Vermeer's Secrets

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2020
  • Kenwood House Volunteer, John Hayward, gives an online Spotlight Talk on works by Vermeer (1632-75), whose ‘Guitar Player’ (1672) hangs in Kenwood House, London.
    John Hayward’s talk, entitled ‘Vermeer’s Secrets’ delves into the mysteries behind the characters in Vermeer’s paintings and examines the techniques and method of Vermeer’s practice. In all of the 34 paintings known to be by Vermeer, his obsession with light, tonal values, shadow and colour suggests an accomplished use of a camera obscura. Hayward additionally discusses Vermeer’s particular focus on the depiction of women and their private lives in the Dutch 17th century.
    Introduction and fade out music: Francesco Corbetta (1615-1681), composer for the 5-course (10-string - as in Vermeer's picture) Baroque guitar (played by Jakob Lindberg). A contemporary of Vermeer, Corbetta was in high demand in the courts of Europe and travelled to Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and Germany. He moved to England with royal patronage, and was mentioned in Samuel Pepys' diary in 1667.
    Produced by Friends of Kenwood
    www.friendsofkenwood.org.uk

Komentáře • 36

  • @barbarabarry3799
    @barbarabarry3799 Před 3 měsíci

    Informative about these wonderful, mysterious paintings. Kenwood House is certainly (and deservedly) fortunate to have one.

  • @katebradley7864
    @katebradley7864 Před 7 hodinami

    I'm very sorry to bother you and it's rare I comment on these things but on studying vermeer I discovered that he painted a sepia under drawing first , all of his paintings have been studied. He starts with sepia under drawing then fills it with paint. It is impossible to simply paint straight away like this as if by magic. I enjoyed your talk and learnt a lot. Thankyou

  • @Beegee1952
    @Beegee1952 Před 2 lety +8

    I was lucky enough to see “Girl With a Pearl Earring” in Delft. It literally glows!

    • @johnkilcher477
      @johnkilcher477 Před rokem +1

      I've seen it as well. I was shocked to be able to get right up close to it. Somehow a painting that famous is entitled to like the Mona Lisa have a "restrictive" fell, for the lack of a better word.

    • @nigellee9824
      @nigellee9824 Před rokem

      Yeah, it was a great film…

    • @Beegee1952
      @Beegee1952 Před rokem

      @@nigellee9824 The book is even better. There were some things they left out of the movie (time limitations probably) that would have helped explain a couple of things. Having read the book before seeing the painting made it even more meaningful.

    • @cyndydejoy6129
      @cyndydejoy6129 Před 8 měsíci

      Lucky you!🤩

  • @alexpearl5980
    @alexpearl5980 Před 4 lety +8

    Terrific talk, John. Fascinating.I've seen the Delft painting in the Hague, which is exquisite and has that ethereal quality about it that is, of course, Vermeer's trademark.Thank you.

  • @janedoe5229
    @janedoe5229 Před rokem

    I never noticed until watching this talk, what a BEAUTIFUL job he did on the blank, painted walls. So many subtle variations of the light going across it.

  • @ivanguerra1260
    @ivanguerra1260 Před 3 lety +6

    Thanks for put this. I think Vermeer´s story is not complete yet, maybe we have to look to all his contacts and study all of them. Lot of secrets !!

  • @saukibasya
    @saukibasya Před 3 lety +9

    Have you seen Tim's Vermeer?

  • @cskarbek1
    @cskarbek1 Před 3 lety +3

    thanks for posting. helps to while away some time and actually learn something. thx

  • @johnryskamp7755
    @johnryskamp7755 Před 2 lety +5

    She's listening to the sound she is making, while singing.

  • @michaelmcdonnell5998
    @michaelmcdonnell5998 Před 2 lety +7

    I don't think there is any doubt these artists used optical aids and the lack of contemporary evidence of this must mean they did not want the public to know!
    But as David Hockney said,"Optics don't make marks!"

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Před 2 lety +1

      Michael McDonnell. It is unlikely large lenses existed at this time. It was most laborious to make lenses, and also unhealthy as the grinding of the glass produces dust which was breathed in and ended up in the lungs. The lenses would not have had sufficient contrast and to achieve better contrast reducing refraction and astigmatism would need two convex lenses combined, one flint glass the other schott glass, which was only invented in modern times. In all the talks about the supposed use of lenses in the late Renaissance this fact is never alluded to. After a death a detailed list would be drawn up of the contents of the house, and the list of the house of Vermeer did not contain a single lens, none at all. Where are the lenses and why has none survived? What did exist at the time of the Spanish invasion of the Netherlands was a telelens fitted with very small lenses, and it is hardly surprising this was by the Dutch solely used for military purposes.

    • @inekes8808
      @inekes8808 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Foxglove963 When Vermeer and van Leeuwenhoek were born, just a week apart, in 1632, Delft was renowned for the quality of its lens glass. Although lenses were mainly used in eyeglasses, they were increasingly being incorporated into tools for scientists and artists. The telescope was invented around 1600; within a decade it had been transformed into a scientific instrument by Galileo, who also developed some of the earliest microscopes by adapting telescopes to study insects

  • @skymanroberson5684
    @skymanroberson5684 Před 2 lety +3

    Painting an image upside-down produces a more "honest" work - you're not painting what your brain wants a "face" or a "chair", or "brown" or "blue" to look like, you're just painting the shapes & colors you actually see.

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Před 2 lety +1

      Skyman. That'll work for clouds but certainly not for portraits.

