Saturday, July 18, 2026

Book: Vermeer’s Afterlives

 

How a once-forgotten Dutch painter inspired generations of artists, writers, and filmmakers


Hardcover

Price:
$39.95/£35.00
ISBN: 9780691277820

Published:
Jun 23, 2026
2026
Pages:
320
Size:
7 x 10 in.
Illus:
146 color illus.

Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675) is one of the most beloved painters in the world. But when an enterprising French journalist and art critic set out to recover his work in the mid-nineteenth century, both his name and achievement were virtually forgotten. Vermeer’s Afterlives tells the remarkable story of how one of the great masters of the Dutch Golden Age was lost to obscurity until the rise of art history as a new discipline introduced his work to modern audiences and asks why his art compels so many other artists to respond with works of their own.

Ruth Bernard Yeazell traces the cultural ascendency of this extraordinary painter, whose enigmatic subjects and quiet, introspective interiors, transfigured by light and color, continue to captivate viewers far removed from his native Delft. We meet the critics who first welcomed Vermeer into the canon along with the painters who sought to imitate him, the forgers who tried to pass off their work as his own, and the contemporary artists who openly repurpose it. The enquiry concludes by looking at Vermeer’s paintings through the eyes of the poets and novelists who have attempted to translate his silence into words and give voice to the stories he left untold. Along the way, Yeazell interrogates the changing assumptions that govern art history, while demonstrating how paintings live on not only in later paintings but in poetry, fiction, photography, and film.

Marking the 350th anniversary of Vermeer’s death, this beautifully illustrated book explores the variety of ways in which Vermeer’s art has been interpreted through the centuries and shows how his paintings take on afterlives of their own in the imaginations of those who view them.


AUTHOR


Ruth Bernard Yeazell is Sterling Professor of English at Yale University. Her books include Picture Titles: How and Why Western Paintings Acquired Their Names and Art of the Everyday: Dutch Painting and the Realist Novel (both Princeton). Her work has appeared in leading publications such as the London Review of Books and The New York Review of Books.


PRAISE

"Beautifully illustrated. . . . [Vermeer’s Afterlives is] an authoritative, insightful work of art history."—Kirkus Reviews starred review

"[Ruth Bernard Yeazell] marshals rigorous analysis to show how the artists, filmmakers, writers, and critics who carried forward Vermeer’s “afterlives” have expanded, innovated, and sometimes transformed the meaning of his work. Serious admirers of the painter will want this on their bookshelves."—Publishers Weekly

"Beautifully illustrated. . . . [Vermeer’s Afterlives’s] clarity, fluidity, and accessibility are impressive. Particularly noteworthy is Yeazell’s considerable skill in interweaving Vermeer’s oeuvre with paintings by other artists, films, poetry, fiction, photography, and scientific work."—Amy Ione, Leonardo Reviews

"[Vermeer’s Afterlives] deepen[s] our understanding of this singular figure, whose scant oeuvre of some three dozen pictures has bequeathed a continually radiating light."—Kelly Presutti, Art in America

“Ruth Bernard Yeazell provides a revelatory new account of a fascinating and multifaceted subject: the reception of the seventeenth-century Dutch painter Vermeer from the period of his putative ‘rediscovery’ in the 1860s through to the present day. The book covers not only the nuances of scholarship on Vermeer, but also the responses of artists, filmmakers, poets, and novelists. Yeazell’s deft and imaginative treatment makes these varied responses come alive and shows why Vermeer’s art has proved so compelling to modern audiences.”—Elizabeth Prettejohn, author of Modern Painters, Old Masters: The Art of Imitation from the Pre-Raphaelites to the First World War

“The story of the rediscovery of Johannes Vermeer in the mid-nineteenth century, and the subsequent fascination with his art until the present day, is at the core of Ruth Bernard Yeazell’s engaging and important book. Yeazell explores the various ways Vermeer’s paintings, which seem so perfect in their colors, compositions, and subject matter and yet reach deep into the emotional core of human life, inspired the imagination of artists, novelists, poets, and filmmakers. Yeazell’s book is a compelling in-depth study of Vermeer’s long-lasting impact on popular culture and the various ways in which artists and writers appropriated his imagery in their own creative works.”—Arthur K. Wheelock Jr., author of Vermeer: The Complete Works

A LOOK INSIDE


Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Richard Estes

 

Richard Estes

Woods and Waters

July 3 – August 1, 2026

Dowling Walsh Gallery, Rockland, Maine 


Richard Estes (born 1932) is best known for his complex photo-realistic images of urban shop windows and their mind-eye confounding reflections. However, his work also attests to a well-traveled eye for distant places, including Mount Desert Island and Lake Champlain. While helping Alice Walton select artworks destined for the permanent collection of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas, she fell in love with one Este’s icy views of a massive, calving ice-shelf in Antarctica. Before the museum opened, we installed the painting just inside the front door of her rural Texas ranch house, greeting visitors with its chilling blast of frozen air—at once welcoming and disorienting—in much the same way as his better-known images of concatenated reflections distort and confuse and visually echo New York’s windowed storefronts.  

