A Alcoviteira (The Procuress) - Johannes Vermeer
Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden, Alemanha
OST - 143x130 - 1656
The Procuress is
a 1656 oil-on-canvas painting by the 24-year-old Johannes Vermeer. It can be seen in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden.
It is his first genre painting and
shows a scene of contemporary life, an image of mercenary love, perhaps in
a brothel. It differs from his earlier biblical and mythological
scenes. It is one of only three paintings Vermeer signed and dated (the other
two are The Astronomer and The Geographer).
It seems
Vermeer was influenced by earlier works on the same subject by Gerard ter Borch, and The Procuress (c.
1622) by Dirck van Baburen, which
was owned by Vermeer's mother-in-law Maria Thins and hung in her home
The woman in
black, the leering coupler, "in a nun's costume", could be the
eponymous procuress, while the man
to her right, "wearing a black beret and a doublet with slashed
sleeves", has been identified as a self portrait of the artist. There is a resemblance
with the painter in Vermeer's The Art of Painting.
The man, a
soldier, in the red jacket is fondling the young woman's breast and dropping a
coin into her outstretched hand. According to Benjamin Binstock the
painting could be understood as a psychological portrait of his adopted family. Vermeer
is in the painting as a musician, in the employ of the madam. In his rather
fictional book Binstock explains Vermeer used his family as models; the
procuress could be Vermeer's wife Catherina and the lewd soldier her brother
Willem.
The three-dimensional jug on the oriental rug is a piece of Westerwald Pottery.
The kelim thrown over a bannister, probably produced in Uşak, covers a third of the painting and shows medaillons and leaves. The instrument is probably a cittern. The dark coat with five buttons was added by Vermeer
in a later stage.
In 1696 the
painting, being sold on an auction in Amsterdam, was named "A merry
company in a room". According to Binstock this "dark and gloomy"
painting does not represent a didactic message.
Some critics
thought the painting is atypical of Vermeer's style and expression, because it
lacks the typical light.
Pieter
Swillens wrote in 1950 that—if the work was by Vermeer at all—it showed the
artist "seeking and groping" to find a suitable mode of expression.
Eduard Trautscholdt wrote 10 years before that "The temperament of the
24-year-old Vermeer fully emerges for the first time".
The painting
was in the Waldstein collection
in Dux (now Duchcov), then bought in 1741 for August III of Poland, the
Elector of Saxony.
The painting
was exhibited in 1980 at the Restaurierte Kunstwerke in der Deutschen
Demokratischen Republic exhibit in the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin,
Altes Museum.
This painting
should not be confused with another painting by the same name, by Dirck van
Baburen, nor with a fake version once attributed to Vermeer which technical
analysis in 2011 disclosed that there's Bakelite in the paint, definitely proving that the
painting is a modern forgery. It was most probably executed by the notorious
forger, Han van Meegeren, who was responsible for producing several fake
Vermeers and known to use said resin to harden the paint.
The technical
investigation of this painting was done in 1968 by Hermann Kühn. The
pigment analysis revealed Vermeer's use of his usual pigments such as ultramarine in the blue wine jug and lead-tin-yellow in the jacket of the woman. He employed
also smalt in the green parts of the tablecloth and in the
greenish background which is less usual for him.
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