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View of Delft, 1660-61,
99x118 cm
The Hague, Mauritshuis
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The bright church tower, just right of center, is probably a political statement. It is the Nieuwe Kerk, which holds the tomb of William of Orange, a hero of the Netherlands for his role in the resistance to Spanish rule.t is assumed that Vermeer made this picture with the help of the camera obscura, an optical device like a pinhole camera to project a view on to a flat screen. We can only imagine the fruitful discussions with Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, the inventor of the microscope and Vermeer's friend and executor. The 1649 maps of Delft by Willem Blaeu have been used to identify the exact place -- the upper story of a house -- which is the viewpoint for this painting. It is not, however, a totally accurate representation: Vermeer compressed part of the view and spread out other parts to achieve the balanced composition.
At the right, the boat on the water shimmers with reflected light from the water, an effect achieved with tiny highlights of intensely bright, white paint. This is a slight contradiction, since the water and the boat are in shadow. This picture has always been regarded as one of Vermeer's masterpieces, and fetched the highest price (200 guilders) of any of the 21 Vermeer's that were sold in the Amsterdam auction of 1696.
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