Showing posts with label Girl With A Pearl Earring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Girl With A Pearl Earring. Show all posts

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Blockbuster Vermeer Exhibition Yields Surprise Olympic Find in Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum

Just one line of an October news article inspired a February jaunt to Amsterdam.  

"Vermeer retrospective to be held in 2023 at the Rijksmuseum" was all it took. 

In recent years (though we could not pinpoint exactly when), a close friend, his wife and I began an informal competition, each vying for the title of s/he "who has seen the most Vermeer paintings."

With a reported "record number" (28) of the artist's canvases under one roof, it made sense to go Dutch post-haste, not only for the sake of advancement in our playful contest but also for the joy brought with each Vermeer viewing. 

Of the artist's 37 known works (down to 36 if one discounts a canvas still missing from a 1990 burglary, reduced further to 35 given recent study), each of us had experienced some of the "easy access" Vermeer portraits on view at the National Gallery in Washington, in the Manhattan-based galleries of The Met and neighboring Frick Collection, or in The Louvre, while neither of us yet journeyed to the more elusive Vermeer paintings further afield in museums of Germany, Ireland and Tokyo. The exhibition also promised, and delivered, a look at some works held in private collections. 

My own introduction to Vermeer was through client publicity work when "The Girl with the Pearl Earring" made its world tour summer stop at Atlanta's High Museum of Art in 2013. It was love at first uncrating, setting in motion my quest to experience her siblings. 

Landing at Schipol was characteristically easy, and after short rail rides by train to Centraal and tram to the Leonardo Hotel, which faces the same canal as Rijksmuseum, it was just a short stroll to engage with Vermeer's masterpieces. In fact, the public transport commute was shorter than the three-hour exploration of the special galleries. 

With some intention, it's now my habit (when museum security does not intervene) to first walk through art exhibitions in reverse, starting at the exit and slowly studying each work sans mobile phone and without reading wall texts. It's all about the art and just the works, not the organizer's narrative nor "expert" perspectives, though often there are informative notes to absorb during the second pass. 

Since most special exhibitions of late have a gift shop near the end, crossing this retail space usually teases the "must see" and "nice to see" highlights arranged by the curators. This proved especially true with Vermeer's retail opportunities, including a Rijksmuseum-specific batch of Playmobil sets. 

I learned Vermeer painted from the mid-1650s to 1672, sometimes investing two or three years on one creation, and occasionally working on more than one painting simultaneously. Paraphrasing Rijksmuseum General Director Taco Dibbits' foreword to the exhibition catalogue, 'Closer to Vermeer' could be the exhibition's motto, which rings true in than I got my face right up within a half-meter of almost everything hanging on the dark blue or taupe walls. 

The first visual feast was "Woman with a Pearl Necklace" in town from Berlin, one of four or five Vermeers in which his model dons a yellow fur with what may be snow leopard cuffs and collars. 

Not far from her, "The Geographer" which travelled from Frankfurt, gazed out the artist's studio window that graces the left side in many other works. 

The galleries did not seem overcrowded from my 7 p.m. entry to closing time at 10. More than once I overheard English speaking guests referencing the outstanding Penn & Teller feature documentary film "Tim's Vermeer" regarding a businessman who invested in study of the artist's technique. Other languages overheard include Dutch, French, Mandarin, Japanese, Spanish or Portuguese and at least one indecipherable conversation from Eastern Europe (possibly Russian or Polish). 

With an exception or two, each gallery included five-to-seven works, with Vermeer's two known hometown street or landscapes, assorted character study tronies and more monumental works generally grouped together. 

While I spent about five to seven minutes with each work -- about 2.5 hours plus a Nescafe/waffle break and exit through the gift shop -- certain canvases really popped or resonated:


From Tokyo's National Museum of Western Art, "Saint Praxedis" was entirely new to me and one of the boldest surprises, not only for its subject's vivid rouge attire but also the drama -- a decapitated martyr and another woman approaching his corpse -- looming in the background. The squeezing of blood from her foreground cloth or sponge into an elaborate urn is reminiscent of another fluid-spilling work displayed around the corner (and painted three years later), "The Milkmaid" in a temporary new space of her home museum. 


"Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window" in town from Dresden. This canvas enjoyed a bit of its own, well-deserved international press in recent years for the museum discovery and restoration of a painted-over Cupid portrait aloft in the artist's studio.


