This tiny reproduction of Girl With a Pearl Earring is “painted” with light

Scientists have fabricated tiny “nanopillars” capable of transmitting specific colors of light, at specific intensities, which hold promise for improved optical communication and anti-counterfeit measures for currency. For proof of concept, they decided to digitally reproduce Dutch master Johannes Vermeer’s famous painting Girl With a Pearl Earring—just painted in light instead of pigment. They discussed their work in a recent paper published in the journal Optica.

“The quality of the reproduction, capturing the subtle color gradations and shadow details, is simply remarkable,” said co-author Amit Agrawal, a researcher with the National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST). “This work quite elegantly bridges the fields of art and nanotechnology.”

Nature abounds with examples of structural color. The bright colors in butterfly wings don’t come from any pigment molecules but from how the wings are structured, for instance. The scales of chitin (a polysaccharide common to insects) are arranged like roof tiles. Essentially, they form a diffraction grating, except photonic crystals only produce certain colors, or wavelengths, of light while a diffraction grating will produce the entire spectrum, much like a prism 

Scientists have sought to mimic nature with nanofabrication techniques capable of generating structural colors, just by tweaking the dimensions of nanostructures. However, the brightness of the colors such “metasurfaces” generate is fixed; they don’t allow for tuning the brightness to achieve the complex interplay of light and shadow known in the art world as “chiaroscuro.”

Nanopillars are a type of nanostructure with a unique shape, tapering from a bottom pillar into a pointed top. Group them into arrays and they are an excellent means of capturing light (up to 99 percent) with less material—making them a promising alternative for manufacturing solar panels. They can also be used to create antibacterial surfaces, much like the tiny, similarly shaped rods in a cicada’s wings can kill bacteria by rupturing their cell membranes.

Nanopillars can also be used to generate structural colors. For instance, scientists have previously illuminated nanopillar arrays with white light to produce specific colors (red, blue, and green light), simply by varying the sizes (widths) of the nanopillars. However, the authors note that while those arrays can produce vibrant colors, the brightness (or intensity) of the generated colors is fixed and cannot be “tuned.” Shifting levels of brightness are key to reproducing the chiaroscuro of an image. “By tuning the brightness of a color, the generated shadow rendering effect can make an image appear with a stronger space and stereo perception,” the authors wrote.

It’s possible to add liquid crystals and electrochromic polymers to metasurface arrays to control that brightness, but that control does not extend across the full visible spectral range. And the complicated electronic architectures required make it difficult to adapt such metasurfaces for practical applications.

The NIST team’s nanopillars address many of those issues, most notably the question of tunability. The team fabricated titanium dioxide nanopillars on glass slides, using an elliptical cross-section rather than a circular one so that the diameter wasn’t uniform but had a longer axis and shorter axis. By changing the alignment of the long axis with the polarization of incoming white light and pairing that with a special polarizing filter on the back of the glass slide, the team was able to tailor the intensity of the light transmitted by the nanopillars.

In principle, it works in much the same way as polarized sunglasses. The greater the rotation angle of the polarization, the greater the intensity of the transmitted light. By this means, the scientists were able to control both color and brightness across the visible spectrum of color.

Vermeer is a noted master of light and shadow, and his paintings are rich in chiaroscuro. So Girl With a Pearl Earring was a natural choice when the NIST team sought a good test candidate to see if their technique could digitally reproduce the painting with light. First, they made a digital copy of the painting, just 1 millimeter in length, and then used that information to design a matrix made up of millions of nanopillars. Groups of five nanopillars (one red, two green, two blue), oriented at the desired angles, formed pixels of the Vermeer. Finally, they shined white light through the matrix to produce a millimeter-sized reproduction of the original.

The results proved quite impressive, even capturing some of the texture of oil on canvas. “It can be observed that the girl wears a blue turban and gold jacket with a white collar underneath, which presents ultra-smooth brightness transitions, and the darker peripheral sides blend seamlessly with the black background,” the authors wrote. “The smooth color hue and brightness transitions allow the image to present an oil painting-like texture, elegantly bridging the gap between scientific results and art.”

These nanopillar metasurfaces could be used to add specific wavelengths of light in an optical fiber, the better to control the amount of information that fiber can carry. It could also be possible to use the technique to paint paper currency with complex colors that would be difficult to forge.

DOI: Optica, 2020. 


2019 Summer Appeal

Dear Friend,

On behalf of the Board of Directors of the American Friends of the Mauritshuis, I am delighted to share some news about recent developments at the museum and some exciting upcoming projects. At the same time, we hope that you will take a moment to renew your membership in the American Friends of the Mauritshuis and help spread the word about our mission and impact!

The Mauritshuis had a busy and productive 2018, punctuated by special events that captured the public imagination. The museum presented several innovative projects, from the conservation of the Girl with a Pearl Earring, accomplished in full public view, to the launch of “Meet Vermeer,” an Augmented Reality app created in collaboration with Google Arts & Culture and twenty-six other collections. It was also an exceptional year for acquisitions, with seven additions to the collection. And the Mauritshuis presented three exhibitions in 2018, including the critically acclaimed Jan Steen’s Histories, to which the American Friends made a significant contribution. We are off to another strong in 2019 – with attendance up significantly over last year, partly thanks to a special Rembrandt exhibition. I hope you’ve been able to follow along in the Mauritshuis in Focus. By the way, translations in the magazine are also made possible by our American Friends.

