The Minneapolis Institute of Arts has promised weekly surprises throughout its 2015 centennial celebration, and it delivered a big one Friday, unveiling "Woman in Blue Reading a Letter," one of only 34 surviving works by 17th-century Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer.
The oil painting — an enigmatic gem about 18 inches high and 15 inches wide — will be on view through May 3 in the museum's Cargill Gallery, just off the main lobby. There is no charge for admission.
On loan from Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum, the picture is a prime example of Vermeer's intimate studies of women in contemplative moments.
"I'm not good at verbalizing beauty, but it's really beautiful," said Brenda Freier, a recently retired defense contract analyst from Apple Valley who was visiting the museum Friday morning and unexpectedly got swept up in the hoopla. "We've been wanting to come here for a long time and this was just a nice surprise."
Even the museum's staff gasped and applauded when director Kaywin Feldman unveiled the picture Friday morning.
"This is the first Vermeer I've ever seen, so it's extremely exciting," said Aubrey Mozer, the museum's corporate relations specialist. "I work with our sponsors and even they didn't know" what they were paying to bring to Minneapolis, she said.
The painting is the first of three promised masterpieces on loan that the MIA will unveil at unannounced times throughout its centennial year.
The identity of the woman in blue is unknown, but the picture contains details that help experts interpret the scene. Like many of Vermeer's subjects, the woman faces a window from which morning light floods the room. That she is still wearing her bed jacket, a pearl necklace on the table beside her, hints that the letter's arrival interrupted her as she dressed for the day.