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The Tokyo Sunflowers: a genuine Van Gogh or a Schuffenecker forgery ?
01 March 2002



Cet article se compose de 14 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Correspondence and identification

Scepticism about the authenticity of the Yasuda painting was fed, if not created, by the fact that although a total of five ‘Sunflower' paintings on size 30 (92 x 73 cm) canvas are known, the artist only mentions four in his correspondence. The first size 30 version of this subject is reported in a letter from the final week of August 1888, when Van Gogh conceived the plan for decorating his studio with still lifes of sunflowers. Alongside two smaller still lifes with a small bouquet of flowers, he had commenced work on a painting with “douze fleurs & boutons dans un vase jaune (toile 30)”. This painting was “clair sur clair” and “sur fond bleu vert”. Shortly afterwards he produced “un nouveau bouquet de 14 fleurs,” as well as a “toile de 30”. According to Van Gogh's description, this still life also included a yellow vase, although the background was not blue-green but yellow, a colour he elsewhere described (just once) as “jaune vert”. Some three weeks later the artist indirectly indicated that these two larger works had been completed. He had hung them in the spare bedroom -- not in the studio -- where Gauguin would have seen them in late October.

After Gauguin had broken off his collaboration with Van Gogh, he informed his former companion in a letter sent from Paris in mid January that he would like to receive “un tableau de tournesols”, apparently “les tournesols à fond jaune”.

Vincent seems to have been unsure whether Gauguin was proposing an exchange or a gift, and he did not really want to part with his paintings of this subject, as he told Theo. However, he did feel honoured by Gauguin's request. The latter had recognised the significance of the sunflower paintings for his oeuvre, he wrote in his reply, and he was thus willing to accede to his friend's wish, even to reward him: “comme j'approuve votre intelligence dans le choix de cette toile je ferai un effort pour en peindre deux exactement pareils”. By this he meant not two new versions of the coveted still life with a yellow background, but rather repetitions of both that work and the still life with a blue background. In late January he informed Theo that he was in the process “de mettre les dernières touches aux répétitions absolument équivalentes & pareilles”. These repetitions appear to have been just completed when Joseph Roulin visited him at the end of January. As Van Gogh had now conceived the idea of displaying his still lifes of sunflowers in a triptych together with La berceuse, his friend saw “deux exemplaires de la Berceuse entre ces quatre bouquets-là”. A later sketch in a letter shows that the triptych comprised a portrait of Madame Roulin flanked by a still life with yellow background to her right and its blue pendant to her left.

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