Save on Framed Art and Canvas Prints Pictures to Art
Save 5% More...

Johannes Vermeer Girl with a Pearl Earring, c.1665


Price: Sale Price: $119.69
Regular Price: $132.99


A beautiful girl on a black background


In Stock - Ships within 5-8 days

Item # 33896 Finished size:
See more product details
  • Product
  • Size
  • Customize
Would you like to crop this print?
off
 Frame Selection
off
 Mat Selection
Choose your number of mats:
Mat width:
Select your mat color:
Top Mat
Middle Mat
Bottom Mat
off
 Glass Selection
Acrylic Plexiglass Finishing
Lightweight & Shatter-Resistant
 
Glass Finishing
Slightly Thicker & Heavier

* Clear Plexiglass and Clear Glass, standard picture frame protection, reflective with direct sunlight.

** Non-Glare Plexiglass and Non Glare Glass, diffuses glare from light and will soften | mute colors in your artwork.

Select a Size
Product Type
Size Guide
All sizes based on outer dimensions.
Product Type
Customize It
Customize It
Select a Size
Product #: R33896-AEAAAAGADM
You Might Also Like:
The painting 'Girl with a Pearl Earring' is one of Vermeer's Masterworks and as the name implies, uses a pearl earring for a focal point. The painting is in The Mauritshuis in The Hague. A careful consideration gives rise to the question of how far the painting is to be taken as a portrait. Scholars are not in agreement on the subject. P.T.A.Swillens, who compiled the first exhaustive study of the artist's life and work in 1950, believed that one of the most important characteristics of a 17th-century portrait was its likeness. According to Arthur Wheelock the painting is an "idealized study" which reveals Vermeer's "classical tendencies." Walter Liedtke sees in Vermeer's work "the restrained emotion and contemplation having nothing to do with Poussin or Neo-platonic concepts, but were, more simply, consistent with the local artistic tradition and character of Delft." Not a single sitter in Vermeer's paintings has ever been identified, including this young girl. Many believe that she may have been Vermeer's first daughter, Maria who would have been about 12 or 13 years old in 1665. However, this painting was probably not a portrait, but rather a "tronie" - the 17th-century Dutch description of a ’head’ that was not meant to be an exact portrait.
Holiday Shipping times