The title painting, in the Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis in The Hague, is remarkable in that every figure
and every part of every building is clearly discernible in the minutest detail: decorations, weathercock, bells
in the church tower, and so on. Thousands of individual bricks are visible in the buildings at the left and the
question has been posed by art scholars as to whether these bricks were laboriously painted individually or
instead more efficiently pressed to the painting by some form of template, for instance by pressing a wet print
against the painting. Close inspection of the painting in raking light reveals that the mortar work is rendered
in thick, protruding paint, but such visual analysis, while highly suggestive, does not prove van der Heyden
employed counterproofing; as such evidence must be sought in order to corroborate this hypothesis. If some form
of counterproofing was employed by the artist, there might be at least some repeated patterns of the bricks, as
the master print master was shifted from place to place in the painting. Visual search for candidate repeated
passages of bricks by art scholars has proven tedious and unreliable. For this reason, we instead used a method
based on computer forensics for detecting nearly identical repeated patterns within an image: discrete crosscorrelation.
Specifically, we preprocessed a high-resolution photograph of the painting and used thresholding and
image processing to enhance the brickwork. Then we convolved small portions of this processed image of the
brickwork with all areas of brickwork throughout the painting. Our results reveal only small regions of moderate
cross-correlation. Most importantly, the limited spatial extent of matching regions shows that the peaks found
are not significantly higher than would occur by chance in a hand-executed work or in one created using a single
counterproof. To our knowledge, ours is the first use of cross-correlation to search for repeated patterns in a
realist painting to answer a question in the history of art.
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