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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
It has traditionally been thought that the still lifes painted in late August 1888 are the works now in London and Munich, a hypothesis supported by a comparative study of style and technique in the five works. Compared with the other three paintings, these two display looser, descriptive brushwork, a more elaborate modelling of form, and a more specific rendering of detail. The repetitions now in Tokyo, Amsterdam and Philadelphia, however, exhibit a logical trend towards increasing schematisation of the motif.

Oddly, however, Van Gogh's descriptions of the bouquets in his letters do not match the actual number of flowers in the London and Munich paintings. According to his correspondence, the still life with a blue background contained 12 sunflowers; the Munich work, though, has 14. The still life in London features 15 flowers, although Van Gogh speaks of only 14 in connection with this work. To err is human, of course, and in the case of the Munich picture it seems indeed that Van Gogh simply miscounted. The lower areas of the bouquet are rather tightly arranged, and sunflowers 5 and 9 are eclipsed by their more prominent neighbours (even taking into account that this effect may have been exaggerated by subsequent discolouration and loss of nuance). The London bouquet, however, is less compact, and it seems unlikely Van Gogh could have miscounted the flowers in this work. One possible explanation for the discrepancy is that flower 14, which was painted over the second and final layer of the background, had not yet been added when he described the still life in his letter.

Van Gogh's correspondence does not provide us with an immediate answer to the question as to which of the three remaining still lifes should now be identified with the two repetitions painted in January 1889. Although Van Gogh described his two versions as “répétitions absolument équivalentes & pareilles”, all three repetitions display clear differences of both detail and colour in relation to their originals, so that this passage is of little help. Apparently his choice of phrase referred only to the subject, which did indeed remain the same. However, shortly after completing the two repetitions, Van Gogh incorporated these new versions of the sunflower motif into the above-mentioned triptych with La berceuse. For this reason it may be conjectured that the works created in January are the paintings now in Amsterdam and Philadelphia , since, unlike the Tokyo canvas, they are signed, as is the central work from the triptych -- with which, moreover, they form a stylistic unity. Like La berceuse -- but not the Tokyo still life -- both paintings incorporate a flat, decorative structure as well as a more full-bodied application of paint, although the latter predominates in the Sunflowers.

From this it may be concluded that the work in Tokyo is not mentioned in the artist's correspondence. Although this absence could be interpreted as “un certificat de non-réalisation,” as Landais has claimed, there are other, equally plausible explanations. For example, Van Gogh may have produced the painting with the intention of giving it to someone in Arles, thus seeing no reason to mention it to Theo. He may also have regarded it as a less successful version of the motif, or as an experimental study that similarly required no description.

A further possibility is that he produced the work during a period of “little correspondence,” as suggested by Roland Dorn, and by Druick and Zegers. Finally, one could also imagine that he simply failed to mention the work, for whatever reasons. While everything is possible one thing is certain: the letters do not provide any clues as to which of these options is the most plausible.

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