top of page
Search
Writer's picture tbHUNKYDORY

At long last, love has returned to the Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window.


Stephan Koja, director of the museum, explained in a statement that the restoration has big implications for the themes of the Golden Age painting: What was once thought to be a mysterious if somewhat dour scene is now brimming with hope.


“With the recovery of Cupid in the background, the actual intention of the Delft painter can [now] be recognized,” Koja said. “Beyond the ostensibly amorous context, it is about a fundamental statement about the nature of true love. So before that we only looked at a rudiment. Now we understand it as a key image in his oeuvre.”


Johannes Vermeer, Girl Reading a Letter at the Open Window (1657-59). © Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden. Photo: Wolfgang Kreische.



A similar image of Cupid appears in Vermeer’s 1670–72 painting Lady Standing at a Virginal. Scholars have speculated that both pictures are based on a real-life painting owned by the artist. A 1676 inventory of his widow’s possessions mentions “a Cupid.”

Girl Reading a Letter will headline the Gemäldegalerie’s upcoming exhibition “Johannes Vermeer: On Reflection,” set to go on view September 10. The show marks the first time in centuries that the painting will be presented in its original state.


Vermeer’s painting—thought to have been completed between 1657–59, and one of roughly 40 canvases by the Dutch master that are extant today—has been in the Gemäldegalerie’s collection for more than 275 years. For all of that time, the backdrop of the subject was a bare wall. It wasn’t until 1979, when the museum x-rayed the painting, that experts realized the section had been overpainted to obscure the Cupid figure.


At that time, the correction was believed to have been made by Vermeer himself. But in 2017, after conservators studied the painting through a number of newfangled techniques—infrared reflectography imaging, microscopic analyses, and x-ray fluorescence examination among them—they realized that the overpainting had actually been completed at least several decades after the artist’s death.


5 views0 comments

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page