Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age
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Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age

at The National Gallery, London
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Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age

This exhibition explores the concept of music as a pastime of the elite in the northern Netherlands during the 17th century. Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age will bring together for the first time the National Gallery’s two paintings by Vermeer, Young Woman Standing at a Virginal and Young Woman Seated at a Virginal, and Vermeer’s Guitar Player, on exceptional loan from the Iveagh Bequest, Kenwood House. The exhibition aims to enhance viewers’ appreciation of these beautiful and evocative paintings by Vermeer and his contemporaries by juxtaposing them with musical instruments and songbooks of the period. Visitors will be able to compare 17th-century virginals, guitars, lutes and other instruments with their painted representations to judge the accuracy of representation and what liberties the painter might have taken to enhance the visual or symbolic appeal of his work. In 17th century Dutch paintings, music often figured as a metaphor for harmony, a symbol of transience or, depending on the type of music being performed, an indicator of one’s education and position in society. Musical instruments and songbooks were also included as attributes in elegant portraits to suggest that the sitter was accomplished in this area.

Rated Excellent

Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age image © The National Gallery, London

The National Gallery

Trafalgar Square
London
WC2N 5DN

Disabled Booking:
0207 747 2590

See all events at The National Gallery

Vermeer and Music: Love and Leisure in the Dutch Golden Age image © The National Gallery, London

The National Gallery

Trafalgar Square
London
WC2N 5DN

Disabled Booking:
0207 747 2590

See all events at The National Gallery