Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Vermeer of Delft: With a Frontispiece in Photogravure and Twelve Other Illustrations
The technical problems involved by this novel vision were unknown to the Low Countries. Their traditional method, the use of a foundation of transparent brown into which touches of more positive colour were crisply worked, with infinite craft by Metsu and Terborch, with marvellous vigour by Rembrandt and Rubens, was bankrupt in face of Vermeer's requirements. The crystalline purity of light on white walls or linen, the adj ust ment of contours and edges as trimly and precisely as the camera shows them to us to - day, the making of tones as ?at and simple and solid as nature exhibits to the unsophisticated eye, and, last and most difficult of all, the suppression of every trace of human handiwork which might intervene between the spectator and complete optical illusion -such were his demands. And allied with these almost scientific ideals there was in Vermeer a spirit of refined aloofness, of leisurely aristocratic distinction, which lifts him high above his clever, but for the most part rather homely, colleagues.
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