A contrarian by nature and trained on American realism at the Art Institute of Chicago—Eakins, Homer, Hopper, etc.—it is possible that Estes’s style developed out of healthy skepticism for the primacy of either realism or abstraction. Why not both? That is to say, his use of photography for paintings seems to suggest precise replication of photographic sources. His paintings, however, are not that.  Instead, Estes often combines views from multiple photographs and slightly shifted perspectives — combining both close-up and background spaces — that no human eye, nor the camera, is capable of clearly seeing at the same time in sharp focus.  

His landscapes, moreover, examine and celebrate the mostly uncelebrated, more intimate views of nature underfoot or from points of view largely determined by diminishing visual access—whether from the wake-racing deck of a tourist boat on Lake Champlain or a crowded mountain hiking trail on Mt. Cadillac in Acadia National Park. It has become nearly impossible to personally experience wilderness in America, perhaps another reason Estes paints with such close, detailed passion.

It is also no surprise that the pre-eminent art historian of 19th-century American painting, John Wilmerding, whose groundbreaking National Gallery of Art exhibition (Washington, D.C., 1980) devoted to American Luminism, which tellingly included the Maine paintings of Fitz Henry Lane and Frederic Church, among others, was a huge fan of Estes’s work. “Estes brings two consummate talents to his art,” Este’s Mount Desert neighbor, Wilmerding explains, “the ability to select out of the random chaos and imperfections of the world around him something worth looking at, and the rarified craftsmanship to transform that view into something cleansed and purified, orderly and even harmonious.[1] This phenomenological approach, and the artist’s 21st century adherence to perceptual dislocations, is revealed in these side-long, panoramic tourist-boat-framed and distant vistas and in Estes’s downward-looking views of the forest understory—broken, twisting limbs and winter’s dark leaf leavings. He gives us the numinous remains of summers’ past, never to be seen again. There is no 19th-century, romantic sublime here, these unfixed, near and far, vast and complex, “God-bothered,” lands.[2]

Christopher B. Crosman

Thomaston, Maine


[1] John Wilmerdign, Richard Estes, (New York, Rizzoli, 2006), 219

[2] Sebastian Smee describing the paintings of Frederic Church, “The Artist Who Made America Look Like a Promised Land,” The New Yorker, May 11 & 18, 20026 print edition.


Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Acadia Park II, 2020

Oil on masonite

12" x 24"



Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Acadia Park III, 2020

Oil on panel

12" x 24"



Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Acadia Park IV, 2020

Oil on masonite

12-3/4" x 18"



Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Lake Champlain VIIII, 1996

Oil on paper mounted on board

20" x 14-1/2"



Richard Estes (b. 1932)

The Coastline of Maine, 2006

Oil on board

13-7/8" x 19-1/2"



Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Beech Hill I, 2010

Oil on panel

22-3/4" x 15-1/2"




Richard Estes (b. 1932)

Acadia Park VII, 2020

Oil on panel

14" x 18"


Also


"Richard is a living icon of American painting. While trends and movements come and go, Richard has stayed true to his vision and singular approach to painting for more than 50 years." — Damien Hirst

 

This summer, Schoelkopf Gallery presents Richard Estes: My Camera Is My Sketchbook, offering a revealing look into the practice of one of the leading figures in photorealist art.

 

The exhibition will focus on scenes from New York City and Maine, locations where Estes has lived, worked, and found inspiration for many years. Notably, this exhibition will present photographs by Estes as standalone artworks for the first time in the artist's career. Estes has taken photographs as reference material for decades, but in this exhibition, he presents photographs as artworks unto themselves for the first time.

Monday, July 13, 2026

SOTHEBY’S LONDON OLD MASTERS & 19TH CENTURY PAINTINGS EVENING AUCTION



Rembrandt Harmenszoon van RijnLet The Little Children Come Unto MeEstimate: £8–12m 

Let The Little Children Come Unto Me - a rare and fascinating early history painting, executed by the young Rembrandt when he was in his early twenties, which provides an unparalleled insight into the practices and preoccupations that were to define his celebrated career. A highly ambitious ‘history’ painting, inspired by the biblical story in which Christ blesses children just as he blesses adults, the work is nonetheless particularly personal, bringing together not only a lively self-portrait of the young artist, but also depictions of familiar figures identified as his mother and father and other figures drawn from his close family circle who appear singly in other works. In no other image does Rembrandt bring his family together so completely. (See key below.) At the same time, recent restoration of the painting – involving the removal of confusing later additions to the original, unfinished image - has thrown crisp light onto Rembrandt’s working practice. For reasons we may never know, having worked up the figures and architectural elements in the upper part of the composition in great detail, Rembrandt ultimately left the foreground of the painting unfinished, offering an unusually transparent record of the artist’s method - particularly when it came to history paintings - of working from the back of a canvas towards the foreground. 



