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Woman with a Water Jug

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Woman with a Water Jug
ArtistJohannes Vermeer
Yearc. 1660–1662
MediumOil on canvas
MovementDutch Golden Age painting
Dimensions45.7 cm × 40.6 cm (18.0 in × 16.0 in)
LocationMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Woman with a Water Jug (Dutch: Vrouw met waterkan), also known as Young Woman with a Water Pitcher, is a painting finished between 1660–1662 by the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer in the Baroque style. It is oil on canvas, 45.7cm × 40.6 cm, and is on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

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Transcription

STEVEN ZUCKER: We're in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. And we're looking at "Young Woman With a Water Pitcher" that dates to about 1662, by Johannes Vermeer. It's one of the real treasures in New York. BETH HARRIS: It's a lovely, small painting, so typical of art in Holland in the 17th century-- small images, domestic scenes, still lifes, landscapes, family scenes, genre painting, images that reflected the middle-class culture of-- STEVEN ZUCKER: The new Protestant culture, right? BETH HARRIS: Of the 17th century republic of Holland. STEVEN ZUCKER: Where there was a middle class, or what we would recognize as a middle class, and where possessions were important expressions of one's place in society. BETH HARRIS: Yes, but also a very deeply religious culture. STEVEN ZUCKER: It's interesting, because if this is a Protestant culture, and of course, the Roman Catholic Church had for so long in the West been one of the primary patrons of an artist. When the Church is no longer a primary patron, artists do have to look for different and to different kinds of subject matter. BETH HARRIS: Artists have to find another way to make a living, right? STEVEN ZUCKER: That's right. And so you have here an image that really reflects a kind of idealized domestic life. BETH HARRIS: And it would've been commissioned or purchased by wealthy businessmen. And although we're in the 1600s, the period of Baroque in Italy and Spain and France, this is a kind of Baroque that's very different in Holland, because of the Protestant culture there. STEVEN ZUCKER: It is different. And when I think of Baroque in Holland, I usually think of the first half of the 17th century. And I think of the work of Rembrandt. And this is so different. Here there's a kind of delicacy, and a kind of awareness of light, and of the fleeting, I think, that is very, very different. BETH HARRIS: This is a very poetic moment, where the simple act of opening a window, holding a water pitcher, maybe looking to water some flowers that are out the window, takes on a timeless quality. You can feel the love of the domestic here, the love of small rituals, the love of the everyday. To me, in a way, a Vermeer is always a reminder of the beauty of what's around us every day. It's not Christ on the cross. It's not something monumental and heavenly, but in a way the presence of the divine in the everyday, which speaks to us in a very modern way. STEVEN ZUCKER: It is absolutely poetic. You see this woman against a white background. But there's no white in that wall behind her. BETH HARRIS: No, that's true. STEVEN ZUCKER: It's a whole prism of colors that's filtered through that leaded glass. You have those warm whites of the wall against those cruel, sharp, blue whites of the linen headdress that she wears. BETH HARRIS: And the way that she's very characteristically for Vermeer locked into that space by the rectangle of the window-- STEVEN ZUCKER: Of the map. BETH HARRIS: And the rectangle of the table and the chair behind her. There's a sense of a very controlled composition. At the same time, it's something very spontaneous, and something very caught-- a caught moment in time. STEVEN ZUCKER: And so even as he's portraying this really beautiful, delicate representation, we also have a lot of evidence of what was valued in the 17th century in Holland. BETH HARRIS: We do. STEVEN ZUCKER: You've got, as a tablecloth, this heavy carpet, which would have been a very expensive item of luxury. You've got the brass. And I'm especially taken, I have to tell you, with the ellipse of that basin, which just is so extraordinarily convincing, almost more than if I had seen that thing in person. BETH HARRIS: Yeah. Well, I think that's the thing. In a way, it becomes more real in Vermeer. It's so carefully observed, every little millimeter of the way that the light plays on the reflective surfaces of the basin and the box-- even the brass nails in the chair behind. It makes us see things that in our everyday vision we don't see and we don't pay attention to. STEVEN ZUCKER: And I have the sense that the woman who is portrayed in this image is, in fact, as visually attentive as we are, in a sense modeling for us, the audience. This kind of visual attentiveness, this awareness of her place in the world, her place in space. Vermeer is brilliant, I think, in creating that kind of love and sensuality of space and time and light. BETH HARRIS: And color. STEVEN ZUCKER: It's just so gloriously beautiful.

Description

A young woman is found in the center of the picture. She is opening a window with her right hand, while she holds a water jug with her left hand. This jug rests on a larger platter. Both of these, among other objects, are upon on a table. This is decorated with a predominantly red rug of Asian origin. Behind the table stands a chair upon which lies a blue material. The woman gazes out the window. The clothing of the woman consists of a dark blue dress with a black and gold bodice. A white cloth serves as her headpiece. A map hangs in the background on the wall.

This painting is one of a closely related group painted in the early to mid-1660s as the artist was not using linear perspective and geometric order, and the light was his only source of emphasis. The work suggests that Vermeer was aware that light is composed of colours, and the effect of colours on one another. For instance, the blue drape is reflected as dark blue on the side of the metallic pitcher, and the red fabric modifies the gold hue of the basin's underside.[1]

Young Woman with a Water Pitcher was purchased by Henry Gurdon Marquand in 1887 at a Paris gallery for $800. When Marquand brought it to the United States, it was the first Vermeer in America. Marquand donated the artwork along with other pieces in his collection to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ De la Croix, Horst; Tansey, Richard G.; Kirkpatrick, Diane (1991). Gardner's Art Through the Ages (9th ed.). Thomson/Wadsworth. p. 796. ISBN 0-15-503769-2.
  2. ^ Finding aid for the Henry Gurdon Marquand Papers, 1852-1903.

External links

This page was last edited on 23 July 2023, at 17:21
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