“Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window” by Johannes Vermeer depicts a young blonde girl standing in the light of an open window, reading a letter.
A red drapery hangs over the top of the window, which has opened inward and which, in its lower right quadrant, reflects the girl’s mirror image.
A tasseled ochre drapery in the foreground right, partially closed, covers part of the room in which she stands. Highlighted by the light from the window are the fruit in a tilted bowl, the luxurious carpet, and the peach, which is cut into half.
Scientific test and x-rays of the canvas showed that at one point, Vermeer had featured a naked Cupid on the wall in this painting.
For whatever reason, somebody in the 18th century painted over the cupid image with the empty blank wall featured in this image of the painting.
The museum has restored Vermeer’s original and removed the overpainted layer, which can be seen in the above image. Today, the original Cupid can now be seen in this painting at the museum.
Vermeer had depicted a standing Cupid holding a raised bow with his right hand and lifting his left arm. The painting can now again be seen as it left the artist’s studio.
Art historians suggest that the fruit in a tilted bowl and the peach, which is cut in half, revealing its pit, symbolize an extramarital relationship and that the letter is a love letter.
Now that the cupid image has been revealed, is this theory confirmed? Or is she sad because the relationship has ended?
Art as a Casualty of War
“Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window” was among the paintings rescued from destruction during the bombing of Dresden in World War II.
When World War II was imminent in 1938, the museum was closed, and the painting was stored, with other works of art, in an underground tunnel in Saxony.
Discovered by the Red Army in 1945, they were taken to Russia. After the death of Joseph Stalin, the Soviets in 1955 returned the surviving art to Germany.
Most of the essential paintings from the Old Masters Gallery survived this period, but the losses were significant. Over 200 pictures had been destroyed, and some 450 are still missing today.
Dutch Golden Age
The Dutch Golden Age spanned roughly the 17th century. The Dutch Republic was the most prosperous nation in Europe and led European trade, science, and art.
The northern Netherlandish provinces that made up the new state had traditionally been less important artistic centers than cities in Flanders in the south.
The upheavals and large-scale transfers of the population due to the Eighty Years’ War and the break with the old monarchist and Catholic cultural traditions, meant that Dutch art had to reinvent itself.
The painting of religious subjects declined sharply, but a significant new market for all kinds of secular subjects grew up. Vermeer’s subjects typify this exploration of new subject areas.
Johannes Vermeer
Johannes Vermeer (1632 – 1675) was a Dutch Baroque Period painter who specialized in domestic interior scenes of middle-class life. He was a moderately successful painter in his lifetime.
However, he was not wealthy, leaving his wife and children in debt at his death.
There are only thirty-four paintings by Vermeer that have survived and have been authenticated. Vermeer painted mostly domestic interior scenes, and most of his pictures are set in the rooms of his house in Delft.
There have similar furniture and decorations in various arrangements in his domestic scenes. His art also often portrays the same people.
He was not wealthy, as he left his family in debt after his death. He produced relatively few paintings compared to his contemporaries.
Art historians mainly overlooked Vermeer’s works for several centuries after his death.
However, his reputation has skyrocketed in the last few hundred years, and he is particularly renowned for his masterly treatment and use of light in his work.
Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window
- Title: Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window
- Artist: Johannes Vermeer
- Year: 1659
- Material: oil on panel
- Dimensions: Height: 830 mm (32.67 ″); Width: 645 mm (25.39 ″)
- Museum: Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister
Johannes Vermeer
- Artist: Johannes Vermeer
- Born: 1632 – Delft, Dutch Republic
- Died: 1675 (aged 43) -Delft, Dutch Republic
- Nationality: Dutch
- Movement Dutch Golden Age, Baroque
- Notable works:
- Girl with a Pearl Earring
- The Concert
- Lady at the Virginal with a Gentleman
- Woman with a Pearl Necklace
- The Milkmaid
- The Little Street
- The Allegory of Faith
- The Geographer
- Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window
- The Lacemaker
Johannes Vermeer
Berlin Museums
- The Pergamon Museum
- Neues Museum
- Altes Museum
- Alte Nationalgalerie – National Gallery (Berlin)
- Bode Museum
- Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
- Spy Museum Berlin
- Jewish Museum, Berlin
- Deutsches Historisches Museum – German Historical Museum
- DDR Museum
- German Resistance Memorial Center
Johannes Vermeer
Munich Museums
- Alte Pinakothek
- Neue Pinakothek
- Lenbachhaus
- Deutsches Museum
- Kunsthalle Munich
“Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window” by Johannes Vermeer
How Vermeer Lied to Us
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“A great poet is the most precious jewel of a nation.”
– Ludwig van Beethoven
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Photo Credit: Johannes Vermeer [Public domain]
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