Tim's Vermeer (2013) - full transcript

Inventor Tim Jenison seeks to understand the painting techniques used by Dutch Master Johannes Vermeer.

You know, sometimes
when I'm Iaying in bed at night

trying to get to sIeep,

aII I can think about is this goaI
of trying to paint a Vermeer.

You know, reaIIy, I'm gonna try
to paint a Vermeer.

And, at the face of it,
that seems aImost impossibIe.

And I don't know if I couId do it.

You know, it'II be pretty remarkabIe if I can,

because I'm not a painter.

The Vermeer he's talking about
is Johannes Vermeer,

the Dutch artist from the 1600s.

Some consider him the greatest painter
of all time.



When you look at a Vermeer,
it seems like more than paint on canvas.

lt seems to glow like the image on
a movie screen.

That magical quality has mystified
the world for 350 years.

How did Vermeer do it?

Dutch artists typically learnt
by apprenticeship

and they kept written records
to prove their training.

But no such documents have ever
been found about Vermeer.

And strangely, when you x-ray
these intricate images,

you don't find the usual
artist's sketches underneath.

lt's as if Vermeer were
some unfathomable genius

who could just walk up to a canvas
and magically paint with light.

lt's possible that Vermeer
was using technology

to make these beautiful paintings.

lf he did that, and, of course,
there's no documentation that he did this,



it's possibIe he couId paint some pretty
remarkabIe pictures without a Iot of training.

It's possibIe that he was more
of an experimenter,

more of a tinkerer, more of a geek.

And, in that way, l feel a kinship with him,
because l'm a computer graphics guy,

and we use technoIogy
to make a reaIistic, beautifuI image,

and it's possibIe that's exactIy
what Vermeer was doing.

Tim Jenison is not a painter,
he's an inventor.

He's always had a talent for figuring out
how things work.

When Tim was growing up in lowa,
he got a broken player piano,

repaired it, and taught himself
to play swing music

by slowing down the piano rolls
so he could follow Fats Waller's fingers.

Tim played keyboards in a rock band
for a couple of years

and taught himself to fix anything electronic
that broke.

The amazing wizard!

He got married, had a family,

and built a business repairing
pinball machines and video games.

Then, around 1990, he invented
a way to turn personal computers

into TVstudios for live broadcasting.

He called it the Video Toaster,
and it won him an Emmy.

That led him to other amazing achievements
like LightWave,

a program for rendering 3D images,

which won an Emmy for his company,
NewTek, in 2003.

Tim's now based in San Antonio, Texas,

and his company produces the TriCaster,

used in broadcast, web,
and live performance.

All this has given Tim the money
and free time to make things like this,

Frankie, his lip-syncing duck.

A plane made entirely of stuff from
a home improvement store.

It's an eIectric moth.

His electric moth.

As you raise the Iight,
it comes up off the fIoor,

and it stays at exactIy the same distance
under the Iight.

And this.

Here's the pipe organ Tim put together
from four different churches.

Once I got started,
you have to have more pipes,

because it's never quite enough,
so I've got three pipe organs here,

pIus an eIectronic organ
that I'm using for the keyboard.

Tim and I have been friends
for a reaIIy Iong time.

If there was an artist,
he wouId draw it, what you see...

We've cried together
at space shuttle launches.

We flew his Learjet down to Cabo San Lucas

to see the total eclipse of the sun.

So, the deviI's in there.

This is Penn, the Iast day he was abIe to see

before he Iost God's most precious gift
Iooking at the ecIipse.

Tim's been weightless
in an astronaut-training plane

and he arranged for me to try it, too.

l vomited into my own hair.

Tim was not and is not a painter.

So I didn't know he had
this whoIe IittIe sub-obsession

with Vermeer.

Tim's Vermeer project started
1 1 years back, in 2002,

when his daughter gave him a copy
of David Hockney's book, Secret KnowIedge.

Hockney wrote that
when pictures started to look less like this,

and more like this,

that was because artists had found
new tools to help them.

ln 17th-century Holland, high quality lenses
and mirrors were in use everywhere.

Telescopes were all the rage

and science hobbyists were experimenting
with ways to project live images.

Hockney challenged conventional wisdom
by suggesting

that when artists of Vermeer's day
began to paint more accurately,

they were no longer using just their eyes
and their imaginations.

They were secretly getting help from
optical machines, like the camera obscura.

Camera obscura is Latin for ''dark room''.

Build a box, any size.

Could be the size of a shoebox,

but let's make this one big enough
to stand inside.

lt's a dark room.

Drill a little hole in one side of the box
and you see something surprising.

The image of whatever is outside the box,
in the light,

is projected on the wall opposite the hole,
only it's upside down and backwards.

You can make the image brighter and clearer
by putting a lens in the hole,

and you can change
the size of the image on the wall

by changing the curvature
and position of the lens.

Here's David Hockney on a TVspecial.

He's inside a camera obscura,

tracing the image of a live model
projected through a lens.

Hockney was mostly focused on

how a painter could have traced images
through a lens.

