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The Lacemaker is a painting by the Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675), completed around 1669–1670 and held in the Louvre, Paris.The work shows a young woman wearing a yellow bodice, holding up a pair of bobbins in her left hand as she carefully places a pin in the pillow on which she is making her bobbin lace.
The Lacemaker (French: La Dentellière) is a 1977 French drama film directed by Claude Goretta and starring Isabelle Huppert and Yves Beneyton. [1] It is based on the 1974 Prix Goncourt winning novel La Dentellière by Pascal Lainé .
The Lace Maker; Artist: Caspar Netscher : Year: 1662: Medium: oil paint, canvas: Dimensions: 33 cm (13 in) × 27 cm (11 in) Location: Wallace Collection: Owner: Julie Amelie Charlotte Castelnau, Francis Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of Hertford, Johan Pompe van Meerdervoort
The Lacemaker: 1669/70 Oil on canvas, 24.5 × 21 cm Louvre, Paris: The Love Letter: 1669/70 Oil on canvas, 44 × 38.5 cm Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam: A Young Woman Seated at the Virginals [9] c. 1670 [3] Oil on canvas, 25.2 × 20 cm Leiden Collection, United States Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid: 1670 Oil on canvas, 71.1 × 58.4 cm
The woman is looking at the viewer and on her lap is a lace pillow for bobbin lace.. This is one of the Metsu paintings with the longest provenance in any collection today, first recorded in 1722.
The Lacemaker, a 1977 French drama film. The Lacemaker (Maes), a circa 1650 painting by Nicolaes Maes. The Lacemaker (Vermeer), a circa 1670 painting by Johannes Vermeer. The Lacemaker (after Vermeer), a 1955 copy of Vermeer's work made by Salvador Dalí. Lacemaker (Portrait of Štefka Batič), a 1923 work by Slovenian painter Veno Pilon
The Lacemaker is an oil on canvas painting by the Dutch painter Nicolaes Maes, created c. 1656. It is an example of Dutch Golden Age painting and is part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art , in New York .
La Dentellière ("The Lacemaker"), is a French novel by Pascal Lainé. It was awarded the Prix Goncourt (France's most prestigious literary award) in 1974. It was made into a film with Isabelle Huppert in 1977 (directed by Claude Goretta). It was translated into English by George Crowther in 1976 as A Web of Lace and in 2006 by David Dugan.