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62 entries
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
The ‘Sunflowers' series

The still life's new place in the ‘Sunflowers' series not only reveals a great deal about Van Gogh's motivation and intention as regards this particular piece; it also sheds light on the development of the group as a whole. Although Dorn has contended that the differences between the versions were primarily inspired by the artist's need to systematically apply a certain colour theory, the painting's new position within the series gives rise to quite a different interpretation.

Van Gogh's original plan, as indicated by his description in late August, had been to depict the sunflowers against a blue background. At that time he envisaged
« une décoration où les chromes crus ou rompus éclateront sur des fonds divers, bleus depuis le véronèse le plus pâle jusqu'au bleu de roi, encadrés de minces lattes peintes en mine orange »-- the intention being to create « espèces d'effets de vitraux d'église gothique ».

In his first study of the motif Van Gogh cautiously explored the possibilities. In keeping with his initial idea, this little still life has a decorative structure based on planes of colour, and also features the use of complementary effects, mainly evident in the opposition between the purplish-brown table and the yellow in the sunflowers. In the second, somewhat larger study, however, in which Van Gogh exactly repeated the subject (with the addition of several flowers lying in the foreground), colour contrast began to play an even greater role. The artist replaced the bluish-green of the background with royal blue and made marked use of orange aureoles: “c'est à.dire chaque objet est entourée d'un trait coloré de la complémentaire du fond sur lequel il se detache”.

The strong contrast thus produced, in combination with the introduction of distinct contouring, successfully created the artist's intended stained-glass window effect.
However, Van Gogh soon became dissatisfied with this experimental work, and shortly after its completion he described the use of aureoles as “un dogme universel”. Although it was ‘une véritable découverte,' he himself preferred the painterly approach of Edouard Manet, thinking in this context particularly of Manet's Still life with peonies of 1864 (Paris, Musée d'Orsay). “Simplicité de technique, » that was what he was aiming for, « un travail de la brosse sans pointillé ou autre chose, rien que la touche variée ». A simple but varied brushstroke would henceforth play an important part in the further development of the series.

Van Gogh was also apparently disillusioned with the use of complementary contrasts, as demonstrated by his subsequent work, the still life now in Munich -- his first treatment of the sunflower motif in size 30. In accordance with his initial conception of the series, he now allowed the primary colours blue and yellow to predominate, although he did not opt for a strong tonal contrast between the two. His aim was now a “clair sur clair” effect.

The Munich work must have been an ambitious “étude de nature,” Van Gogh's next piece, however -- the London still life -- was an attempt to produce a definitive work. While his brushstroke in the Munich painting was still fairly arbitrary, the artist now chose a more serene, stylised treatment, practising his philosophy of “la touche variée” by creating even, flat areas of thinly applied paint in addition to the impasto passages. He also introduced a greater sense of space into the composition of the bouquet, distributing the overblown flowers and their still blooming companions over the whole with a greater feeling for variety.

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