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                                Tim's Vermeer

Bunny and I watched “Tim's Vermeer [1].”

In the documentary, Tim Jenison, wanted to paint a Vermeer [2], and he
decided upon The Music Lesson [3]. Now Tim is an engineer, an inventor and
computer programmer. He is not an artist, and most certainly not a painter.

And he didn't just copy from the The Music Lesson painting. No, he recreated
the entire room as it appears in the painting. He then mixed his own paints
by hand—and by hand I mean “ground up the constiuent compounds and oils that
made up paints in the 17^th century.”

He then went on to grind his own lenses and mirrors, all to test a theory
that Vermeer might have used some mechanical means of painting near-
photorealistic paintings in the 17^th century [4].

The results were spectacular [5]! Tim, a non-artist, making a painting that
rivals Vermeer himself.

It's worth watching to see the techique in action (the painting itself took
about three to four months to do) and for the subtle visual clues that were
found to exist in actual Vermeer paintings that show Vermeer might have used
such a method.

[1] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3089388/
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Vermeer
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Music_Lesson#mediaviewer/File:Jan_Vermeer_van_Delft_014.jpg
[4] http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/11/vermeer-secret-tool-mirrors-lenses
[5] http://www.vanityfair.com/dam/2013/11/vermeer-the-music-lesson-method-02.jpg

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