970 01:21:17,360 --> 01:21:21,480 But what effect does this fame have on iconic masterpieces like these? 971 01:21:21,960 --> 01:21:25,260 Does it change the way we understand and appreciate them? 972 01:21:25,740 --> 01:21:28,040 Does it perhaps diminish them in any way? 973 01:21:32,810 --> 01:21:36,450 It's very interesting when images become very well known. 974 01:21:36,750 --> 01:21:41,850 I would say images become well known, not paintings become well known, because 975 01:21:41,850 --> 01:21:46,970 most people never see the real thing. They just see the mechanical 976 01:21:46,970 --> 01:21:51,970 of that image on various surfaces, you know, which might range from the cover 977 01:21:51,970 --> 01:21:58,370 a paperback book to a t -shirt to a print on a wall to an image on a mug. 978 01:21:58,610 --> 01:22:05,310 I don't think it actually diminishes the painting in any way but it 979 01:22:05,310 --> 01:22:09,890 does give a lot of people the illusion that they have seen the picture and they 980 01:22:09,890 --> 01:22:15,090 know the painting because they are physical things that are made out of 981 01:22:15,720 --> 01:22:21,440 They're not made out of printing ink, and they're not made through a 982 01:22:21,440 --> 01:22:27,900 camera. They are made with brushes, with glues, with pigments. And 983 01:22:27,900 --> 01:22:34,300 like sculpture, they have a physical presence that is at least half of their 984 01:22:34,300 --> 01:22:35,780 visual quality. 985 01:22:36,420 --> 01:22:40,720 And what it means is something about that look, that person. 986 01:22:41,020 --> 01:22:42,120 I mean... 987 01:22:42,640 --> 01:22:49,580 You know, you might say, why are some starlets in modern times so haunting to 988 01:22:49,580 --> 01:22:52,740 generation and other equally pretty people not? 989 01:22:52,960 --> 01:22:58,480 And it's something magical in their physiognomy, the way they hold 990 01:22:58,820 --> 01:23:04,600 and also the way they're lit by professionals and treated on camera. 991 01:23:05,120 --> 01:23:09,800 So Vermeer intended this picture to be haunting. 992 01:23:10,440 --> 01:23:12,240 visually and psychologically. 993 01:23:12,600 --> 01:23:17,920 And we've taken his bait. And, you know, that's part of being a great artist. 994 01:23:25,660 --> 01:23:29,940 Did you ever see such ease as there is in this painting? 995 01:23:30,700 --> 01:23:32,760 Such concealment of effort? 996 01:23:33,780 --> 01:23:39,300 It was no small thing as that day for a Dutchman to lay his colors like this. 997 01:23:39,770 --> 01:23:41,710 so openly and lucidly. 998 01:23:42,370 --> 01:23:48,510 It is as though the paint evoked life rather than counterfeited it, as though 999 01:23:48,510 --> 01:23:52,790 the child had been waiting there behind the canvas to emerge at the touch of the 1000 01:23:52,790 --> 01:23:53,790 brush. 1001 01:23:53,990 --> 01:23:58,650 No wonder so many now flock to worship her. 94663

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