  • @ytubeanon
    @ytubeanon Před měsícem

    after seeing Tim's Vermeer and hearing about devices the artist may have used I still have the same thought, those devices require still objects, so how did he paint real people given they'd move around

  • @cecilefox9136
    @cecilefox9136 Před rokem

    The cursor looks like a fly but I'm really enjoying this talk.Thank you very much.

  • @parismetro2012
    @parismetro2012 Před rokem +1

    I don't believe that Vermeer uses a camera obscura to trace outlines. His tiled floors would have been particularly easy to do with a projection device but these were constructed with a chalked thread and a vanishing point (visible in some of his pieces) He may well have studied projected images of sitters and studied the depth of field effect and specular highlights produced by lenses, incorporating them later into his work.

  • @lidiat4925
    @lidiat4925 Před 3 lety +2

    🤩

  • @bluedot6933
    @bluedot6933 Před rokem

    If he used a camera then why did he use a pin to draw perspective lines?

  • @HelmetVanga
    @HelmetVanga Před 3 lety +2

    the hole of the instrument it is usually dark. I know because I have a guitar and a small lute

  • @brandonmcleod5259
    @brandonmcleod5259 Před rokem

    He used a nail not camera obscura or Lucinda. He was a virtuoso.

  • @johndorilag4129
    @johndorilag4129 Před 2 lety +2

    Vermeer is a much better painter than Rembrandt

  • @cindyoverall8139
    @cindyoverall8139 Před 8 měsíci

    A big secret of Vermeer’s was the fact that he did not paint several. And those several are the amateur ones, like
    the Guitar Player. That was executed in a paint by number style as are the others. His daughter, Maria was the likely artist.
    Now here is the proof… Vermeer, of course painted TGWTPE which is obviously, Maria. He painted his other daughter, Elizabeth called Portrait of
    A Young Lady. Note.. her age. Someone else painted Elizabeth at that age too. The dark haired girl in front of a spinet. That painting is
    cringingly bad. Certainly not by the master.
    This information is now coming to light after the exhibition at the Rijks Museum.

  • @randyklinger7649
    @randyklinger7649 Před měsícem

    2 paintings featuring a man: Astronomer & Geographer.

  • @phillipstroll7385
    @phillipstroll7385 Před 9 měsíci

    Of course the Flemish used optics to trace. It wasn't and isn't a secret. Painters were thought of as no different than we think of day laborers today. They were just unskilled labor. They weren't painting secrets, allegory or anything else. They painted what they could capture by the optical devices and what the buyer wanted. Nothing more.
    Painters today are thought of as artists. Although most of them trace and pretend tracing is acceptable, they wouldn't dare admit it to a buyer. Not in a hundred years. They absolutely hide their projectors, cameras, light boxes, dark rooms, etc when company comes. If tracing were acceptable they wouldn't feel the need to lie about it or hide it from the buyers.

  • @marklimbrick
    @marklimbrick Před rokem

    Enjoyable little talk. I talked with Lawrence Gowing while a student at the Slade. I make camera obscura and although it is difficult to accept, Vermeer seems to have made a living being a slow photographer. I doubt he could draw a smiley. To survive he used his curiosity and intelligence. I never got a solution like Tim Jenison did in his movie. Mirror matching is used in sextants and even in existing pantone matching devices. To leave that out and include some irrelevant and inaccurate camera obscura references is a shame. It is 'spherical aberration' that causes a patch of light around bright details. No idea where you got this 'halation' from as that is an issue within analogue silver film negatives. I have replicated Tim's idea. Vermeer composed the tableau using contemporary cliches. The fact that he wasn't an artist at all reassures me that experts and critics really know nothing more than the echoes whispering around their galleries. Lawrence Growing was a real draughtsman, admitting to me that there is something not quite right about this Vermeer painter. His inconsistencies of which you make no mention. The curved paper on the keyboard paper? The anagrams and wordplay in the deliberate text offset Latin?

    • @marklimbrick
      @marklimbrick Před rokem

      Errata:Lawrence Gowing
      Stupid AI spell correct.

    • @brandonmcleod5259
      @brandonmcleod5259 Před rokem

      Hes made 30 of the top 100 paintings yet he's not a real artist. That is such a stupid thing to say.
      Real artists use tracing paper, projectors, razor blades, and anything else they want to make their images. Maybe he did use optical devices to help him make images faster... so he could sell his paintings to support his family.
      He didnt though. He used a nail and a piece of string. It's just most people's brains cannot accept the fact that his perspective was so good... usually.

  • @inekes8808
    @inekes8808 Před 2 lety

    Of course he did, they all did.

  • @Alipotamus
    @Alipotamus Před 2 lety

    I believe the last painting showing a woman in a blue “bed jacket “ is a woman who looks clearly pregnant. I’m an expert

  • @Foxglove963
    @Foxglove963 Před 2 lety

    Friends of Kenwood. You refer to The Hague, the city that does not exists. You probably mean Den Haag, in South Holland. If so, then why call it by another name? Is The Hague English? The people who founded Den Haag are Dutch. Its most ancient name is Die Haghe, which became Den Haag. The original name reflects the identity of the people. The Hague is not English, it is a fantasy name. I don't doubt you can effectively and easily pronounce Den Haag.

  • @johnryskamp7755
    @johnryskamp7755 Před 2 lety +1

    The letter scene is quite conventional. The maid is repeating, including the gestures and attitude, what the letter writer told her to say. That's why the maid looks so awkward--she's pretending to be a man. The woman is feigning surprise. Vermeer's characters are always acting. It must have been an insufferably mannered society.