To me, what was most striking
about the Vermeers, as a video guy,

l'm looking at this image,
and l see a video signal.

l see something that looks like
it came out of a video camera.

So I thought about how a painter
couId actuaIIy copy that.

Now, most peopIe that have pIayed
with a camera obscura

got the idea that they couId take that
projected image and somehow paint on it.

WeII, I've tried that and a Iot of peopIe
have tried it, it's impossibIe.

What happens is it actuaIIy fights you,
it works against you,

it's worse than nothing at aII.

Painting on a projection just doesn't work.

Here's a blue that matches very closely
the blue in the projection.

lmagine this is wet paint.

When you put it into the projection,
it looks way too dark.

On the other hand, here's a perfect match.

The colour that matches
the projected colour just right.

The only colour that'll ever do that is white.

Tim went around
the world studying Vermeer.

They called it ''painting with light. ''
Vermeer ''painted with light. ''

You can't paint with light,
you have to paint with paint.

And so what they're really talking about
is this verisimilitude that Vermeer has,

that it just pops.

You see it from across the room
and it looks like a slide,

it looks like a colour slide of Kodachrome.

Seeing the Vermeers in person
was a revelation.

lt reinforced to me that
l was on the right track.

That what l was seeing was an accurate
representation of the colour in that room.

I just had a hunch that there must be a way
to actuaIIy get the coIours accurate,

with mechanicaI means.

Some way you couId do that
in the 1 7th century.

I remember just having this vague idea
of comparing two coIours with a mirror,

and it didn't go any farther than that
for a Iong time.

Sitting in the bathtub,

you know, that's I guess where you have
your eureka moments,

but, I don't know,
there's something about bath water...

It's just very, very reIaxing.

And I was just picturing that mirror
hanging there in space,

and I pictured what I wouId see,
and there it was.

And so I grabbed a piece of paper,
being carefuI not to get it wet,

made a sketch, and that was where l realised

Vermeer couId have used a mirror
to paint those paintings.

To test this l propped up a high school
photograph of my father-in-law on the table.

l put a piece of Masonite down here
to paint on.

l set a small mirror at a 45-degree angle.

And for the first time in my life,
l did just what Vermeer may have done.

l picked up some oil paints and a brush.

In Vermeer's camera
this wouId be a projection,

a Iens is projecting this image.

But to show the actuaI
mirror painting process,

we're using a photograph here.

You can see that there's a refIection,
and then there's my canvas down here.

And right at the edge of the mirror,
I can see both things at once.

I'm just going to appIy paint

and either darken or Iighten the paint
untiI it's the same exact coIour.

And at that point,
when it's exactIy the same coIour,

the edge of the mirror wiII disappear.

AII right, and I'm an idiot at this,

I have done this process
exactIy twice in my Iife before.

What I'm doing is
I'm moving my head up and down

so that I can see first the originaI
and then my canvas.

I'm Iooking at both things at the same time.

Right on the forehead,
you can see that they match,

because you can't reaIIy see
the edge of the mirror.

That's, that's your cIue that
you've matched the paint exactIy.

It's not subjective, it's objective.

I'm a piece of human photographic fiIm
at that point.

What you're doing here
is you're essentiaIIy bIending?

Yep, I am either darkening or Iightening
the paint that's aIready on the surface.

You aren't tracing any Iines,
'cause there are no Iines.

Yeah, that's a characteristic of the Vermeers
that makes them unusuaI,

is that there weren't Iines,

and there weren't any Iines
drawn underneath the paint either.

It Iooks Iike there's these bIobs
that are emerging into a picture.

It doesn't Iook Iike...

The order you're doing stuff in is not a...

It's not being done mentaIIy.

No, it's...

And that's what's so nutty about it.

You know, if I was better at this,
it may be more systematic,

I may evoIve into doing it
more systematicaIIy, but...

No matter what I've tried,

if I just spend enough time
comparing the mirror to the canvas

and stirring the paint around,
it ends up Iooking Iike a photograph.

And this was the result of Tim's experiment,

it took him five hours.

Not bad for a first oil painting.

The father-in-law picture was proof enough
in my mind that Vermeer probably did this.

However, my father-in-law doesn't look like
a 17th-century Dutch woman,

so l don't think it would be very
convincing evidence for a lot of people.

So, l thought the best way would be
to really do a Vermeer.

l had the suspicion that it was exactly
the same thing.

lf l could do the father-in-law,
l could paint a Vermeer.

lt seemed to me the most powerful
demonstration of the idea.

The reason l chose The Music Lesson
is probably because, of all the paintings,

l think The Music Lesson
is a great little laboratory,

because it's so complete
and so self-contained.

You know where the windows are,
you know how big the windows are,

you can reconstruct the harpsichord
independent of the painting,

the Spanish chair, the viola da gamba,
the rug, all these things could be procured,

and their appearance is gonna be what it is,
independent of Vermeer's painting.

lt's a little scientific experiment
waiting to happen.

