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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
Forgery?

The above observations provide cumulative evidence that Schuffenecker was most likely responsible for the extensions to the Tokyo painting. In the light of this, it would be illogical to believe he forged the rest of the painting, at the same time taking the trouble to fabricate separate extensions and to paint them in an entirely different style.

If this seems to militate against writing the work out of Van Gogh's oeuvre, the painting's critics have offered other, equally forceful arguments to support their position. They have, for example, drawn attention to two conspicuous details. The first of these concerns the leaf that belongs with the drooping flower to the left, number 14, through which the flower-stem passes. Leaves encompassing the stem in this way are not characteristic of sunflowers. In the first version -- the work in London -- the stem runs slightly into the leaf, which may have erroneously created the impression of a leaf encompassing a stem. The second concerns the broken stem of flower number 4. When sunflowers snap, the top part falls forward due to the weight of the head, but surprisingly this is not the case here. The overblown bloom still stands proudly upright, as it does in the London painting, which served as its model; however, the stem in that work is not broken, only slightly bent.

For these reasons critics of the Tokyo still life have concluded that it cannot be a repetition by Van Gogh's own hand. In their opinion, the artist could certainly not be reprimanded for lacking knowledge of sunflowers, and therefore the author of the work must have been a copyist. Although this conclusion at first seems reasonable, it is undermined when we examine the repetition in Philadelphia. Like the picture in Tokyo, this work also has an “incongruously” snapped stem in the place where its prototype, the still life in Munich, only features a slightly bent example.

This means that the “errors of interpretation” in the Tokyo version need not necessarily be ascribed to a copyist; they could equally well be work of Van Gogh himself repeating his motif. If this is indeed the case, the leaf enclosing the stem can only be attributed to carelessness, or a lack of botanical knowledge or interest on the artist's part. The “incongruously”snapped stem, on the other hand, appears to be a deliberate stylisation, as the same angular form also recurs in the portrait of Madame Roulin, where some of the dahlias on the background wallpaper have similarly snapped stalks.

This sacrifice of botanical reality to abstraction and stylisation is moreover apparent in all the repetitions. No botanist would recognise a sunflower in the sea-anemone-like structure of the dark head in, for example, the Philadelphia version. The green hearts of the overblown flowers in the two repetitions of the London picture are equally unnatural. Unlike in the latter work, where the varied transition from open peripheries to the still closed flowers in the hearts of the sunflowers is clearly depicted, the repetitions instead employ separate, closed circles that create the mistaken impression that these are entire heads.

Taking this into account, it becomes difficult to base acceptance or rejection of the Tokyo still life on so-called “errors of interpretation.” The only recourse can be evidence concerning style and technique. In this context, critics of the Tokyo work have stated the following objections. Landais claims that the way the painting has been built up does not correspond with Van Gogh's method of working. According to him, the artist would have painted “first the colours and only later the contour line”; the petals on sunflower 1, however, display the opposite approach.

Furthermore, Matthias Arnold considers it suspicious that the background has been filled in around the flowers, overlapping their contours -- again contrary to Van Gogh's usual procedure. He also regards the brushstroke as problematic, contending that it is “much more uneven and irregular than in the two versions definitively ascribed to [the artist].” Landais speaks of a “mechanical hand,” while Hoving disparagingly used the word “muddy.” Tarica also pointed to the sometimes-frayed character of the brushstroke, which he regards as uncharacteristic of Van Gogh.

None of these critics, however, appear to have studied the painting in a systematic fashion. For example, they have failed to take into account the picture's support. Joint research conducted by The Art Institute of Chicago and the Van Gogh Museum, involving a detailed comparative study of x-rays, has confirmed that the material on which the Tokyo Sunflowers is painted exactly matches the jute fabric used for other works by Van Gogh and Gauguin, and thought to have been cut from the 20-metre roll bought by the latter at the beginning of November 1888. The canvas is similarly of plain weave, and its thread count falls within the same range of 5-5.5 warp by 6-6.5 weft threads per centimetre. The thinner and less closely packed warp threads run horizontally, indicating that the canvas was orientated perpendicularly with respect to the axis of the roll. Along the top of the original canvas there is a narrow (1.5 cm wide) tacking edge, which, like the other three tacking edges, was later flattened and incorporated into the picture area. Although slightly frayed, the tacking edge seems virtually intact, preserving strong cusped deformations with accompanying tack holes where the canvas was originally fixed to the working frame. Again this is consistent with some of the other pictures examined originating from the same jute roll, which also feature narrow (1.5-2 cm wide) tacking margins along the selvedge and opposite sides.

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