برچسب: Vermeers

  • Explore an Incredible 108-Gigapixel Scan of Johannes Vermeer’s Most Famous Painting — Colossal

    Explore an Incredible 108-Gigapixel Scan of Johannes Vermeer’s Most Famous Painting — Colossal


    One of the inimitable joys of visiting an art museum is being able to view paintings up close—to see their textures, frames, and the way the surface interacts with the light. But even if you had the opportunity to step past security wires and get within inches of an original canvas, you’d still never be able to see the work quite like the new, 108-gigapixel scan of Johannes Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring” (1665).

    The Mauritshuis has documented its most famous acquisition in unprecedented detail with the help of lens company Hirox, which has produced a video microscope capable of capturing the tiniest speck of paint with astonishing clarity. The outfit was also involved in an earlier reproduction of the same painting, creating an image composed of 10 billion pixels.

    an extremely close-up detail of an oil painting with tiny daubs of paint and crackled texture

    This high-tech collaboration brings a 17th-century masterpiece to life with an interactive site inviting visitors to examine every micro detail. The new image is more than ten times as large as its predecessor—108 gigapixels translates to 108 billion pixels. A standard computer screen ranges from around four to six million pixels in its entirety. As Kottke notes, the resolution is very high, too, at 1.3 microns per pixel. (A millimeter is 1,000 microns.)

    Hirox, in tandem with a company called Tuur, produced a beautiful video and virtual tour. A three-dimensional tool for exploring the topography of the surface highlights Vermeer’s mastery of light, like reflections in the sitter’s eyes, the folds of her head scarf, and the minimal dabs of white paint on the titular pearl.

    This virtual exploration offers art historians and enthusiasts alike a chance to experience “Girl with a Peal Earring” like never before, regardless of where you are. But if you’re in The Hague, it’s also on view in the permanent collection of The Mauritshuis.

    an extremely close-up detail of an oil painting of a woman's mouth
    an extremely close-up detail of an oil painting within a black frame with software navigation buttons
    an extremely close-up detail of an oil painting with a blue, crackled texture



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  • Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring – Lines and Colors

    Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring – Lines and Colors


    A Fresh Look: Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring - reversed
    A Fresh Look: Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring - reversed

    Hopefully — even if only for a moment — you got to see in the top two images Vermeer’s iconic painting with fresh eyes. The images are reversed left to right.

    It is not an uncommon practice for artists to pause in the process of working on a painting or other artwork and view the work in a mirror. This briefly provides a fresh view of the work, a contrast to the the kind of familiarity that makes it difficult to see something objectively.

    We can use the same effect to view images that are so culturally familiar they are difficult to see in the way we might have when first encountering them. The effect doesn’t last long; we soon become accustomed to the “new” view, but it’s nice to get a fresh view of something so familiar.

    I’ve included an image of the painting in its normal orientation at the bottom.

    Wikimedia Commons has a high resolution image of the painting, available from this page.

    I did the same thing back in 2006 with Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, and in the process, I believe I gained some insight into her enigmatic smile/not smile.



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