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Love Letterby Johannes Vermeer
23" x 25" Framed Art Frame
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Woman Reading a Letterby Johannes Vermeer
23" x 26" Framed Art Frame
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Woman Holding a Balance, 1664by Johannes Vermeer
23" x 25" Framed Art Frame
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Woman With A Pearl Necklaceby Johannes Vermeer
27" x 31" Framed Print Frame
Woman With A Pearl Necklaceby Johannes Vermeer
18" x 20" Framed Print Frame
Girl With The Pearl Earringby Johannes Vermeer
10" x 12" Framed Print Frame
Woman With A Pearl Necklaceby Johannes Vermeer
10" x 12" Framed Print Frame
Girl with a Pearl Earringby Johannes Vermeer
18" x 23" Framed Print Frame
Girl with a Pearl Earring, c.1665by Johannes Vermeer
15" x 19" Framed Print Frame
View of Delftby Johannes Vermeer
27" x 24" Framed Print Frame
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Lacemakerby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 25" Framed Print Frame
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Astronomer, 1668by Johannes Vermeer
22" x 25" Framed Print Frame
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Lady writing a letter with her Maidby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 26" Framed Print Frame
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Young Lady Seated at a Virginalby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 24" Framed Print Frame
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Lady standing at the Virginalby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 25" Framed Print Frame
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Artist's Studioby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 28" Framed Print Frame
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Young Woman with a Water Jugby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 24" Framed Print Frame
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Portrait of a Young Womanby Johannes Vermeer
22" x 26" Framed Print Frame
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Geographer, 1669by Johannes Vermeer
22" x 25" Framed Print Frame
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Johannes Vermeer (1632 – December 1675) was a Dutch realist painter whose subjects were mainly Dutch domestic interiors consisting of human figures. His love of art stemmed from his fascination with cameras and the effects of light on different subjects. Vermeer’s early personal life isn't clear, although it's known that he was a staunch catholic. Sources intimate that he learned his paintings from Abraham Bloemaert, who was a Catholic painter. He started out painting mainly history scenes, involving a lot of imaginations to come up with scenes that truly reflect historical subjects in a distinguishable manner. Vermeer got married to his wife Catherine Bolnes with whom they had 15 children, but lost 4 at birth. In a number of his paintings, his wife and children posed for him. He mainly lived his life in Delft with little activities outside his home town, a reality that narrowed down his market to friends, relatives and a few other locals.
Vermeer mainly used oil paint as his medium and canvas as his support base. He developed a unique style such that to date, his works remain some of the most valued in museums across the globe, and it's believed that only a few of them are available. Vermeer remains one of Europe’s greatest painters. Although he’s celebrated in death, he didn’t achieve much with the paintings during his life, ending up dying poor, leaving his family bankrupt. His wife had to give away his paintings to the city council in exchange for some small fee. Vermeer’s art only resurfaced prominently 200 years later in 1858 after a French writer started writing about them. Now, they’re exhibited in Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Moreover, Johannes Vermeer framed art are also available through different galleries.