"Young Woman Standing at a Virginal" which had fellow attendees or docents and me pointing out "there's that Cupid again." The youthful musician breaks the fourth wall with a sly smirk while fingering the instrument's keys, as if to state, "Here's another ditty from Delft!"


"Girl Interrupted at Her Music" with another Vermeer model breaking the fourth wall, this time with less mirth and more of a melancholic or j'accuse! gaze. This painting inspired the title and themes of the early 1990s memoir and later film starring Winona Ryder, Angelina Jolie and Elisabeth Moss. This was my second encounter, a follow up to a 2015 intro at The Frick.


"The Glass of Wine" featuring a young woman polishing off a serving of vino while a Dutchman motions as though to refill her glass. My eyes kept shifting to the brightly backlit stained-glass window, which I later learned depicts Temperance. 

But the pièce de résistance painting that brought a tear of joy was another new-to-me Vermeer titled "The Procuress" featuring a mix of favorite elements framed by the artist elsewhere. 

The tapestry, for instance, is so detailed you could almost count individual threads. Or the light reflecting from the Dutch porcelain, drinking glass and hand-held guilder also pops delicately from the grin of Vermeer's self-portrait (far left). This canvas made me beam from ear to ear -- I would happily book future passage to experience it again in its Dresden museum home.

Of course, it was fun to reacquaint with "Girl with a Pearl Earring" after all these years (paraphrasing Bobby Brown's late 80s single, "my heart belongs to this tronie"), and also to again experience The Frick's "Officer and Laughing Girl" which, like "The Astronomer" in Paris (regrettably absent for unknown Louvre reasons) is a longtime favorite. 

Observation of "The Love Letter" from the Rijksmuseum collection inspired remarks to a friendly museum guard in that the paper missive might instead be handed over from a neighbor imploring the featured young musician to "put down that lute!"

The same guard explained that for the Vermeer exhibition -- which sold out tens of thousands* of tickets during the early days of availability -- the museum assigned about one guard per canvas, perhaps in response to recent protest-centered vandalism that literally brought ruin within only a glass pane's width of a Vermeer in The Hague (a dreadfully misguided and overly risky PR stunt I and other professional communicators have deplored via direct messages to the protesters' media counsel). 

* I was not yet able to verify numbers, but another guard estimated "over 200,000" tickets including thousands of stretch timeslots added in response to overwhelming demand. 

Though my ticket purchase went through with ease on Feb. 4, a day or two after my friend's wife purchased her passage to Holland for mid-March, within a few days of their on-sale and the opening week blitzkrieg of publicity for the show, the museum website now states "The Vermeer exhibition is definitively sold out" with a link provided to view the entire experience virtually. 

Here's hoping those who secured tickets enjoy the experience as much as I did through my reverse-course, the start-to-finish sequence and back again to gather photos for this post. 

The race to discover the next and remaining, unseen Vermeers ... is on!

Since my special exhibition ticket was for an after-hours Saturday evening, the press office at Rijksmuseum was kind enough to help me purchase a media ticket to view the main collection the next day. 

While I will eventually craft a separate post about Rijksmuseum's outstanding treasures, as noted in the headline to this Vermeer summary, a five-ringed discovery was revealed in close proximity to the special exhibition galleries. 

Peering in on Suday, around the corner from the Vermeer entrance, signage prompted a peek inside an Asian Collection gallery in which one of the museum's newest acquisitions -- a donated assemblage of Japanese prints spanning several decades -- yielded a gorgeous platform diving image that, according to the wall text, was a color woodblock print by Onchi Koshiro. 

"According to collector Elise Wessels, this is one of the most beautiful prints in the donation ... Onchi made it for the exhibition at the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art organized for the 1932 Summer Olympics."

Bravo, Koshiro!

Photos by Nicholas Wolaver

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

The Frick Collection = Unfrickinbelievable!

According to this Urban Dictionary entry, when a person does something completely out of the ordinary, those actions may be deemed unfrigginbelievable.

Given my affinity for puns, on a recent holiday visit to Manhattan I could not help but apply this term to The Frick Collection, an unfrickinbelievable private assemblage of art gathered by Henry Clay Frick. 

In his day (1849 to 1919), Frick amassed a fortune as a coal-to-coke conversion entrepreneur with ties forged to steel production.

His colorful life also included some savvy crisis P.R. moves related to the Johnstown Flood, union-busting, surviving an assassination attempt and missing his reservation on the maiden voyage of the Titanic when his wife injured her leg.

