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This is all of it on wnyc. I'm Alison Stewart. Hey. Coming up on the show this week, we'll have live music from harp player Ashley Jackson as well as the Americana musician Hiss Golden Messenger. We'll also talk about a new play, Ken Rex, a one man show about a murder in a small town in which its star plays 35 different characters. It is a wild show.
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And as part of Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, we'll have an hour of AAPI debut authors. That's happening later in the week. Now let's keep things going with Full Bio. Full Bio is our book series where we spend time with the author of a deeply researched biography to get a fuller understanding of the subject. Our guest is the author of the book Vermeer A Life Lost and Found Andrew Graham Nixon. Vermeer is a Dutch master whose paintings like the Girl with the Pearl Earring and View of Delft are known for the use of light and shadow as well as technique and and for their beauty. They can be seen at the Louvre, the Met and the Rijksmuseum in his homeland of the Netherlands. There is very little written about Vermeer himself. No letters, no diaries. So Andrew Graham Nixon researched Vermeer's life by using family wills and papers, maps, religious affiliation and the world around him. As Graham noted, Vermeer only lived to be 43 years old, dying in 1675. And during 16 of those lived years, there was war in the Dutch Netherlands. Get in today's discussion involving European conflict, his family lineage and the influences on his life. Here's my full bio conversation with Andrew Graham Nixon, the author of Vermeer A Life Lost and Found. Vermeer was rediscovered in the mid-19th century. By whom and under what condition was he rediscovered?
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Well, Vermeer vanished from history not long after he died, partly because he was so little known during his own lifetime that he was an easy man to forget. And although his paintings were so beautiful that nobody who had one would ever destroy it or lose it. So they survived. But they didn't survive as being by him. They survived as being by Pieter de Hooch or Franz van Mieris or whoever. The dealer felt he could sell the painting as being by, in one case, the famous Dresden lady reading a letter at an open window. The dealer actually painted out the background to make it look more like a Rembrandt and passed it off as that. So he had completely vanished by the mid 19th century. And it was at that time that a great French chap called Theophile Torre, so revolutionary, who was exiled from France because of his part in the 1848 revolutions, he ended up in Belgium, which is every Frenchman's idea of purgatory. And he wiled his time away by rediscovering Vermeer. And by the time he'd finished, he had more or less reset the shattered bones of Vermeer and re established him as an actual artist. Although he said in the same breath as rediscovering him, that he remained an extraordinary mystery. Why had he disappeared? Why did we know nothing about him? Torre called him the Sphinx of Delft.
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Let's talk about a few facts.
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How many paintings are we aware of by Vermeer that exist now?
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Well, I'm not a great one for statistics, but, you know, 30 and a bit, let's put it that way. There's some dispute about one or two pictures, but let's say 36, 38, something like that.
D
Do you think there are others out there?
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Well, I know that there's at least one out there, or at least, I hope it is because it was stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. So I really hope that one's out there and there's another one. If anybody's sort of trawling the auction catalogues and looking out for things. There's a painting that was auctioned in 1696 as a Vermeer, which was a Vermeer, of a man washing his hands in a see through room full of sculpture. Where is that? And there's also a painting of a single house in Delft, which I think is the rest of the house that we see the right hand part of in the famous picture the Little Street. So there are some pictures to look out for, but we don't know where they are.
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We're talking to Andrew Graham Dixon. He's the author of A Life Lost and Found. It's our choice for full bio, considering there are minimal accounts of his life. How did you go about writing this book?
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Well, I took the approach of trying to reconstruct, as it were, his networks, to try and find out as much as I could about the people who commissioned his pictures. There were very few of them. The people whom he knew about his family, his mother, his father, his sister, and to piece together as much as I could about him from his proximity to those people. We've got very few documents that have a direct bearing on Vermeer's life, but I found that in reconstructing these networks, suddenly a whole new vista opened up and a whole new Vermeer emerged as a result.
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One of the ways you look at Vermeer in this book is to get to know the people who are around him and the world around him and the world he inhabited and the world that he inherited. In fact, the first book, the first part of your book is called the inheritance 1560-1632, 1632 being the year that Vermeer was born. And you write about the history between Spain and the Dutch Netherlands. First of all, why did Spain want to control the Dutch Netherlands?
