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Stay tuned. Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Stay tuned. Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Stay tuned. Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Stay tuned. Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Stay tuned. Something new is about to be unveiled on Vickery.art.

Hammershøi. The Eye that Listens


The exhibition Hammershøi. The Eye that Listens offers not simply a retrospective of Vilhelm Hammershøi’s work, but an invitation to experience painting as a form of quiet, attentive perception. Through its focus on emptiness, light, and interiority, it reveals how his restrained compositions draw the viewer into an active process of looking that becomes, in effect, a kind of listening.


Text by Angie Afifi


The exhibition Hammershøi. The Eye that Listens, on view from February 17 to May 31, 2026 at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, marks the first major retrospective of Danish painter Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864-1916) in Spain. The subtitle itself, ‘The Eye that Listens,’ already sets a particular mode of perception, in which vision ceases to function as a purely visual act and begins to operate as a form of inner attention, almost like listening. In this sense, the exhibition from the very beginning proposes not so much a historical overview as a particular way of looking, or more precisely, of listening to Hammershøi’s painting.


The exhibition is arranged in a rather restrained manner, yet it is not without a carefully considered dramaturgy. Dark grey walls and dim lighting create an expected sense of intimacy, but what matters more is something else: the feeling of gradually entering a space where the usual museum distance begins to disappear. Hammershøi’s works are not completely isolated; nearby, works by other artists appear, allowing us to read him both as part of a broader artistic tradition and at the same time as a figure that breaks away from it, which in turn encourages further associative comparisons on the part of the viewer.


Perhaps the central and most compelling characteristic of Hammershøi’s work is emptiness. However, this is not absence as such, but rather a specific state of indeterminacy in which the viewer becomes involved in the process of meaning-making. The lack of a fully developed narrative, figures turned away from us, enclosed interiors where other hidden spaces are suggested through doors and openings, all of this creates a situation of visual and psychological ambiguity and incompleteness. It is precisely this that provokes the viewer into an inner activity, into the need to complete what is seen, to project personal interpretations, and as a result to fill in the gaps proposed by the artist.


In this sense, Hammershøi’s painting appears paradoxically close to those artistic and theoretical strategies that will only fully develop in the art of the twentieth century. What is at stake is a shift from the image as a finished statement to the artwork as an open structure that requires the participation of the viewer. It is telling that similar questions about the limits of the image, the role of emptiness, and the involvement of the perceiver become central, for example, in the theoretical writings of Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) around the same time. Of course there was no direct influence, since their artistic languages develop independently and remain stylistically incomparable. Nevertheless, while in Kandinsky these issues receive an explicit and often declarative formulation, in Hammershøi they are realized on the level of intuitive painterly practice, through light and an extreme reduction of the visual.


It is precisely here that the particular duality of his art lies: while touching on questions fundamental to modernism, it remains outwardly restrained, clear, and therefore more accessible to a wider audience.


There is another artist with whom an interesting comparison can be made, although he belongs to a completely different period and works in a different medium, Eduardo Chillida (1924-2002). As with Hammershøi, emptiness plays an important role in his work. But if in Chillida emptiness is more often perceived as an element of form, as part of the sculpture itself, almost a classical device of abstract art, then in Hammershøi everything functions differently. In his case, emptiness is rather a psychological state. It is not “nothing,” but on the contrary a space filled with a sense of ожидание, silence, and incompleteness.


Yet perhaps the first artist that comes to mind when looking at Hammershøi’s works is Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675). And this resemblance is far from accidental. Hammershøi was not simply inspired by his painting, he studied Vermeer’sworks closely, learned from them, admired them, and to a certain extent even emulated them. However, this similarity manifests itself not so much at the level of direct visual borrowing as in the effect their paintings produce on the viewer: a sense of calm, silence, and inner stillness, conveyed through a soft, muted, almost monochrome palette in which everything seems to dissolve into a greyish blue and pale haze, creating the impression of a deep, almost tangible quiet.

Almost empty interiors, wrapped in a light melancholy, with slowly flowing light and rare figures absorbed in themselves, do not simply depict space, but rather draw the viewer into a state of stillness and meditative suspension.


In contrast to colour, toward which Hammershøi remained largely indifferent, light was central to his work. In the conditions of the Northern European climate of Denmark, with its constant clouds and pale sky, every ray of sunlight entering a room becomes a vivid impression, almost a small miracle, and it is precisely this feeling that he repeatedly conveys in his quiet interiors.


Floors, walls, tables, and chairs function merely as supporting elements, all subordinated to a single task: to show how light fills space. The idea of simultaneous presence and absence periodically emerges through the figure of a woman, who is almost always turned away from the viewer. This is a deliberate strategy of depersonalization that transforms her into a generalized image, stripped of individual features and emotions, helping to preserve the atmosphere of quiet detachment and contemplation.


A similar approach can be seen in Vermeer: his figures seem to pause in silent contemplation, their hands calmly placed or occupied, their poses natural and restrained, their faces without pronounced emotion. There are no theatrical gestures or baroque expressiveness, even though he lived in the Baroque era, when art was often filled with drama, movement, and emotional intensity. The same careful attention to light is evident in his work, as he studied how it shapes volume, constructs space, and creates depth. His interiors are always quiet and contemplative, free from unnecessary movement. Hammershøi clearly builds upon these strategies; he himself acknowledged Vermeer’s influence, and art historians often refer to him as the “Danish Vermeer.”


When looking at Hammershøi’s works, beyond Vermeer, one inevitably recalls the broader tradition of seventeenth century Dutch genre painting, with its characteristic attention to everyday domestic life unfolding within restrained, almost minimalist bourgeois interiors. This tradition is also marked by carefully constructed perspective and composition, in which soft light envelops objects and figures, entering through windows and doorways, as well as by a particular treatment of the everyday as something elevated and worthy of contemplation.


Vermeer was among the first to develop the effect of spatial depth by guiding the viewer’s gaze through a sequence of gradually unfolding interiors. This compositional device is later developed by Pieter de Hooch (1629-1684), Emanuel de Witte (1617-1692) and Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627-1678). In Vermeer, however, the genre scene acquires an almost metaphysical dimension, where domestic space is organized as a particular mode of perception, conveying a slowing of time, isolation, and concentration.


In this context, it becomes especially interesting how the exhibition at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza guides the viewer toward this perceptual state. This is achieved largely through the rhythm of the exhibition itself, increased distances between the works, and an almost deliberate refusal of excessive textual explanation that might otherwise fix interpretation in advance. The curatorial approach gently directs the viewer toward a slowing down of vision to such an extent that at a certain point one begins to notice that the focus is no longer on the subject or the figure, but on the intervals between them, on those very empty spaces that at first seemed secondary. And it is precisely within them that the main content gradually begins to unfold.


It is this embodied experience that makes the exhibition so compelling, as the viewer is forced to abandon their usual speed of perception. The play with time and space, the emphasis on inner perception, and the demand not just for attention but for immersion in a particular state of presence all contribute to an experience that, despite the apparent visual simplicity of the paintings, becomes dense and even tense, as if, despite the silence we perceive in these works, something is happening, yet it deliberately escapes final definition.

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