Hans Memling The Virgin Mary Nursing the Christ Child Estimate: £3-4m 

This roundel, small enough to be held in one hand, depicts an extraordinary moment of intimacy and maternal tenderness. Datable to 1485–90, it offers a porthole into the world of late fifteenth-century Bruges, its private devotional practices, associated art market, and - most significantly - the skill and artistic enterprise of Hans Memling, the leading painter in the city at the time. Works of this quality and age, well over five hundred years old, appear exceedingly rarely on the open market. A mere handful of paintings attributed to Memling’s workshop, and even fewer considered to be fully autograph, have been sold over the last half century. It is one of the last and finest devotional works by Memling to remain in private ownership. 


 Sir Edwin Landseer Scene in Braemar Estimate: £3-4m 

Monumental in scale and charged with the drama of the Scottish Highlands, Sir Edwin Landseer’s Scene in Braemar is the culmination of the artist's lifelong fascination with the Highland stag. The nearly nine-foot canvas has long been understood as a darker and more mysterious sister painting to The Monarch of the Glen - Landseer’s iconic image of the Highland stag, and one of the most recognisable symbols of British art. Widely admired as among “the best works of the artist” when it was first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1857, Scene in Braemar has remained one of the most celebrated compositions by Landseer, often dubbed the “King of animal painters”. The painting distills everything he loved about the untamed beauty of the Highlands. Unseen in public for over two decades, the painting represents the culmination of an idea that had occupied Landseer for more than thirty years. 


Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi, called Sandro Botticelli, and Associate The Virgin and Child with the young Saint John the Baptist Estimate: £2-3m 

This beautiful panel, never before seen in public, is one of only two known versions of The Madonna and Child with the infant Saint John the Baptist, sometimes known as the Madonna del Roseto ("Madonna of the Rose Garden") - long counted among Botticelli's most famous early compositions. For more than a century, the prime original has been understood to be the slightly larger panel in the Musée du Louvre, painted around 1468–69. But new technical research suggests that the present work is far more than a later echo: it may in fact have been created alongside the Louvre painting, in Botticelli's own studio, at the very same moment. First recorded as a Botticelli in the mid-nineteenth century, when it hung in the Livorno collection of Francesco de Larderel, Count of Montecerboli, the painting remained virtually unknown until 1946, when it was rediscovered by the great Italian art historian Roberto Longhi, who hailed it as "a very important addition to the early work of Botticelli". Though later scholarship quietly reassigned the panel to Botticelli's workshop, recent examination has revealed a fascinatingly intimate relationship between the two paintings, and significant changes made during the earliest stages of this work point to Botticelli's own hand shaping the composition as it evolved, offering a rare window onto the young artist at work and the close-knit world of the assistants and associates who painted alongside him in late 1460s Florence. 


Pieter Brueghel the Younger Village scene with peasants carousing and dancing around a maypole Estimate: £2.5 - 3.5 million 

Populated with a rich cast of characters and depicting one of the most popular feast days in the medieval calendar, the feast day of Saint George. Pieter Brueghel the Younger’s Maypole Dance, dating from the 1620s, is one of the best examples of Brueghel's independent compositions - and when last sold, nearly 30 years ago, set an auction record for the artist. While best known for replicating the now-lost inventions of his father, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Brueghel the Younger here demonstrates striking originality, developing a dynamic composition that both honours and extends the family tradition, while its vivid colour and observational wit - though partly indebted to his father’s compositional devices - are distinctly his own. Exceptionally well preserved, the panel may be considered the prime version of this composition, of which only a small group of fully autograph examples - no more than seven or nine - are known to survive. The painting stands as a work of considerable importance within Brueghel’s oeuvre, embodying both his inheritance and his individuality within the great dynasty of Netherlandish painting. 


Bernard Van Orley Virgin and Child Estimate: £1.5 - 2 million 

This exquisite and highly refined panel (c.1518) by Bernard van Orley, one of the most important painters and tapestry designers active in Brussels and Antwerp in the first half of the 16th century, is executed in the same year that Van Orley was engaged by Margaret of Austria, Regent of The Netherlands. The walls of her Royal Palace of Coudenberg in Brussels, which no longer stand, are seen through the open window. Beyond can be seen the Church of Sainte Gudule, very much as it appears today. The painting reflects the rarefied culture of her court. Though he never travelled to Italy, Van Orley emerges here as one of the earliest and most accomplished interpreters of Italian Renaissance ideals in Northern Europe. Conceived on an intimate scale as a portable aid to private devotion, the work rewards close inspection with its wealth of detail, from the beautifully rendered and legible prayer book to the rich furnishings that would have resonated with an elite, courtly audience. 


Paulus Pietersz. Potter Landscape with Animals and a Woman Milking a Cow Estimate: £2 - 3m 

Coming to the market for the first time in almost 140 years, this work was painted just one year after Paulus Potter’s most famous composition, the monumental The Young Bull, which recently returned to view at the Mauritshuis in The Hague following conservation. Created during the brief yet accomplished decade of the artist’s career, the picture exemplifies Potter’s distinctive vision of the Dutch countryside. Set at the hour of melkuur, when cattle are brought in for milking, the scene unfolds in the warm light of a summer afternoon, with low viewpoints and gently rising ground. Animated by resting livestock, a watchful cow, and the milkmaid in her vivid red coat anchoring the composition.