The China Mail - Dutch windmill offers last link to paint made in Vermeer's day

USD -
AED 3.672975
AFN 70.498872
ALL 87.850125
AMD 388.079699
ANG 1.789679
AOA 916.999547
ARS 1124.935024
AUD 1.54046
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.697557
BAM 1.760475
BBD 2.01821
BDT 121.44561
BGN 1.74424
BHD 0.376907
BIF 2936
BMD 1
BND 1.304667
BOB 6.906795
BRL 5.617296
BSD 0.999608
BTN 85.262414
BWP 13.645733
BYN 3.271208
BYR 19600
BZD 2.00784
CAD 1.390785
CDF 2871.000319
CHF 0.835415
CLF 0.024508
CLP 940.493978
CNY 7.20635
CNH 7.198635
COP 4211.75
CRC 507.95051
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 99.125042
CZK 22.172978
DJF 177.719994
DKK 6.63492
DOP 58.897745
DZD 133.17696
EGP 50.412015
ERN 15
ETB 133.131461
EUR 0.88953
FJD 2.257404
FKP 0.753148
GBP 0.74909
GEL 2.740331
GGP 0.753148
GHS 12.725014
GIP 0.753148
GMD 71.999524
GNF 8654.99957
GTQ 7.685314
GYD 209.123559
HKD 7.8007
HNL 25.770469
HRK 6.704098
HTG 130.691715
HUF 359.512948
IDR 16538.8
ILS 3.561605
IMP 0.753148
INR 85.327397
IQD 1310
IRR 42099.999426
ISK 129.607527
JEP 0.753148
JMD 159.24209
JOD 0.709402
JPY 146.137029
KES 129.250331
KGS 87.450285
KHR 4018.999937
KMF 440.499962
KPW 900.025486
KRW 1395.459739
KWD 0.30729
KYD 0.832966
KZT 508.08524
LAK 21619.999937
LBP 89549.999943
LKR 298.717314
LRD 199.624979
LSL 18.329777
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.514976
MAD 9.299562
MDL 17.472119
MGA 4485.000541
MKD 54.74912
MMK 2099.382878
MNT 3577.646594
MOP 8.02371
MRU 39.599353
MUR 46.150052
MVR 15.449605
MWK 1736.000123
MXN 19.35897
MYR 4.298022
MZN 63.909992
NAD 18.32983
NGN 1602.790603
NIO 36.775018
NOK 10.28677
NPR 136.415311
NZD 1.677726
OMR 0.385005
PAB 0.999577
PEN 3.66125
PGK 4.07275
PHP 55.782978
PKR 281.750307
PLN 3.776315
PYG 7982.465221
QAR 3.640497
RON 4.540305
RSD 105.514724
RUB 80.194272
RWF 1420
SAR 3.750567
SBD 8.36135
SCR 14.226593
SDG 600.497717
SEK 9.671045
SGD 1.297015
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.749882
SLL 20969.500214
SOS 571.50348
SRD 36.494926
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.746686
SYP 13001.704189
SZL 18.330085
THB 33.232029
TJS 10.365266
TMT 3.505
TND 3.022495
TOP 2.342099
TRY 38.77137
TTD 6.783414
TWD 30.184503
TZS 2695.494781
UAH 41.541044
UGX 3658.179822
UYU 41.748053
UZS 12935.000039
VES 92.946016
VND 25940
VUV 120.127784
WST 2.788568
XAF 590.436285
XAG 0.030481
XAU 0.000309
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.734637
XOF 575.498432
XPF 107.149774
YER 244.449772
ZAR 18.21091
ZMK 9001.203875
ZMW 26.488498
ZWL 321.999592
  • BCC

    -1.1950

    92.515

    -1.29%

  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    63.81

    +1.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.1010

    21.959

    -0.46%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    10.62

    -0.85%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    67.54

    +0.01%

  • JRI

    -0.0750

    12.805

    -0.59%

  • RELX

    0.7850

    53.185

    +1.48%

  • RIO

    -0.0300

    62.24

    -0.05%

  • BCE

    -0.4800

    21.5

    -2.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.3

    -0.4%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    10.68

    -0.19%

  • GSK

    0.1800

    36.53

    +0.49%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    30.51

    -0.16%

  • AZN

    -0.5900

    67.13

    -0.88%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    9.06

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.2050

    40.485

    -0.51%

Dutch windmill offers last link to paint made in Vermeer's day
Dutch windmill offers last link to paint made in Vermeer's day / Photo: © AFP

