Times Colonist

Louvre exhibit shows Vermeer as borrower

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PARIS — His luminous strokes produced masterpiec­es such as Girl with a Pearl Earring.

But Vermeer, the unique jewel in Dutch painting’s crown, copied ideas from his contempora­ries like every other artist, argues a new major exhibit at the Louvre Museum in Paris that opened this week.

Five years in the making, “Vermeer and the Masters of Genre Painting” presents a third of the Dutch Golden Age master’s complete opus to the public. It’s the biggest such collection of the old master’s work in Europe in almost two decades.

It shows that, however revolution­ary some elements of his paintings were, Vermeer heavily borrowed from his rivals.

“In a way, Vermeer is not very original because he picks ideas from different contempora­ries. His themes are very classical — music-making, lacemaking — that’s been done before,” curator Blaise Ducos said at a preview of the show.

Ducos said the genius of Vermeer, who died at 43 and produced just 36 paintings, can be seen in how he transforme­d rehashed themes and techniques. “He has a distinct, specific psychology. I think there is a mood in Vermeer that you do not find in other paintings,” Ducos said.

Vermeer’s 12 oil paintings in the show, including The Milkmaid on loan from Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseu­m, are hung side-by-side with 58 similar works by his 17th-century rivals, such as Gerrit Dou and Garard ter Borch.

The exhibit runs from Feb. 22 to May 22 in the Louvre, and will travel to the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. in the fall.

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