Hexagram 58: Dui -

The Joyous
Fine Art
Johannes Vermeer — The Lacemaker

Johannes Vermeer — The Lacemaker

Johannes Vermeer (c. 1669-1670)

Vermeer's smallest painting shows a young woman absorbed in intricate needlework. Her concentration on the delicate threads represents quiet satisfaction in skilled labor. The Joyous (Dui) relates to contentment from within—her calm focus on craftsmanship reflects inward pleasure rather than external stimulation.

Practical Integration

A young woman bends over bobbins and thread, her universe contracting to the work beneath her fingers. Johannes Vermeer painted this scene around 1669, his smallest canvas—nine inches tall. The lacemaker's focus remains absolute, her hands frozen mid-gesture as colored threads blur into abstract dabs of paint. Light falls from the left, illuminating delicate labor that transforms thread into pattern through meticulous repetition. She embodies what the I-Ching describes as Dui (兌), the doubled Lake trigram—joy arising from within rather than imposed from without. Lake above, lake below: the youngest daughter in both positions, openness meeting openness, reflection multiplying reflection. The character 兌 combines elements suggesting speaking and exchange, but here the exchange occurs between concentration and satisfaction. Vermeer shows no grand celebration, no external stimulus for pleasure—just absorbed engagement with skilled work. Song Dynasty diviners saw this configuration in contexts of teaching, conversation, and activities where responsive interaction produces mutual contentment. Vermeer's smallest painting shows a young woman absorbed in intricate needlework. Her concentration on the delicate threads represents quiet satisfaction in skilled labor. The Joyous (Dui) relates to contentment from within—her calm focus on craftsmanship reflects inward pleasure rather than external stimulation. The Judgment addresses the lacemaker's quiet absorption: \"The Joyous. Success. Perseverance is favorable.\" Her satisfaction stems not from completed lace but from the process itself, each movement bringing its own completion. In divination practice, Dui appeared when questions concerned communication, commerce, or situations where open exchange creates shared benefit. The doubled lake structure suggests that genuine joy cannot exist in isolation—like water reflecting sky, delight multiplies when it finds response. The Image Text clarifies what Vermeer captures: \"Lakes resting one on the other: the image of the Joyous. Thus the superior one joins with friends for discussion and practice.\" The lacemaker works alone in Vermeer's frame, yet her craft connects her to generations of practitioners, to the person who will wear this lace, to the tradition of skilled making. In the I-Ching sequence, Dui follows Xun's gentle penetration—after patient influence comes the joy of responsive connection, the satisfaction when careful work meets receptive appreciation.

References & Citations

  1. The Lacemaker — Johannes Vermeer-c. 1669-1670. Vermeer's smallest painting shows a young woman absorbed in intricate needlework. Her concentration on the delicate threads represents quiet satisfaction in skilled labor. The Joyous (Dui) relates to contentment from within—her calm focus on craftsmanship reflects inward pleasure rather than external stimulation.

The Judgment

The Joyous. Success. Perseverance is favorable. Joy must be based on steadfastness if it is not to degenerate into uncontrolled mirth. The joyous mood is infectious and brings success, but truth and strength must dwell in the heart.

duìjoy
hēngfulfillment
worth
zhēnpersistence

The Image

Lakes resting one on the other: the image of the Joyous. Thus the superior man joins with his friends for discussion and practice. When two lakes are joined they do not dry up so readily. Learning becomes many-sided and cheerful through stimulating intercourse, whereas the learning of the self-taught is always ponderous and one-sided.

conjoined
lakes
duìsatisfaction
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
péngjoins
yǒucompanions
jiǎngdiscussion
practice

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1和兌吉

responsive
duìjoy
promising

Line 2孚兌吉悔亡

trusting
duìjoy
promising
huǐregret
wángpass

Line 3來兌凶

láiupcoming
duìjoy
xiōngdisappointing

Line 4商兌未寧介疾有喜

shāngmeasured
duìjoy
wèiare less than
níngpeaceful
jièlimit
urgency
yǒuto attain
joy

Line 5孚于剝有厲

true
to
disintegrating
yǒuthere are
hardship

Line 6引兌

yǐnled
duìjoy

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Lake (☱) doubled—joyousness resting on inner firmness, manifesting outwardly as gentle expression.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm: 'True joy rests on firmness and strength within, manifesting itself outwardly as yielding and gentle.' Joy without inner foundation degenerates into empty amusement.

Character Analysis

The Haçienda embodies this: outer atmosphere is ecstatic, free, communal—but underneath is the firmness of genuine musical innovation, the 808/303 rhythm as structural foundation. Not superficial fun but deep collective synchronization.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Lake

Upper Trigram

Lake

Binary

110110

Energy State

Doubled joyousness, firm within, gentle without. Read bottom to top: strength below, strength below, both expressing through yielding surface.

Trigram Symbolism

☱ Lake (Upper) - Joyous expression ☱ Lake (Lower) - Firm foundation Lakes resting one on another replenish each other.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.