Frick also collected art -- lots of art -- and he built an enormous mansion on the east site of Central Park to display his paintings, furnishings, carpets and sculpture ... sort of the early 1900's residential version of Alice Walton's Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (the unfrigginbelievable modern entry from Bentonville, Arkansas).

With thanks to The Frick Collection media relations team for the blogger ticket on short notice, presented below are a few notes on the experience and why anyone heading to New York should make time to join the museum's 300,000 annual visitors. 

First, the building. 

Like an introvert at the prom, the mansion sits quietly on the east side of Fifth Avenue a few blocks south of its extroverted neighbors the Guggenheim Museum and Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Frick can dance like the best of New York's art destinations, and the Collection features a few moves rarely seen anywhere stateside or abroad.

Entering the museum from 70th Street, just inside visitors find a gorgeous enclosed courtyard. After an early morning flight and long, chilly train ride in from JFK, this was a comfortable, quiet and surprising tropical oasis in which to briefly recharge before exploring the galleries.

Amazing awaits in almost every room. The Frick displays not one but three Johannes Vermeer showstopping canvases. 

I must have spent an hour (20 minutes each) studying these magnificent paintings -- "Officer and Laughing Girl" is easily my favorite of the bunch, but I loved "Girl Interrupted at her Music" and "Mistress and Maid" as well. For this blogger, the Vermeer trio alone warrant a special trek to The Frick. 

But wait, there's more!

I lost count of the Rembrandt portraits, the Turner nautical scenes and El Greco images. Turn through a doorway and (ta-da!) there's a Renoir of parading youngsters, a Gilbert Stuart portrait of George Washington, and numerous works by James McNeill Whistler. 

Degas, de Goya, Manet ... the major artist list goes on and on.

Lush furnishings, tapestries, carpets and objects adorn each room, with many areas decorated as Frick intended during his few years in the residence. 

One bronze that caught my eye -- an Italian work titled "She-Wolf" -- is reminiscent of the Rome 1960 Olympic logo. A peek at the online collection shows a Frederick Remington "Bronco Buster" bronze is another Frick acquisition though not currently on view (something I'll seek during a future visit).

The oldest item I spotted was an enamel work created in the years 1308-11 titled "The Temptation of Christ on the Mountain" -- gorgeous, and so rich with detail. The largest object I noted is a giant female figure of "Diana the Huntress" displayed near several large windows (this fully nude form is perched in a manner that almost showcases the bright side of the moon to passersby on Fifth Avenue). 

Though I did not use the museum audio guides (included with admission) nor the Frick app (very helpful post-visit, and recommended pre-visit), I spoke with three of the docents who enthusiastically answered my questions about several works and clarified The Frick did not loan objects nor paintings for Cultural Olympiads. 

The best conversationalist on site is the Frick employee named Lauren (sadly, I did not catch her title), a Michigan native who came to the Frick by way of the Detroit Institute of Arts -- she is one smart woman and just might be related to Debra Winger or Zoey Deschanel in the classy, dark-haired, blue-eyed department. 

Lauren knows a thing or two about Vermeer; The Frick hosted "Girl With A Pearl Earring" just after then-client the High Museum of Art's tour stop for "The Dutch Mona Lisa" a couple years back, and it was clear Lauren did some homework about loaned works from The Netherlands. 

In addition to swapping art stories, Lauren recommended an excellent neighborhood eatery, Via Quadronno, for a late lunch. Walking back from the cafe, I stumbled upon a Madison Avenue gallery with some Linda McCartney photographs and a shiny Roy Lichenstein "Bonsai" sculpture in the window (unfrigginbelievable!) -- something to pick up the next time I have $2.4 million handy in New York.

Exterior photos of The Frick Collection and Gagosian Gallery by Nicholas Wolaver. All art images via The Frick Collection online galleries except the Johnstown Flood image (not a Frick item) via this gallery




Saturday, June 22, 2013

Delights Der Dutch Details


I've got a new summer girlfriend in Atlanta. You need to meet her!

She's Dutch. She's famous. She's likes to wear pearls and she's got a smile that stops people in their tracks.

This week at my freelance P.R. job, the High Museum of Art welcomed the long-awaited arrival of "Girl With A Pearl Earring." The world-famous canvas by Johannes Vermeer got its official Atlanta unveiling on Monday, joining 34 other Dutch masterworks on view through Sept. 29.