Before Tim went to all that trouble,

we thought he should run
his idea by a working artist.

So we called up our friend,

Los Angeles-based painter
and entertainer, Martin Mull,

and asked him to meet Tim
at a studio in Las Vegas and see his gizmo.

Oh, my God.

Oh, my God.

HoIy cow.

Took me about haIf an hour
to Iearn how to operate a paintbrush.

Good for you, it took me 40 years.

WeII, and the beauty of this technique
is that you can make mistakes

and see what you did wrong instantIy
and try to fix it.

This is astounding.

So this is a camera obscura,

typicaI of the type
that couId be found in the 1600's.

This type of camera obscura
is caIIed a ''box camera obscura''.

It generaIIy had a ground gIass Iike this.

It has the abiIity to refocus
by moving the Iens in and out.

The generaI consensus of peopIe
that beIieve Vermeer used optics

was that he may have Iooked at that image
and been inspired by it.

Yeah.

And that's the end of the story.

So now that we know there's a way
to copy the coIours exactIy,

I'm proposing an aIternate history
of Vermeer.

Okay.

His father's an art deaIer,
he knows something about art,

he wants to make a painting.

He Iooks at this image...

Okay.

There's my daughter, NataIie.

What if Vermeer took the camera,
turned it sideways, and now it's verticaI,

-Iike my father-in-Iaw picture.
-Okay.

He takes his canvas,

and, the secret ingredient,

the mirror.

He positions the mirror here.

Which corrects the inversion?

-Yeah, it brings it back...
-And everything...

And there it is! CIear as can be.

So if he's in his Iiving room,
he puts up some curtains,

controIs the Iight,

and now picks up his brush
and starts to paint.

My guess is that the Girl with the Red Hat
is that first painting.

-Wow.
-It's painted over the top of another painting.

We can x-ray it and see that
there's something eIse underneath,

so maybe this was just
a throwaway experiment.

So I understand, Tim,
that when you go back to Texas,

you're going to construct a repIica
of the exact room where Vermeer painted?

Yeah.

And you're going
to do a painting in his stead,

am I right?

Yep.

Many of Vermeer's paintings appear
to have been painted in the same room,

likely the north-facing room

on the second floor
of the house Vermeer lived in.

That's the room Tim plans to construct.

I reaIIy hope to see firsthand
what Vermeer was up against,

if he was using this technique.

And try to get some idea

of how Iong it wouId take,

just to get the conditions right...

Just mundane things Iike how much
usabIe Iighting do you get in a day.

So you're not going to use any artificiaI Iight.

That's right.

And I'm onIy going to use materiaIs
that Vermeer wouId have had.

Okay.

So, I'm going to force myseIf
into the constraint

of having to grind the pigments
and, you know, make the paint,

and use onIy pigments that he had access to
or that he used in his paintings.

For his experiment, Tim wanted
to recreate, as closely as possible,

the conditions that Vermeer
was working with.

Back then you couIdn't just run down
to the paint store

and pick up a tube of paint,

so Tim had to Iearn how to grind
and mix the pigments,

which I'm now taIking about
something I know nothing about,

but of grinding the pigments
and adding in the oiI

and however you make paint.

If it were Ieft to me to make paint,
there wouId be no paint.

I aIso Iearnt how to make Ienses.

I couIdn't use a modern Iens,
they're too good.

So I had to buiId one.

So I had to make the form on a Iathe,
I had to meIt the gIass,

I had to poIish it with
various grades of abrasives,

just the way they made Ienses
in the 1 7th century.

To be sure he was getting everything right,

Tim took some time off of work
to fly to Holland.

He visited Delft,
the city where Vermeer had lived,

and studied the light and the architecture.

So this is it, this is where Vermeer painted
those magicaI Iight pictures.

He learnt to read Dutch,
he consulted with experts,

measured furniture in museums,
and immersed himself in Vermeer's world.

AII right, so move it in. Okay, good.

I wouId Iike to get one exactIy Iike this.
Do you think you couId make one?

That's possibIe, yes.

When he got back to San Antonio,
Tim rented a warehouse that faced North,

just like Vermeer's studio,

and invited Professor Philip Steadman
over from London

to look over his experiment.

While some believe that Vermeer
painted from his imagination,

Steadman found evidence that
Vermeer used optics.

Steadman is the author of Vermeer's Camera.

ln this book, Steadman analyses six
of Vermeer's paintings

to determine the layout of Vermeer's studio.

Then he uses geometry to figure out

where the lens in a camera obscura
would have to go

to match each painting's viewpoint.

Now he calculates the size of the projection
on Vermeer's back wall,

and compares that to the size
of the corresponding painting.

For all six, the sizes match exactly.

lt doesn't seem like
that would happen by chance.

Pretty convincing evidence
that Vermeer used a lens.

WeII, teII me about what you're doing.

Steadman's discovery fit perfectly
with Tim's mirror,

so now Tim set up a test that would use both.

And this, we wiII make
an attempt at painting this.

-Okay.
-Using the mirror.

So, now Iet's go inside the booth.

