Mulher de Azul Lendo Uma Carta (Brieflezende Vrouw / Woman Reading a Letter) - Johannes Vermeer
Rijksmuseum Amsterdã Holanda
OST - 46x39 - 1663
Woman Reading
a Letter (Dutch: Brieflezende
vrouw) is a painting by the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer, produced in around 1663. It has been part of
the collection of the City of Amsterdam since the Van der Hoop bequest in
1854, and in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam since it
opened in 1885, the first Vermeer it acquired.
The central
element of the painting is a woman in blue standing in front of a window (not
depicted) reading a letter. The woman appears to be pregnant, although
many have argued that the woman's rounded figure is simply a result of the
fashions of the day. Although the woman's loose clothing may be suggestive,
pregnancy was very rarely depicted in art during this period.
While the
contents of the letter are not visible, the composition of the painting is
revealing. The map of the County of Holland and West Friesland in
the Netherlands on the wall behind the woman has been
interpreted as suggesting that the letter she reads was written by a traveling
husband. Alternatively, the box of pearls barely visible on the table
before the woman might suggest a lover as pearls are sometimes a symbol of
vanity. The very action of letter-reading reflects a thematic pattern
throughout Vermeer's works, as a common private moment becomes revealing of the
human condition.
The painting
is unique among Vermeer's interiors in that no fragment of corner, floor or
ceiling can be seen.
The
composition and the female figure are similar to Vermeer's 1657-59
painting Girl Reading a
Letter at an Open Window. This work has similarities to his
similarly-dated Woman with a Pearl Necklace and Woman Holding a Balance.
The map, drawn by Balthasar Florisz. van Berckenrode ,
was published in 1620 and reprinted by Willem Blaeu in 1621; it also appears in Vermeer's Officer and Laughing Girl.
The latter however, shows a polychromatic map while Woman Reading a Letter depicts
a monochromatic print. That such a map really existed is proven by a
monochromatic exemplar preserved in the collection of the Westfries Museum at Hoorn.
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