Somehow, when in the Netherlands, we always seem to have missed The Hague and its Mauritshuis museum.  But we have seen our share of Vermeers. And a decade ago we read Tracy Chevalier's excellent novel 
The Girl with a Pearl Earring with our Missoula book group (which we still miss). So when we learned that Vermeer's 
Girl with a Pearl Earring and numerous other Mauritshuis treasures were coming to San Francisco's de Young museum, we had to go. (We also viewed the film, same name, which also was quite good). Rebecca, Jeremy and Penelope motored us in again, took in the visiting show, and then occupied themselves in the Golden Gate Park area while we did the rest of the splendid de Young. Penelope has limited tolerance for museums, and R & J had been there before.
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Thus; in addition to the paintings there also were scores of 
prints, etc. | 
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And thus, the "Dutch Mona Lisa"; stolen directly  
off the Mauritshuis website, I think; they had a no  
fotos policy at the de Young's exhibit, so there will 
be no fotos of the many Hals, Steens, and others 
we admired; nor even of the obligatory Rembrandt 
self-portrait | 
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At this point, the considerable imp in me 
requires that I again post, for comparison, 
Dali's immortal The Girl with the Pearl, 
which is actually, I suppose, a reference to  
Las Meninas | 
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And now we return to the de Young's very 
eclectic and largely American collection, just 
a few bits we particularly liked; here, Karen 
LeMonte's Dress 3, cast entirely in glass | 
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| Edward Hicks' Peaceable Kingdom | 
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Edward Hovenden's Last Moments of John Brown | 
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| Albert Bierstadt's Arch of Octavius (Roman Fish Market) | 
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| Detail: ugly Americans even in 1858 | 
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| Thomas Moran's Yellowstone Falls | 
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| And his Grand Canyon | 
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Willard Leroy Metcalf's Winter Festival; reminds me a lot 
of Russell Chatham; and here, a note: we signed up for one 
of the 30 minute museum guided tours, but no one else 
showed up, and en route to our first masterpiece collected 
three more docents who had no takers: thus, four docents 
to lavish their expertise on us...a real privilege! | 
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Jerome Thompson's 1857 Recreation; OK, lose a few ladies, lose the ladies' clothes, and you've got Manet's Le déjeuner  sur l'herbe; or better, Giorgione/Titian's, Pastoral Concert | 
  
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And, a KO for us, Whistler's The Gold Scab: Eruption of Frilthy Lucre; we'll see the 
decor that led to it at the Freer someday in 
DC | 
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| All in all, another pretty good day in The City |