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We're in the Mauritshuis in the Hague.
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And we're looking at probably their most famous painting.
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This is Vermeer's "Girl with a Pearl Earring."
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Well, I would say not just their most well-known painting, but maybe one of the most well-known paintings generally.
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-But only recently. -True.
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It's a painting that really seems to have ascended in the late 20th century.
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And it's interesting how our society picks out certain paintings for fame and that people really fall in love with.
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And perhaps it's because this was the centerpiece of a film.
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This was the centerpiece of a novel.
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And perhaps because we know so little about the painting.
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And it's interesting that this is sometimes referred to as the Dutch Mona Lisa.
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In both cases, we have bust-length portraits of women in rather indeterminate backgrounds.
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Now, we should be careful here, because this may look like a portrait to us.
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But, in fact, it's not a portrait.
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The Mona Lisa is, though, for a long time her identity wasn't known.
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Now, we are pretty confident we know who the Mona Lisa was.
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But, in this case, this is not a portrait.
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This is known as a tronie, that is, a representation of a character, of a particular type of person.
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The way that we have, for instance, in modern American situation comedies, you have the villain, you have the hero.
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You have a certain type of person.
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And we think this is an exotic type.
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Because of her turban and her clothing seems foreign, and also that rather over-sized pearl earring.
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And the way that we see her from the side.
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But she turns towards us, and so there's something momentary, there's something very alluring, that we're not addressing her directly.
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And it's a lot like the Mona Lisa.
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In both cases, we have gazes that seem enigmatic.
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What are they thinking? Who are they?
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What is our relationship to her?
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They're both paintings that really open up possibilities for interpretation with no one correct answer.
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So much so that somebody was able to produce an entire novel based on this single painting that we know so little about.
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What we do know about this painting, though, is that it's technique is really quite extraordinary.
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The subtlety of light is stunning.
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In the way in which the reflectivity of the pearl is cast against the darkness of her neck.
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The softness of her features and also the harmonies of those blues and golds.
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Now, we know that Vermeer worked very slowly.
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Some art historians have suggested that he only produced perhaps two or three paintings a year.
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And that his technique was really painstaking.
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And we can see that in the care in which he's creating form out of light.
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But it's so momentary, just like we look at Dutch landscapes.
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And we have a sense of the passage of time as the clouds move across the landscape.
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Here we have that same sense of a figure who's just turned her head and is about to speak with us or is about to engage us.
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But we don't know what about.
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And that our eyes are just in the process of focusing on her as she meets our gaze.
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And so we are complicit in this moment.
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And I think the subtlety of color and the subtlety of light, the intimacy here.
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All of that, allows us to register this very personal moment.
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And perhaps this is why this painting is so beloved.