This year the American Friends also provided essential support for the Fulbright-American Friends of the Mauritshuis Grant. Kathryn (Kat) Harada is thrilled to be the 2018-2019 American Friends of the Mauritshuis/Fulbright Fellow in Paintings Conservation at the Mauritshuis. Kat graduated from Smith College in 2008 with a BA in Art History and Italian and earned an M.A. and a Certificate of Advanced Study in Art Conservation from SUNY Buffalo State College in 2017. She worked as a pre-program conservation intern at Shangri La, Doris Duke’s former residence in Honolulu before pursuing her studies in Buffalo. During her graduate training, she focused on the research and treatment of Old Master to 19th century painting and held internships at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and the National Gallery of Art. Kat came to The Hague from Los Angeles, where she was completing a post graduate internship year at the J. Paul Getty Museum. Her main project at the Mauritshuis is the restoration and research of two pendant portraits by Nicolaes Maes, which will be exhibited in the permanent collection at the same time as the museum presents a Maes exhibition this Fall. The American Friends play a vital role in this Fulbright fellowship grant, enabling the next generation of conservators to develop in their profession.

Cornelis de Heem, Fruit Still Life, c. 1670 (inv. nr. 50, detail)

We are now seeking support for a very special exhibition, which will bring our organizations even closer together. The museum plans to organize a show during the summer of 2020 about conservation: why, how and when are paintings treated? The conservation studio, under the eaves of the Mauritshuis, is not open to the public, but this exhibition will let visitors in on the “secret,” and elucidate the often dramatic transformation that the paintings undergo during treatment. One of the paintings to go on display is a still life by Cornelis de Heem, which was treated by the first Fulbright-American Friends of the Mauritshuis Fellow, Ellen Nigro. Another story in the show is about the very special frame, made possible by the American Friends, for Rembrandt’s Susanna. Exhibitions such as this, even ones that draw largely on the museum’s own collection, are expensive to organize, especially to the very high standard that the Mauritshuis has set. Our target is to raise $25,000, which will go a long way to enabling us to realize this special project. We understand that you must have many interests and obligations, but hope that you will consider offering additional support to make possible this “behind-the-scenes” view of the art of conservation.

Rembrandt van Rijn, Susanna, 1636 (inv. nr. 147, detail)

In the meantime, we hope that we can count on you to renew your membership with the American Friends of the Mauritshuis. All contributions are fully tax deductible, in keeping with the IRS guidelines for accredited 501(c)(3) organizations in the United States.

Please note our address has changed to: 1E 53rd Street, 8th floor, New York, NY 10022.

On behalf of the members of the Board of the American Friends of the Mauritshuis, thank you again for your steadfast partnership as we continue to provide support for and create even greater awareness of the Mauritshuis in the United States. I think we all agree that it is a very special museum and one that not only deserves to be better known, but also one that is more than worthy of our ongoing support.

With gratitude and friendship,

Monica Sadler

President

2018 Fall Appeal

Dear Members,

On behalf of the Board of Directors of the American Friends of the Mauritshuis, I welcome this opportunity to share with you our progress over the past year. We are deeply grateful for your valuable friendship and commitment to joining our efforts in promoting and supporting this artistic jewel of The Netherlands.

As you may remember, we entered into a collaboration with the prestigious Fulbright Program in 2016. We have been making great progress this past year in raising funds for a dedicated endowment in support of this important fellowship program. Thanks to some of our most loyal donors, we are now more than half way toward our goal of raising $500,000 which will support the continuance of the fellowship for years to come. We hope we can count on your ongoing support, and if you would like to make an extra tax-exempt donation to our Fulbright Program as the year prepares to draw to a close, please reach out to me directly at monasadler at aol.com.

You will be delighted to know that the Mauritshuis has enjoyed another successful year. With the recent opening of a new exhibition, National Trust – Dutch Masters from British Country Houses, twenty-two paintings from twelve National Trust houses are now on view. Never before has such a large group of Dutch paintings owned by the National Trust traveled outside the United Kingdom. If your travels during the holidays bring you to or near The Hague, please don’t miss this spectacularly-designed exhibition which will be on view until January 6, 2019.

The New Year 2019 marks the 350th anniversary of Rembrandt van Rijn’s death. This specially-designated “Rembrandt Year” will be marked by special events and exhibitions honoring this pre-eminent Dutch Master throughout the Netherlands. The Mauritshuis has one of the world’s most renowned collections of paintings by Rembrandt and will exhibit all of the paintings that are part of the permanent collection attributed to Rembrandt. Next October, the Mauritshuis will also present the first-ever retrospective of paintings by Nicolaes Maes – considered Rembrandt’s most talented pupil. The exhibition will include a very special painting by Rembrandt, The Sacred Family, which will be on loan from the legendary Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia. This work not only makes clear the very special connection between Maes and Rembrandt, but it has special relevance in this Rembrandt Year.

Our new Fulbright Fellow Kathryn Harada will be contributing to this project by researching and conserving two portraits by Maes from the Mauritshuis’s permanent collection.

 

17 October 2019 – 19 January 2020 – The Mauritshuis presents an exhibition on Nicolaes Maes, one of Rembrandt’s most talented pupils, in the autumn of 2019. This is the first retrospective exhibition of this painter from Dordrecht. Maes started his career painting biblical representations, which clearly show his master´s influence. In subsequent years he painted intimate domestic scenes, which usually focussed on women engaged in household chores. Beginning in the 1660s, Maes developed an elegant style of portraiture that was popular with his clients in Dordrecht and Amsterdam. Featuring over thirty paintings the exhibition shows all aspects of Maes’s varied oeuvre.

Thank you for your continued appreciation of the importance of the Mauritshuis, as one of today’s most important and renowned museums. Your support makes such a difference in our ability to promote its continued relevance and appeal to art lovers not only here in the United States but internationally.  We look forward to sharing our continued progress.  With best wishes to you and yours for a wonderful holiday season and New Year!

Sincerely,

 

Monica S. Sadler

President