E
Well, why does Vladimir Putin want to control Ukraine? People who are very powerful and have empires tend not to want to let go of part of their empire. And the Spanish had lost the confidence of their subjects in the Low Countries because the Protestant idea had spread to those parts. And the people who lived there, very many of them, wanted no longer to be Catholics. And the King of Spain said, well, that's not up to you, I'm afraid. If you're not going to be Catholics, I'm going to have you executed. And he tried to impose his will on them. And that resulted in a revolt, a revolution, and they ceded from Spain. And that was the. The cause of the war, was that they wanted independence, they wanted freedom, and the Spanish wanted to control them and to control their belie. If the Spanish had been prepared to say, fine, if you want to be Protestant, stay Protestant. Just remain within us, you know, remain part of our team, the Dutch, and, you know, the. All of the people in Flanders and Brabant and so on, who were. Who were rebelling and who eventually formed their republic in the watery land of Holland and further north, you know, they might never have done that.
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What did you want us, the reader, to understand about the violence during this time?
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Well, to me, you know, if you walk into a lot of museums that contain great collections of Dutch art, it's quite rare to find any of those museums that will give you an explanation of the sheer stress, trauma, death, destruction, suffering, martyrdom that went into the creation of the Dutch Republic. And if you don't understand that the Golden Age was really also an age of blood, an age of steel, an age of gunpowder and dynamite and siege warfare and women and children being massacred in their homes, that's what the Dutch Republic was shaped out of, then I don't think you can remotely begin to understand the charge of meaning that Vermeer gave. For example, Vermeer gave to his wonderful depictions of domestic peace and tranquility. What he's painting for a people who've lived through all that is a kind of heaven on earth. And if you don't know what they've lived through, you just can't get that.
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I was curious. How is Vermeer tied to the horrible atrocities that occurred during this time?
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Well, partly by blood. His maternal grandfather, who's a man called Balthasar, rather a character, but very much in Vermeer's past. Balthasar was three years old when one of the very worst atrocities of the Dutch revolt, namely the sacking and the looting of the great city of Antwerp by mutinous Spanish soldiers who hadn't been paid for years on end. The. They went into the richest city in Europe and they laid waste to it, killed nobody knows how many people exactly, but something like 8,000 people were killed. Many women were violated, innocent children died. It was a truly awful, awful thing. And Balthasar was there. He was brought up in Antwerp. He was three years old when it happened. So his daughter Digna, you know, like so many Dutch people, they are refugees from the southern Netherlands. It's a refugee state. When they settle in the Dutch Republic, and they tell their children, like Vermeer, the stories of where they came from and what happened and how it is that they came to be living there. They would, of course, have told them the great tales, the atrocities and so on. I mean, even the inn, the name of the inn, the publishers, which Vermeer's father ran, the second. His second inn, the larger one, it was called Mechlin. He bought it under that name. He didn't name it. That inn was named by people who came from Mechlin, which was a city that had been entirely decimated by, you know, Spanish invaders that killed most of the people there. So Vermeer essentially lived in a. Lived in a kind of. Well, I suppose you could call it a kind of Holocaust memorial by name. I mean, it was still a tavern. People drank there, and I'm sure there was lots of laughter. But the name itself, you know, this whole Dutch Republic was carried, these scars, these memories. To me, thinking about the Dutch Republic and not knowing about what happened before is rather like trying to understand 1950s Germany, say, if you don't know about the terrible things that happened in the 1940s.
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We're discussing Vermeer, A Life Lost and Found. It's by Andrew Graham Dixon. It's our choice for full bio. Vermeer's parents, Digna and Rainier, born in 1595. Rainier, born in 1591. First of all, let's start with Digna. You spoke of her earlier. What kind of family did she come from?