Yeah.

He and Steadman would try to paint a jug

using his comparator mirror
inside a camera obscura,

as Tim thought Vermeer had done.

They take turns painting.

lt doesn't matter who does the brushstrokes,

the process is objective,

and any painter who uses it,
gets the same result.

David Hockney's book came out
just after mine.

What do you remember about the reaction?

There was quite a controversy around
both books, wasn't there?

Enormous, yes, yes.

There was a Iot of upset, a reaIIy deep
anguish amongst the art historians.

The painters were reIaxed.

They said, you know,
''This is a technoIogy, fine, okay.''

But there was something, a reaIIy deep
hurt amongst some of the art historians

which was to do with intrusion
of amateurs and crass rationaIists

into the preserves of art history.

It was to do with a misunderstanding
of the nature of art

and cheating and genius,

and the idea that an opticaI method
is some sort of cheat,

because these are very accurate,
measured perspectives.

So, there are two ways you can do them.
You can produce them opticaIIy,

or you can set them up geometricaIIy.

If you set them up geometricaIIy,
you're using the standard methods,

it's a machine, it's an aIgorithm,
you appIy the ruIes.

Why is that not cheating?

-ExactIy.
-Strange, isn't it?

So, the onIy Iegitimate way to make
a painting is to just waIk up to the canvas,

and aIIa prima paint it.

But the reason it isn't cheating
is that it's hard.

-Yes.
-It's geometry, it's mathematics.

-WeII, this certainIy is not easy.
-This is not easy, no.

-If Vermeer did this, it wasn't a time saver.
-No, indeed.

I can't comprehend that someone
couId paint that from their imagination.

No. Of course not.

A human being is pretty
remarkabIe sometimes.

To get objects at their true sizes,

and to get aII the kind of Iuminous effects...

Painters can do miracuIous things,
it's difficuIt to say, ''This is impossibIe,''

but some things are more impossibIe
than others.

I was gonna go right off the edge there.

So.

-Great. WeII, congratuIations.
-And you.

Fantastic.

I want to think that
this simpIe, eIegant device

is something that Vermeer couId have used.

There's no doubt it's practicaI,
and it's simpIe.

You know, it's a pIain mirror.

This is a 1 7th-century technoIogy,
they knew aII about mirrors,

and you can imagine him perhaps thinking
of something Iike what Tim has thought of,

but we know nothing from
a documentary point of view

of how Vermeer worked,
there are no descriptions by him,

by other peopIe, there are no drawings...

We know very IittIe about his Iife.

So the onIy reaI source of information
to answer a question Iike that

wouId be the paintings themseIves.

Using Tim's device, it isn't easy,

but somehow it does turn you
into a machine.

You become a machine.
Was Vermeer a machine?

Maybe Vermeer was strong-minded enough
to think, ''I'II become a machine''.

That little picture of the jug

took Tim and Steadman
eight and a half hours to paint,

and Tim's method worked.

But they were painting in black and white,
and using powerful electric light

that wouldn't have been around
in Vermeer's day.

Would Tim's mirror work well enough
to paint The Music Lesson,

in full colour, in natural light?

To find that out Tim would need
Vermeer's room, and everything in it.

But museums don't loan stuff from the 1600s
to video engineers with a wacky hobby.

It wouId be nice if I couId have hired
somebody to buiId aII this

but it was kind of an interactive process,

you know, I had to first modeI the room
in LightWave 3D,

working from the painting to get
the dimensions and the shapes right.

Even though it was a Iot of work,
it was just easier for me to do it,

because as I went I couId make sure

that the furniture Iooked Iike
the furniture in the Vermeers.

But Tim is not a dressmaker.

Or a framer.

Or a carpenter. Upholsterer.

Glazier.

Builder of virginals,
which is a type of harpsichord.

Metalsmith.

Furniture maker.

Plasterer.

Tile layer.

Or a lens maker.

But he's not an artist either.

He used what he was, a technologist,

to help him become
all those things he wasn't,

so that he could build his room.

This is fun.

I mean, this is the reaI thing.

Is it safe for there to be that much smoke?

I don't know, I've never done this before!

CouId it heat up and catch fire?

-WeII, I guess. I don't know.
-Whatever!

It's kind of cooI. Okay, here we go.

Okay, I got a probIem with the virginaIs Ieg.

It's supposed to be 36 and a haIf inches Iong,

but my Iathe onIy goes

about 34 inches.

I mean, I couId make the Ieg in two pieces.

But I think what I'm gonna do
is I'm going to cut the Iathe in two.

GeneraIIy, you don't take a fine
precision machine tooI and saw it in haIf,

but power tooIs are made to be jury-rigged.

Yeah, it's a big guitar.

VioIa da gamba is caIIed a ''vioIa da gamba''
because ''gamba'' means Ieg,

and you pIay it between your Iegs.

I Iike it.

I don't know much about woodworking.

So I'm doing this, not out
of Iove for woodworking,

but out of necessity

because you just can't buy these
stupid chairs anywhere,

and I need one.

