Artists and Cultural Profiles

Jan Vermeer
Holland, 1632-75

Jan Vermeer (yahn vair-meer) is an artist about whom almost nothing was known
until about a hundred years ago. He created relatively few paintings, and little was
recorded about him in writing.

Vermeer was born in Delft, Holland. In Vermeer's world, artists did not reach the
high social position that was enjoyed by such Italian Renaissance artists as Raphael.
Dutch artists of Vermeer's time were considered craftspeople, and their financial
success was in the hands of the new wealthy middle class. This group wanted
artwork that showed scenes of everyday life rather than religious scenes. Paintings of
this type became known as genre paintings. Because of the Dutch people's great
desire for artwork—and the many paintings being produced—professionals ranging
from picture framers to innkeepers became art dealers. They regulated the prices
that artists could get for their works, which often was very little.

We know that Vermeer made fewer than 40 paintings, 29 of which he still owned
when he died. The style of his paintings made them unique. He focused perhaps
more intensely than anyone on the different surface qualities of a scene. He
translated for the viewer the textures, values, and relationships between shape and
space that natural light revealed. He then organized all these elements into a
perfectly balanced whole.