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Oh, quite a characterful family, I think. Her father, Balthazar was. We know quite a lot about him thanks to a brilliant American archival researcher called John Michael Montias, who did a huge amount of fantastically effective work in the archives about Vermeer's family back in the 1980s. And he discovered that Balthasar had been involved in an infamous counterfeiting plot to forge millions of pounds worth of, or millions of dollars worth in modern currency of false coins so that a particular debt could be paid. Adolph seems to have involved national security. I mean, it's all very skullduggery. I don't go into it in huge detail because I have enough, as it were, extraneous material to go through. But we know that he was quite a character and that he wanted the best for his daughter. He left Antwerp and tried to make a new life in Amsterdam. And that's where Dichner met Reinier Vermeer's father. But the circumstances in which they met are very interesting. And this is one of the key parts of the book. Because what I discovered in my researches is that both Dichna and Giniya are clearly part of a very radical, fascinating religious movement called Remonstrantism, or Arminianism, the adherents of which are wonderful people. They're very, very Christian in a, you know, kind of very straightforward way. They're charitable, they're kind. They would never, you know, they're people who believe that you should love thine enemy as well as love thy neighbor. They're, you know, they're. They're extremely moral and they are great pacifists in this age of war. So that meeting between Reinier and Dichner is very much at the core of my book. In fact, I should confess that I wrote a version of the first hundred pages of my book before I discovered that they were part of that religious movement and had to throw the whole thing away. It was a year and a half of wasted effort. In this book, I talked about the Dutch having scars. Well, I've got a few scars myself.
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What kind of family did Rainier come from?
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Rainier, like so many Dutch refugees, sorry, or immigrants refugees from Antwerp and places like that. He wasn't from Antwerp, but he was from Flanders. They were in the cloth trade because there's this great tradition, as I'm sure you know, of cloth and tapestry making and, you know, that being one of the great sort of sources of wealth in Flanders and Brabant. And so Vermeer's dad was a tailor. Sorry, Vermeer's grandfather was a tailor. And Reynia, his father, the son of the tailor, was trained up in Amsterdam. That's why he was there. He was learning to make a very luxury kind of damask fabric called kaffir, and he trained to do that. But he seems not to have really taken to it because by the time he's in his late 20s, he started innkeeping. And that seems to have been the job that really suited him.
D
When they married in 1615, as you said, they were part of the Remonstrant movement. What did it mean to be a member of the Remonstrant movement? What did that mean for the daily life of the person involved in it?
E
Well, at that time, it meant a great deal of difficulty because, you know, as often happens when peacemaking groups come into being and make their desire for peace known, they are quite often branded as terrible troublemakers. And because the Remonstrance came from within the established Dutch Orthodox Reformed Church, the Calvinist Church of the Dutch Republic, they protested. They remonstrated against some of the doctrines of that church, including predestination, a doctrine they hated because they said it condemned unborn children to go to hell, or children who'd been stillborn condemned to go to hell. They didn't like the orthodox Calvinist determination to continue fighting Spain at all costs and not make peace or not even countenance the idea of peace. So they had bones of contention, and they hoped that they could live and let live and their voices would simply be heard and that perhaps the Calvinists would perhaps slightly soften their approach. But instead of which, they were absolutely crushed. There was a coup d'. Etat. The Calvinists got together with the leading Prince of Orange and they took over the country. And all the Remonstrants were told, you either go into exile or you convert, but you can't be a Remonstrant and live here. So they went underground. And we know that Vermeer's father and mother and their family priest, who was a very radical Remonstrant, who was part of an even more radical pacifist and, for want of a better word, feminist fundamentalist Christian group called the Collegiates, which sprang from the same roots as the Ramas were. They all lived underground, and they had to, as it were, not tell anybody, you know, what they were doing.
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We're talking to Andrew Graham Dixon. He's the author of Vermeer A Life Lost and Found. It's our choice. For full bio, let's get into the name Vermeer, how they ended up with the last name Vermeer, because we've been calling them Digna and Rainier. I want you to explain how they became Digna and Rainier Vermeer.
E
Well, surnames were not that commonly adopted in the Dutch Republic, and that's one of the reasons that it's hard to find people. But they begin to take established surnames at this point. And in fact, I mean, it's a bit of a long story, but Rainier initially doesn't take the name of Vermeer. He takes the name De Vos, which means fox, and his first name also means fox. So he's called Mr. Fox Fox, if you like.
B
And they ran a business called the Flying Fox on top of it.