David Hockney is one
of Britain's greatest artists.

He's famous for paintings like this.

Since his optical theory got
Tim started on this journey,

he seemed the ideal person for Tim to talk to.

Hockney invited us to visit,
so we all went to England.

What l knew about David Hockney
was that he was a famous artist.

But, reading his book, l could see
that he wasn't a typical artist,

that he was somewhat a scientist.

PhiIip Steadman and David Hockney,
to my mind,

to the mind of a sceptic,

prove that Vermeer used some sort of device.

But Secret Knowledge,
and aII the PhiIip Steadman work,

are this wonderfuI, exciting, tingIy whodunit,
that never teIIs you who did it.

Hockney showed
that artists were using lenses.

Steadman argued that
Vermeer was using a lens.

l believed that Vermeer must have
been using more than just a lens.

The reason to go see Hockney was
to bounce this idea off him

and see if he thought it was plausible.

How did you figure this out?
What are you, a...

WeII, I started thinking about it
after I read your book, and...

Are you an opticaI... I mean...

I design teIevision equipment.

-That's my job.
-I see.

So I know a bit about coIour and imagery.

And I suspected Iooking at these
oId pictures from the GoIden Age,

Caravaggio, Vermeer, van Eyck,

that there must have been
a way to copy the tones.

Because that's what's quite remarkabIe,
actuaIIy. Yes, it is.

I need to stand on that side
of the tabIe for a second.

So it's a mirror on a stick.

AII right.

This is what I saw when I was painting,
if you Iook straight down.

And of course I started with a bIank...

I see, yes. Yeah, yeah.

And you can move your head up and down
and you can see different parts of the image.

And that's how you work your way
from one part to the other.

Now right at the edge of the mirror,
where you see both images,

you can do a direct comparison of the tone.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

And your eye can instantIy see,
because they're together,

can see any contrast, and the edge
of the mirror basicaIIy disappears.

When you have the right coIour
and onIy when you have the right coIour.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I see.
This is very ingenious.

So you notice that there is no paraIIax
when you move your head,

there is no shifting.

-That's it, no.
-The two images stay Iocked together.

-Why is that?
-Want to Iook through it?

-How is that?
-I know, it's very cIever.

I must say, the idea that the ItaIians,
when you think about the ItaIians,

they Iove pictures,
the idea that they didn't use this

because this wouId have been cheating,
I find chiIdish, absoIuteIy chiIdish.

There's aIso this modern idea that
art and technoIogy must never meet.

You know, you go to schooI for technoIogy
or you go to schooI for art

but never for both.

But in the GoIden Age,
they were one and the same person.

Yeah.

The interesting thing is that
if this was around then,

we are seeing photographs.

If they were using this
and exactIy copying that coIour.

Yeah, weII, I mean...

-It's a photo.
-Yeah.

After seeing this, I mean,
it's not a compIicated piece of equipment,

but how IikeIy do you think it is
that they may have done this?

-I think it's very IikeIy.
-ReaIIy.

Very IikeIy. Yeah, yeah, absoIuteIy IikeIy.

I mean, I'm pretty positive optics...

I mean, there's no expIanation
for the paintings without optics.

But, you know, historicaI evidence,

it'd be great to find a Iost Ietter
from Johannes Vermeer...

Wait a minute.

I put a joke Ietter in Secret Knowledge.

You did?

A joke Ietter.

This is what historians were Iooking for.
From Hugo van der Goes to van Eyck.

''CouId you go to ye
Brugge Mirror SuppIy Company

''and get one of those makeup mirrors
for my wife, you know what I mean?''

WeII, I said,
''You'II never find a Ietter Iike that.''

-Yeah.
-They never wrote down...

Van Eyck wouId not write down
the formuIas for the paint

for the simpIe reason
that somebody might read them.

And there were other peopIe

that wouIdn't write 'em down.

PeopIe were sworn to secrecy,
oaths that they took very seriousIy.

You won't, you never...
It's naive to think you'II find something.

Paintings are documents, aren't they?
Aren't they teIIing you a Iot?

Paintings are documents.

They contain the story of their own creation.

Every brushstroke, every layer of colour,
every shadow

represents another piece of information.

To the trained eye, a painting can be read
as accurately as any written text.

And you don't need a trained eye

to see that Vermeer's look different
from his contemporaries.

They look like video images.

He painted the way a camera sees.

Ever since photography was invented,

people have been noticing optical things
about Vermeer.

On the GirI with the Red Hat,

there's this lion's head
in the foreground that's fuzzy.

Your eye naturally refocuses
on whatever you're looking at,

so something in the foreground

is not going to appear to your eye
as out of focus.

But it could be out of focus
if the image was projected with a lens.

The so-called pointilles,

these little circles of paint,
look similar to what you get in a bad lens.

You look at the back of her jacket
and there's a faint blue line.

And that looks a lot like chromatic aberration
which is what happens in a crude lens.

The edges of objects can develop
this rainbow fringe around them.