Dutch windmill offers last link to paint made in Vermeer's day

Every morning for the last 42 years, Piet Kempenaar has cast a careful eye over the Dutch sky before releasing a brake and "steering" the giant blades of his centuries-old mill into the wind.

Text size:

To match the force, he adjusts the sails of De Kat (The Cat), the world's last remaining mill using wind power to crush rocks into fine dust and make paint pigment -- just as it was done almost 400 years ago.

Driven by a system of wooden gears, ropes and pulleys, two massive grinding stones together weighing 10 tonnes churn and crush rocks for hours on end, until they become colourful pigments with enticing names like lapis lazuli, terre verte, umber and burnt sienna.

Now retired and leaving most of the paint-making business to his son Robert, Kempenaar still cuts the quintessential figure of a seasoned Dutch "colourman" in a cap, blue workman's jacket streaked with pigment dust, and a pipe angled in the corner of his mouth.

Behind him, De Kat, standing on the spot where rocks were first ground into pigment around 1646, creaks and groans as the four giant blades power the grinding stones in a never-ending circle.

The original mill burnt down in 1782 before being rebuilt. De Kat has been reconstructed and repurposed over the centuries for a variety of roles including a chalk storage space at one stage, before resuming its rock-crushing duties in 1960.

Kempenaar has leased De Kat from the local milling association since 1981 for his pigment-making business, which attracts thousands of buyers every year.

"I am not interested in painting, but I am obsessed with pigments," the 73-year-old Kempenaar told AFP at the famous mill in the picturesque but tourist-heavy Zaanse Schans north of Amsterdam.

- 'King of the blue' -

In his rugged hands, Kempenaar holds a block of a famous blue pigment favoured by a Dutch master.

"Here we have the king of the blue. It's a half-diamond from Chile or Afghanistan. You're talking about lapis lazuli, used by Johannes Vermeer," he said.

"Vermeer had the money -- he could pay for it. Back then, this was literally worth its weight in gold".

Dozens of pigments made at De Kat are neatly stacked on shelves -- terre verte or "green earth" from Verona, dark umber from Cyprus and carmine red, made from grinding up female cochineal insects, from the Canary Islands.

"We grind pigment the old way here. That's why people from all over the world come to buy from us. It's unique," Kempenaar said.

"And it hasn't changed in almost 400 years."

Art experts say many of the pigments used by Dutch masters like Vermeer and Rembrandt almost certainly came from "dye mills" dotted around the Dutch landscape at the time.

This includes the precious lapis lazuli which produced the ultramarine blue paint for the apron of Vermeer's famous work The Milkmaid.

Today, De Kat is the last link to the original way of paint-making before the process was industrialised around 1850, experts say.

- 'Step back in time' -

At Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum, some 20 kilometres (12.5 miles) to the south of the Zaanse Schans, art lecturer Peter Pelkmans has been preparing a paste of lapis lazuli and linseed oil to make ultramarine blue paint.

At the museum's Teekenschool (Drawing School) workshop, amateurs and artists alike can learn how to prepare paint the traditional way using De Kat's pigment.

"We give people a chance to take a step back in time," Pelkmans told AFP before mixing another colour, this time a burnt sienna, much loved by Rembrandt.

Rembrandt was known to grind most of his own pigment in a giant iron mortar in his studio and used a cheaper alternative called "smalt" as a substitute for the precious and more expensive lapis lazuli.

Vermeer's ultramarine blue pigment was however made from lapis lazuli, almost certainly ground in a windmill, Pelkmans said.

He explained just how precious the prized colour was.

"Often the blue was left as the last part of a commissioned painting. The artist would only add it once he had been paid in full," Pelkmans laughed.

B.Clarke--ThChM