The seated young woman looks up from her exchange with the man standing over her as if the viewer of the painting has interrupted them. The man, meanwhile, remains engrossed in whatever it is they have been doing, both figures with their hands on a sheet of paper, perhaps musical notation like the sheet visible on the table; or is it, perhaps, a letter?
This kind of intriguing narrative is characteristic of Vermeer’s genre scenes. Music-making in seventeenth-century Dutch culture was associated with courtship, and this connection is seemingly reinforced in this picture by the painting of Cupid hanging on the shadowed wall behind the couple. On the table is what appears to be a cittern, a plucked string instrument, and a delicately painted glass of red wine. The silver lid of the blue and white ceramic ewer glints in the light streaming in from the window. The ewer has been identified by some scholars as a piece of Chinese porcelain (modified with a European-style silver lid) and by others as a piece of Delftware—that is, the ceramic craft produced in Vermeer’s Delft in direct imitation of the Chinese porcelains that had been imported into Europe for centuries. Vermeer imbues the scene with his characteristic luminosity and carefully observed details, like the lion heads carved on the chair by the window, their manes partially illuminated by the light.
Girl Interrupted at Her Music
Music-making, a recurring subject in Vermeer’s interior scenes, was associated in the seventeenth century with courtship. In this painting of a duet or music lesson momentarily interrupted, the amorous theme is reinforced by the picture of Cupid with raised left arm dimly visible in the background; the motif is derived from a popular book on emblems of love published in 1608 and symbolizes fidelity to a single lover.
Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996.
Pieter de Smeth-van Alphen sale, August 1, 1810, Amsterdam, Lot 57, sold for 610 florins to de Vries. Henry Croese sale, September 18, 1811, Amsterdam, Lot 45, sold for 399 florins to C.S. Roos. His sale, August 28, 1820, Amsterdam, Lot 64, sold for 330 florins to Brondgeest. Samuel Woodburn sale, June 25, 1853, London, Lot 128, sold to Francis Gibson, Saffron Walden, who died in 1858. Mrs. Lewis Fry (Francis Gibson’s daughter), Clifton. Lawrie and Co. Knoedler. Frick, 1901.
Source: Paintings in The Frick Collection: American, British, Dutch, Flemish and German. Volume I. New York: The Frick Collection, 1968.