This faIIoff of Iight from the window
to the opposite corner

is something that an artist reaIIy cannot see
the way a camera sees it.

It's impossibIe to see it.

But Vermeer painted it
the way a camera sees it.

Is it possibIe that
some peopIe can see absoIute brightness,

and most peopIe, can't?

You know, the way a musician
might have perfect pitch?

You know, that's a question for a doctor.

I'm CoIin BIakemore.
I'm a professor at Oxford.

Or a scientist
that speciaIises in human vision.

And I've spent most of my career studying
vision and the functions of the brain.

Is Vermeer maybe some sort of a savant

that's different
from the rest of the human race?

What if someone said,

''Maybe there's a savant who is so smart,
that he couId figure that out.''

WeII, he's not smart. I mean,
he'd have to have a very strange retina.

Our retinas are made the way they're made.

The retina is an outgrowth of the brain.

It's a very compIicated structure
in terms of its nervous organisation.

The signaIs go through
a compIicated network,

severaI Iayers
of different types of nerve ceIIs,

before they finaIIy get back
to the Iast ceIIs in the chain

whose fibres make up the optic nerve.

The optic nerve has limited bandwidth,
so the signals have to be compressed.

One thing we lose in that compression

is the ability to record absolute brightness
the way a light metre can.

When we see two values side by side,
it's easy to compare them.

But when we split them,
that ability goes away.

There just isn't any mechanism
in the human nervous system

to turn the eye into a Iight metre.

And this is a very cIever trick
for reducing information,

but it's a disaster if you reaIIy want to know
about the appearance of the scene

because you just can't do it with your brain.

Look at the light on the back wall
of The Music Lesson.

Every subtlety of brightness is recorded
with absolute photographic precision.

The unaided human eye
is not equipped to do that.

But if Vermeer used something
like Tim's device,

the painting becomes possible.

The Queen of England
owns Vermeer's Music Lesson

and she has it there in Buckingham Palace.

We thought since we were in England,
we'd stop by the palace and check it out.

But the Queen said no.
So we shot a whole tirade against the Queen.

But then...

WeII, I just came out of that buiIding.

That's where the painting is,
Buckingham PaIace.

The day before Tim returned home,
the Queen changed her Royal mind.

She granted Tim a private audience
with The Music Lesson.

He had 30 minutes to study the painting.

The deal was, he could only record
the experience in his head,

no photography allowed.

And it was a great 30 minutes.

The painting is amazing.

It's very different than I thought it wouId be.

The reproductions
don't do it any justice at aII.

The coIours are more muted.

It's sIightIy darker,
it's got a kind of an overaII bIuish cast.

But the astounding thing
is the amount of detaiI.

I put on my magnifying binocuIars

and Iooked at the virginaIs, and every stroke

of that decoration is there.

The Persian carpet,
you can see the individuaI knots.

The amount of devotion, or dedication,
or obsession

to get that amount of detaiI

that just makes a generaI impression
on the viewer,

but must have taken months of hard work.

I don't know if I can even come cIose.

When Tim got back to San Antonio,
he was in trouble.

When he looked directly at the virginals,

he could see the intricate pattern of
interlocking seahorses that Vermeer painted.

When he looked at the projection
in his camera obscura,

all those delicate little lines were too fuzzy
and dim to paint.

lt was a deal-killer.

l had visions of a failed experiment.

Tim knew there was something
he was missing.

He experimented with increasingly
complex arrangements of lenses and mirrors.

But nothing worked.

Then Tim had an inspiration.

He held a mirror against the wall
where the image was being projected.

Now he could see a small circle of the room
sharp and clear

and hundreds of times brighter.

By tilting the mirror around, he could see
any part of the room he needed to paint.

Then he realised if he just replaced
the flat mirror with a concave mirror,

like a shaving mirror,

he could make the bright circle much larger.

So I reaIised
that if I couId have an image that bright,

I didn't have to have this darkroom,

I couId paint in dayIight,
which is a huge, huge breakthrough.

Tim started in the dark room.

But the room is gone.

The back wall is a concave mirror.

All that's left
of the traditional camera obscura is the lens.

Tim had invented a new optical instrument
or, perhaps, rediscovered a lost one.

ln it, he could see well enough
to attempt Vermeer's level of detail.

He had his room. He had his machine.

He was now ready to paint.

Oh, boy.

Boy, you know, I'm not trying
to make this Iook Iike a Vermeer,

but it reaIIy Iooks Iike a Vermeer.

I was cIeaning up,
and getting ready to put my paIette away,

caII it a day's work,
and I Iooked up at the monitor.

I thought, ''Man, that camera got pointed in
the wrong direction, it's pointed at the room.

''How did that happen?''

And that's the thought that went through
my head for just a coupIe miIIiseconds

before I reaIised,
''No, I'm Iooking at the painting.''

And it was just kind of Iike a...

You know, this project
is a Iot Iike watching paint dry.

l can paint the costumes
by putting them on mannequins.

But to paint faces and hands,
l need to use people.

l do everything l can to help them hold still.

lt sort of works.