Wednesday's media preview and advance work got some nice play with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia Public Broadcasting, Atlanta Magazine, Fox 5 Good Day Atlanta, Creative Loafing and the Associated Press.

The exhibition marks the first Southeast U.S. visit of the "Dutch Mona Lisa," and I have to say that gazing upon the canvas in person reminded me of crossing paths with Madonna, Lady Gaga, Cher, Annie Lennox and other famous and beautiful women backstage or from the photo pit at Philips Arena. Like shaking hands with Hillary Clinton a few years back, walking up to the "Girl With A Pearl Earring" for the first time provided those "meeting a celebrity" ganzen staten (Dutch goose bumps).

For this blogger, art exhibitions must deliver on several fronts to earn "outstanding" status. In addition to the inclusion of "important" works, a heavy dose of learning and "elements of interest" are key. I loved walking through "Girl With A Pearl Earring: Dutch Paintings from the Mauritshuis" for it entices the visitor to get up in the face of most of the works and really study the fine details.

A cousin of mine who experienced the exhibition in San Francisco a few weeks ago remarked that she loved how small and detailed many of the canvases are -- I concur, and I also delighted in the Dutch details many times.

The exhibition includes works grouped by landscapes/seascapes, still lifes, genre and history paintings and portraits.

While viewing the first few frames, visitors should be sure to closely study the snow-tipped leaves in "Winter Landscape" by Jacob van Ruisdael, and make time for his larger work "View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds" for the glorious countryside it portrays, filled with churches, windmills and fields under a cloudy summer sky (the title refers to the olde school methods of making linen -- ranked with beer as Haarlem's top exports -- and the fabric bleaching process that covered acres of farmland).

I also enjoyed an early peek at Mauritshuis -- the museum from which the exhibition is on loan during a two-year remodeling project -- shown in "A Hunting Party near the Hofvijver in The Hague, Seen from the Plaats" (later in the exhibition, a floor-to-ceiling photograph of modern day Mauritshuis quickly moved a trip to The Netherlands up on my world travel wish list).

The still lifes showcase Dutch flowers, food and property enjoyed by the wealthy elite, while the genre paintings bring to life a day in the middle class Holland.

The largest canvas by artist Jan Steen titled "As the Old Sing, So Twitter the Young" (see image at base of this post) includes a family party scene not too shy for its commentary on liberal lifestyles (smokes and drinks for all ages!) and the consequences for future generations, while a tiny canvas by the same artist, "The Oyster Eater," made me hungry (check out the fine porcelain detail -- how did the painter do that?). Studying the latter canvas was like standing before the tiny oil canvases by Salvador Dalí that were in the same High galleries not long ago. Wonderful surprises in the tiniest details.

While Tweeting about the Twitter-titled Steen, one may also wish to IM RE: "The Goldfinch" by Carel Fabritius (saved by conservation works, according to the exhibition catalog), the skull in "Vanitas Still Life" by Pieter Claesz, or "Still Life with Five Apricots" that look so real its as though peach fuzz grew on the canvas.

Other favorites include "Woman Writing a Letter" with a young lady donning an earring like the exhibition's namesake, and her neighbor "The Violin Player" with a life-sized female giggling through her wardrobe malfunction circa 1636. Tobacco and alcohol return in "A Man Smoking and a Woman Drinking in a Courtyard" and there's a Muppet-like quality to each of the peasant faces in "The Violinist."

The big guns come out with four magnificent Rembrandt van Rijn masterpieces, including "Susanna" and "Simeon's Song of Praise" flanked by portraits and tronies or facial paintings that capture people of era but not necessarily a specific person. Which brings us to the "Mona Lisa of the North" by Vermeer, who is not a specific person as portrayed by Scarlett Johansson in the film based on a fictional bestseller by the same name.

The "Girl With A Pearl Earring" gets to hang out in her own private green room just like the other lady rock stars mentioned in this post, with her gaze following your movements across the room like the eyes of the president's statue inside the Lincoln Memorial rotunda.

I highly recommend a visit to experience "Girl With A Pearl Earring" during her once in a lifetime stop at Atlanta, or during her final worldwide tour dates with The Frick Collection in New York and at a museum in Balogna, Italy, before her homecoming in The Hague. And though I don't often do this, I also recommend the audio tour and exhibition catalog which elaborate on many more details of the Dutch masterworks.

Photos by Nicholas Wolaver except for "The Girl With The Pearl Earring" image from this link


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