Jovem Adormecida (A Maid Asleep / A Woman Asleep / A Girl Asleep) - Johannes Vermeer
Metropolitan Museum of Arts Nova York
OST - 87x76 - 1656-1657
A Girl Asleep,
also known as A Woman Asleep, A Woman Asleep at Table, and A
Maid Asleep, is a painting by the Dutch master Johannes Vermeer, 1657. It is housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York City and may not be lent elsewhere under the terms of the donor's
bequest.
According to
Liedtke, the presence of the dog would have alluded to "the sort of
impromptu relationships canine suitors strike up on the street." The man
and the dog were replaced with a mirror on a far wall, suggesting how the
experience of the senses quickly passes, and a chair left at an angle with a
pillow on it, possibly signifying indolence, together with a hint of recent
company. The idea that she was recently together with someone is reinforced by
the wine pitcher, the glass on its side and the possible presence of a knife
and fork on the table. The Chinese bowl with fruit is a symbol of temptation,
and for a Vermeer contemporary familiar with the symbolism of Dutch art of the
time, the knife and jug lying open-mouthed under a gauzy material would have
brought to mind more than social intercourse.
The painting
was very likely owned by Vermeer's patron, Pieter van Ruijvan, who
also owned The Milkmaid, which has a
similar tension between the symbolism of sexual or romantic relations with
maids and their presentation in a way that was more sympathetic than the
established tradition.
The painting
was among the large collection of Vermeer works sold on May 16, 1696, from the
estate of Jacob Dissius (1653–1695). It is
widely believed the collection was originally owned by Dissius'
father-in-law, Pieter Claesz van Ruijven of
Delft as Vermeer's major patron, then passed down to Ruijven's daughter
(1655–1682), who would have left it to Dissius. The work's history from that
point is unknown until its ownership by John Waterloo Wilson in Paris after 1873. It was sold on
March 14, 1881, in Paris when the Sedelmeyer Gallery in
Paris bought it and sold it later that year to Rodolphe Kann, also of Paris.
Kann owned the work until 1907. It was sold in 1908 through the Duveen Brothers of
London to Benjamin Altman, and it
was exhibited in New York in 1909. Altman owned the work until 1913, when it
passed into the hands of the Metropolitan Museum of Art as a bequest.
The
misbehavior of unsupervised maidservants was a common subject for
seventeenth-century Dutch painters. Yet in his depiction of a young maid dozing
next to a glass of wine, Vermeer transfigured an ordinary scene into an
investigation of light, color, and texture that supersedes any moralizing
lesson. While the toppled glass at left (now abraded with time) and rumpled
table carpet may indicate a recently departed visitor, X-radiographs indicate
that Vermeer chose to remove a male figure he had originally included standing
in the doorway, heightening the painting’s ambiguity.
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