My daughter CIaire is home for a month
from coIIege.

And it's time to paint the girl,

so I put two and two together,
and used CIaire.

Her two sisters, are also in town,
Luren and Natalie.

So they worked on fitting the costume
and doing her hair

so that it looks like the girl in the picture.

When they got aII that on,
she was a dead ringer for the IittIe Dutch girI.

With that completed,
we put her in the head clamp,

and positioned her just right.

Few students have ever been happier
to go back to school.

I may repaint that.

Excuse me a second.
The wind's trying to bIow my shade down.

l thought you were having a ghost visitation.

Fucker!

Piece of shit.

We're gonna have to go to pIan B here.

The frame that has my window,
and my shades and stuff, it came Ioose

and it feII over and I think everything's okay.

AII right.

I tend to buiId things
untiI they're just bareIy good enough.

And sometimes that enveIope gets exceeded.

So if anything falls askew,
your painting's in no danger, is that correct?

No, I wouIdn't say that.

-Okay.
-But, you know, I can aIways start over.

Another interesting thing happened.

What I noticed whiIe I was Iooking at this,

I can see the straight Iines
of the seahorse there,

and I can see the straight Iines
that I've ruIed aIready on the canvas,

the framework of the virginaIs.

AII those are perfectIy straight Iines
because I Iaid 'em out with a straight edge

before I painted them.

WeII, when I am trying to aIign this
very cIose now, within a tiny fraction,

I can see that this straight Iine
isn't quite straight

in the refIection.

It's ever so sIightIy curved.

ProbabIy not enough to throw me off
now that I'm aware of it,

but if I had just IiteraIIy painted
that seahorse pattern,

it wouId have ended up curved Iike this.

And, so, I don't know why, but I went over
and I picked up the Vermeer print.

And I go,
''WeII, obviousIy Vermeer had no troubIe

''painting those Iines straight.''

And then, I heId the painting sideways
Iike this

and I'm Iooking down these straight Iines.

And there's something reaIIy crazy
about this.

The top and the bottom of the virginaIs
are absoIuteIy straight.

Because when I Iook at it down here
at an angIe,

I can see that it's a straight Iine.

The seahorse motif is curved.

It goes Iike this.

You can't reaIIy teII untiI you Iook at it

right down those Iines, but...

There is a curvature in there.

And there's reaIIy no IogicaI expIanation
for that

unIess he was using something Iike this.

Tim caIIs that bend in the seahorse pattern
the ''seahorse smiIe.''

It's a fIaw in Vermeer's painting.

A mistake that nobody noticed for 350 years,
and then Tim aImost made the same mistake.

Tim is not Iooking for something
that wiII dupIicate Vermeer's mistake.

You know,
he doesn't know Vermeer's mistake is there.

That's either a remarkabIe coincidence

or Vermeer was using Tim's machine,
or something very much Iike Tim's machine

to do his painting.

As Hockney said, paintings are documents,

and here's a IittIe bit of evidence.

Today I painted the seahorse motif.

It was a Iot of work. I couIdn't reaIIy sit here
for more than 15, 20 minutes at a time.

Your back just gets extremeIy tense.

I tried to sit in the most reIaxed position
I couId find, which is Iike this.

It's just reaIIy nerve-wracking, meticuIous,
demanding work.

I'm not Iooking forward
to doing the rest of the instrument,

but at Ieast I know it's doabIe.

What I painted today is maybe, I expect

wiII turn out to be the hardest part
of the painting, physicaIIy, to do.

Man.

WeII, yeah this is going to be short
because it's about 40 degrees in here.

So KarI and I came in here this morning,
and Iooked at each other, Iike,

''No.'' You know, it's reaIIy coId in here.

So I go, ''Wait, I've got this heater
in the garage that I never assembIed.

''I got it for Christmas a few years ago,
it's one of those patio heaters.''

So, KarI said,
''Hey, I'II put it together, Iet's go get it.''

So we went and got it, and put it together,
it's over there.

And fired it up and it worked great.
It's nice and toasty, you know?

KarI was sittin' over there with his computer,

and I said, ''Hey, Iook up on there
to see if it's safe to use these indoors.''

And KarI Iooks up and says,

''Yeah, you know it says here
it's absoIuteIy not safe to use indoors.''

And I said, ''Okay. WeII, Iet's just run it

''and we'II be carefuI, okay?

''So if we notice any symptoms
of carbon monoxide poisoning, you know,

''we'II shut it off.''

So I start painting, and I actuaIIy painted
an eIephant on The Music Lesson.

I don't know why I put it there,
but it seemed Iike a good idea at the time.

KarI actuaIIy, he put his head down,

and he said, ''I need a nap.''

I said, ''What did you say?''
He said, ''I need a nap.''

I said, ''Okay, Iet's Ieave right now.''

''Let's shut this thing off and go get Iunch.''

And on the way to Iunch, driving to Iunch,

everything sort of cIeared up again,
you know, we were in a fog.