E
Yes, his tavern was called the Flying Fox. He's not just any fox. He's Aesop's. Well, he's like Aesop's Fox who wants to reach the grapes that he can't reach and sort of is unhappy about it. But he's a kind of fox with superpowers because he can fly. And get the grapes. Anyway. It's probably also a way of saying that, you know, come and drink in my tavern, because the grapes here aren't sour at all. Not like the grapes complained about by the fox who had no wings. So it's. Yes, it's all. I mean, they, they, they like these kinds of jokes, the Dutch, they still do. And I'm sure he had a wonderful sign that he himself painted of a flying fox. And the. In the inn itself was full of painters, because he liked painters. He had many friends who were painters. And in fact his notary was an art collector. So he had lots of connections with the art trade. The pub was only two doors down from the Guild of St. Luke, which is the Guild of the Artists, the painters, the pottery makers, the tile makers. Anybody who makes anything creatively is a member of the Guild of St. Luke. So he's, he's not, he's not an artist, but he's an art dealer. And there's also, there's an artist's. There's a drawings school for young budding draftsmen in the same street. So Vermeer, as a child, he sees artists on all sides. He probably sits at the tavern table watching artists draw. I imagine he grows up surrounded by art. His father even has a sort of secondary business. He's an art dealer. The tavern is full of pictures.
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So the Vermeers ran the Flying Fox, they ran the Mechlin Inn, which you mentioned earlier. Until Rainier's death. It became very clear in his parents will when Vermeer, I think he was five, I think he wrote that he was going to be left enough money to become educated and taught a trade. And I thought it was very interesting about the way it was worded. Can you explain why it was worded the way it was?
E
It was fairly straightforward. It just indicates that they both agreed that whatever happened to either of them, the one who survived would have to be obliged to put some money away to make sure that he got an education. I mean, it suggests they had a certain definite ambition for this boy. And it's interesting that he's called Johannes, not Jan. Everybody in the family who was a man going back generations is called Jan, which is a really working class Netherlandish name. Whereas they want him to have. It's more the name of an erudite churchman. In fact, it is the first name of their remonstrant radical preacher who's clearly very close to the family. He's a man called Johannes Taurinus. And I rather suspect that Johannes Vermeer is named after this troublesome priest, as the Calvinists would regard him.
B
You said that he likely grew up around painters. What did painters do in that day? What was the role of a painter?
E
Well, in terms of. That's a. Well, it's a very broad question. But what they didn't tend to do in the largely Protestant countries of the Dutch cities, of the Dutch Republic, they didn't paint very many explicitly religious pictures. They didn't paint for the church. Not much. Not much at all. The churches had been whitewashed and images had been proscribed. Most Protestants, even Remonstrants, regarded religious imagery as something they didn't want. They could have paintings that had religious meanings, but they didn't want to see Jesus Christ or Mary, mother of God, on the wall of their house or their church because they regarded that as idolatrous. So in the absence of that kind of church commission, what you had was quite a lot of secular painting. So you had paintings of, for example, kermess scenes, peasants getting drunk, paintings to make you laugh. You had paintings of Dutch landscape which might perhaps express pride in your country. These pictures could have many different meanings. Paintings of flowers, paintings of fish, paintings of meat and cheese, quite a lot of secular painting. And that's what Vermeer's paintings have always been taken to be part of, but they're not.
D
That was Andrew Graham Dixon, the author of Vermeer A Life Lost and Found. Tomorrow on full bio, we'll hear about Vermeer's compromise with his rich mother in law and the patrons who allowed him to complete most of the works of art.
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Air date: May 4, 2026
Guest: Andrew Graham Dixon, author of Vermeer: A Life Lost and Found
In this episode of "Full Bio," Alison Stewart is joined by acclaimed art historian and biographer Andrew Graham Dixon to explore the life and enigmatic legacy of Dutch master painter Johannes Vermeer. With almost no direct historical records left behind—no letters, diaries, or first-hand accounts—Graham Dixon reconstructs Vermeer's world, drawing on family histories, social context, and political upheaval. The discussion reveals Vermeer as not only an artist of peerless technical finesse but a man deeply stamped by war, faith, and the tumultuous world of 17th-century Netherlands.
Historical Context: The Dutch Revolt
Violence and its Imprint on Vermeer
Vermeer’s Maternal Grandfather: A Survivor
Ongoing Trauma
Through detailed research and storytelling, Andrew Graham Dixon offers listeners a vivid reconstruction of Johannes Vermeer’s world. Rather than the mysterious figure known only through art, Vermeer emerges as an artist deeply marked by the scars of war, the struggles of faith, and a family legacy intertwined with the trauma and resilience of the Dutch Republic. The episode challenges us to look beyond the tranquil surfaces of his canvas and see the history, suffering, and hope within.