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<h3 class="panel-title">Young Woman with a Water Pitcher</h3>
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<h4>Young Woman with a Water Pitcher</h4>
<p>In the early and mid 1660s, Vermeer painted a group of closely related work which the art historian Lawrence Gowing called the "pearl pictures" in honor of their exquisite facture and for the fact that each work features a pearl necklace. In these compositions the artist made a decisive move away from the cubical interior spaces, which he and De Hooch had brought to near formal perfection.</p>
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<h4>Girl With A Pearl Earring</h4>
<p>The painting is a tronie, the Dutch 17th-century description of a 'head' that was not meant to be a portrait. It depicts a European girl wearing an exotic dress, an oriental turban, and an improbably large pearl earring. In 2014, Dutch astrophysicist Vincent Icke raised doubts about the material of the earring and argued that it looks more like polished tin than pearl on the grounds of the specular reflection, the pear shape and the large size of the earring.</p>
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<h3 class="panel-title">The Milkmaid</h3>
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<h4>The Milkmaid</h4>
<p>The Milkmaid (Dutch: De Melkmeid or Het Melkmeisje), sometimes called The Kitchen Maid, is an oil-on-canvas painting of a "milkmaid", in fact a domestic kitchen maid, by the Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer. It is now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, which regards it as "unquestionably one of the museum's finest attractions".</p>
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<h4>Woman Holding A Balance</h4>
<p>At one time the painting, completed 1662–1663, was known as Woman Weighing Gold, but closer evaluation has determined that the balance in her hand is empty. Opinions on the theme and symbolism of the painting differ, with the woman alternatively viewed as a symbol of holiness or earthliness.</p>
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