So anyway, that was a bad idea.

It was kind of a weird day.

I came in and started painting
this Iower cushion,

and sort of a wave of revulsion
swept over me.

l just wanted to do anything in the world
but sit here and paint for some reason.

I don't know, just one of those things.

But I am pretty much ready
for this painting to be finished.

If we weren't making a fiIm, wouId I quit?

Yeah, I definiteIy wouId. Yeah.
I'd find something eIse to do right now.

WeII, yesterday
when I was painting this chair, I was aImost

repuIsed by it.

I think maybe subconsciousIy
I knew that it was wrong.

And it just didn't Iook Iike
it beIonged in the painting to me,

and I couIdn't
put my finger on the reason why.

And as I was trying to get to sIeep Iast night,

I was just sort of Iaying there
and I was visuaIizing that chair

and I couId see it in my mind.

And I go,
''You know, that's just the wrong bIue.

''l should darken the legs. ''

The top of the chair
can't possibly be tilted to the left.

lt's like l'm seeing it
and that can't possibly be right.

l realised that
l had bumped the lens out of position

and that's why
the chair's perspective was wrong.

It was totaIIy a subconscious thing.

Maybe I do have an inner artist
that knew that was wrong.

I thought that the rug wouId be
a IittIe more free-form painting.

But this rug is cIose enough
to the opticaI equipment here

that l can clearly see all those little stitches.

And since I can see that, and since my ruIe
is ''paint what you see in the mirror,''

if I want to get that kind of detaiI,

I'm gonna have to
sort of make Iike the harpsichord here

and just go for the detaiI.

So, another day, more dots.

Ditto yesterday.

Just painting more dots.

You know, it gets oId painting this carpet.

Oh, my God.

We're on.

Okay, so I've been
franticaIIy running around here,

setting up Iights.

And it shows.

Today is the denouement, of sorts.

The varnish job.

For the last several months
l've been promising myself

that all would be better
when the varnish went on.

Because as the paint dries,
it gets light, it gets chalky, it desaturates.

l've been very anxious to do this.

l went along slowly with a small brush
and finally l just grabbed a giant brush,

sloshed it in the varnish
and just started going to town.

And everywhere l touched was magic.

lt's pretty astounding.

WeII, you know, today...

Today's the day I've been waiting for.

I'm sorry.

I can't beIieve it's finished.

We took Tim's painting back to England
to show Hockney and Steadman.

WeII, that's it.

So, you know, it's my first ambitious attempt
at oiI painting,

and that's kind of part of the experiment,
that I'm not a painter,

but I was trying to show
the power of the concept.

Yeah.

This is terrific, I must say.

We noticed this
when we were doing our Iens experiments.

We noticed
that especiaIIy on these kind of cIoths,

on the projection you saw every weave

that you couIdn't in the reaI one,
and you get that in Vermeer.

Now that's very, very effective.
Anybody Iooking at this...

-I think this is better than Vermeer.
-Better than Vermeer?

You do feeI the weave of the carpet.

Yeah, you reaIIy do.

It Iooks actuaIIy wooIIy, doesn't it?

Amazing, actuaIIy.

It had to be something simiIar, it had to be.

I mean, there's no doubt
that you've proved one thing, Tim,

that you can paint a painting
of this degree of detaiI and precision in...

WeII, it's not exactIy a camera obscura,
but it's an opticaI machine.

And that's reaIIy what I set out to prove,
is that it couId have been done that way.

Sure. I mean there's no doubt about that.

There's no way
that it proves that Vermeer did.

That's the second question obviousIy, yes.
Did Vermeer work that way?

Yeah, but it makes you rather convinced
that's what he did.

I'm getting a IittIe more convinced
aII the time.

I wouId say I'm about 90% there.

But, you know,
if there was some historicaI record...

I mean, the idea
that a painting isn't a historicaI record

is from Iiterary peopIe who seem to just
not Iook at pictures and just read texts.

This is a document in itseIf.

I know peopIe are going on
about documents.

Paintings and drawings are documents,
they teII you a great deaI.

You've made a document
that's proving something, it is.

It's fascinating.

I mean, you set out to do some research.

I think you've succeeded and, weII,
you've shown it's possibIe to do it.

-As I say, if you've recorded it very weII...
-Yeah, yeah.

I think it might disturb quite a Iot of peopIe.

-I certainIy hope so.
-Which is fine, that's fine. Why not?

My friend Tim painted a Vermeer.

ln a warehouse, in San Antonio.

He painted a Vermeer.

And is Tim an artist, or is Tim an inventor?

l think the problem is not trying
to pick one of those two for Tim to be,

but the problem is
that we have that distinction.

What Tim has done
is given us an image of Vermeer

as a man who is much more real,
and in that way much more amazing.

l mean, unfathomable genius
doesn't really mean anything.

Now he's a fathomable genius.

lf there's any great merit in this picture
as a work of art, it's Vermeer's.

lt's Vermeer's composition
and it's Vermeer's invention.

lt's just been forgotten for 350 years.