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Vermeers Love Letters Special Exhibition Galleries To Showcase Major Vermeer Loans

January 01, 1970

In the first exhibition to be held in The Frick Collections new special exhibition galleries, three works by Johannes Vermeer will be presented from June 18 to Sept. 8. The unprecedented installation titled Vermeers Love Letters centers on the Fricks iconic Mistress and Maid, uniting it with two special loans: The Love Letter from the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, and Woman Writing a Letter with Her Maid from the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin. Presented together in a single gallery for the first time, this trio of works will offer visitors the opportunity to consider Vermeers exploration of themes of letter writing and epistolary exchange in the context of the 17th-century domestic settings for which the artist is renowned. States Xavier F. Salomon, the Fricks Deputy Director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator, On the heels of the museums public reopening on April 17, it is fitting that we are debuting our new special exhibition galleries with a closer look at the work of Vermeer, one of the most popular artists in our collection. His Mistress and Maid is the final masterpiece that Henry Clay Frick acquired before his death, making this inaugural show a particularly appropriate tribute to his legacy as a collector. In taking up the motif of the exchange of letters, Vermeer and his contemporaries explored and imagined the inner lives and emotions of their painted subjects, often creating enigmatic narrative scenes. Of about three dozen surviving works by Vermeer, six are variations on this theme. The three works united in the exhibition share a particular focus on women in the domestic sphere: ladies and their maidservants. The complex relationships, tensions, and trust between these two social classes, domestic servants and their employers, is a topic linked to and exemplified by the writing, reading, and delivery of letters. The exhibitions curator, Dr. Robert Fucci, distinguished scholar on 17th-century Dutch art from the University of Amsterdam, examines these ideas in the literary and artistic contexts of Vermeers time. The display of the three works brought together in Vermeers Love Letters captures the artists ability to portray themes of everyday life with nuance, variety, and drama. This exhibition is generously funded by the Jasmine Charity Trust in memory of Regina Jaglom Wachter. The Frick Collection is located at 1 East 70th St. in New York City. For additional information, visit www.frick.org.
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