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First full image of ‘new’ Vermeer with uncovered Cupid released by Dresden museum

Drastically altered composition of Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window can now be seen in all its glory ahead of major exhibition

José da Silva
24 August 2021
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The newly restored Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window (around 1657-59) by Johannes Vermeer © Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, SKD, Photo: Wolfgang Kreische

The newly restored Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window (around 1657-59) by Johannes Vermeer © Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, SKD, Photo: Wolfgang Kreische

Art lovers get ready to be struck by Cupid’s arrow, as the first image of the completed restoration of Johannes Vermeer’s Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window (around 1657-59) has been released today by Dresden’s Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, fully revealing a hidden image of Cupid. The change to the composition in one of Vermeer’s most famous paintings is so great that the German museum is dubbing it a “new” Vermeer in publicity materials.

The painting has been in the museum’s collection for more than 250 years and the hidden Cupid had been known about since an x-ray in 1979 and infrared reflectography in 2009. It had been assumed that the artist himself had altered the composition by covering over the painting of Cupid.

Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window (around 1657-59) before its most recent restoration © Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, SKD, Photo: Wolfgang Kreische

But when a major restoration project began in May 2017, conservators discovered that the paint on the wall in the background of the painting, covering the naked Cupid, had in fact been added by another person. When layers of varnish from the 19th century began to be removed from the painting, the conservators discovered that the “solubility properties” of the paint in the central section of the wall were different to those elsewhere in the painting.

Following further investigations, including tests in an archaeometry laboratory, it was discovered that layers of binding agent and a layer of dirt existed between the image of Cupid and the overpainting. The conservators concluded that several decades would have passed between the completion of one layer and the addition of the next and therefore concluded that Vermeer could not have painted over the Cupid himself.

The partially restored Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window photographed during its restoration © Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, SKD, Photo: Wolfgang Kreische

When the discovery was announced to the public in 2019, the senior conservator Uta Neidhardt said that it was “the most sensational experience of my career”. She added: “It makes it a different painting.”

The layer of overpaint was meticulously removed using a scalpel under a microscope, revealing the startlingly altered composition. The painting will go on show next month for the first time since the restoration as the star piece in a major exhibition titled Johannes Vermeer: On Reflection (10 September-2 January 2022) at the Gemäldegalerie in Dresden. The exhibition will include ten Vermeer paintings in total, making it one of the most significant shows on the Dutch Old Master in recent years (there are only around 35 extent Vermeer paintings).

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Among the standout loans in the show are The Geographer (1669) from the Städel Museum in Frankfurt; View of Houses in Delft/The Little Street (around 1658) from the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam; and A Young Woman standing at a Virginal (around 1670-72) from the National Gallery in London, which has a similar painting of Cupid in the background.

• Listen to the story behind the revealing of Vermeer's Cupid on The Week in Art podcast here

Johannes VermeerDutch artOld MastersDresdenGemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden
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7 May 2019

Hidden Cupid resurfaces in one of Vermeer’s best-known works after two and a half centuries

Laboratory tests revealed "sensational" discovery that the figure in Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window was overpainted decades after the artist’s death

Catherine Hickley
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