Abstract

Johannes Vermeer may well be the foremost painter of interiors and interiority in the history of art, yet we have not necessarily understood his achievement in either domain, or their relation within his complex development. This essay explains how Vermeer based his interiors on rooms in his house and used his family members as models, combining empiricism and subjectivity. Vermeer was exceptionally self-conscious and sophisticated about his artistic task, which we are still laboring to understand and articulate. He eschewed anecdotal narratives and presented his models as models in “studio” settings, in paintings about paintings, or art about art, a form of modernism. In contrast to the prevailing conception in scholarship of Dutch Golden Age paintings as providing didactic or moralizing messages for their pre-modern audiences, we glimpse in Vermeer’s paintings an anticipation of our own modern understanding of art. This article is published as part of a collection on interiorities.

Highlights

  • Johannes Vermeer may well be the foremost painter of interiors and interiority in the history of art, yet we have not necessarily understood his achievement in either domain, or their relation within his complex development

  • Interiors further prefigures a tendency in Allen’s later films to compensate waning profundity in content through formal and technical means, presenting A-list ensembles in fantastically expansive and luxurious Manhattan apartments, referred to by some as “real estate porn.”2 Allen’s true seriousness as a film-maker is thought to reside instead in his “low” comedic films like Annie Hall (1977) and Manhattan (1979), which draw on elements of his life and work, and star his lover as muse (Diane Keaton, in Interiors), following the precedent of numerous artists and film-makers

  • This essay explains how Vermeer based his interiors on rooms in his house and his figures on family members as models, combining empiricism and subjectivity

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Summary

Introduction

Johannes Vermeer may well be the foremost painter of interiors and interiority in the history of art, yet we have not necessarily understood his achievement in either domain, or their relation within his complex development.

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