ArtCult : News of the art market .
Find in the whole site :
  Home
  News
  Features
  Experts tools
  Communication
  Une question ?
Filtres
Année

Catégorie


Recherche
Find in page Archives des News :
Find in the whole site :

Actuellement
Latest Ads
27/06: A MAN NOT TO BE TRUSTED
A man by the name of Oscar Oleg (alproofing75@gmail.com ) has been asking artcult ...
07/03: LOOKING FOR MISSING PIECES
URGENTLY LOOKING FOR THE FOLLOWING MISSING PIECES SINCE FEBRUARY 3, 20161) Fauv...
05/01: MR ROBINSON'S DEC 6, 2014 FORGOTTEN RAMPAGE
On December 6, 2014 Mr David Robinson of Pacific Grove (CA) visited the Au Temps Jadis ...
> Post an ad
Online estimate
Send us a photography and a description and questions, and we will return our point of view.
Sumit estimate

Newsletter
Type in your email to subscribe to our newsletter

Archives des News

Année :
62 entries
Benoit Landais response to the report published on behalf of the Van Gogh Museum
01 March 2002



Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
THE JUTE

“Van Tilborgh/Hendriks write: “The jute fabric used by the two artists at Arles is thus a distinctive material, with its own particular characteristics. The fact that the Tokyo picture is painted on precisely the same kind of cloth provides compelling if not conclusive evidence of its authenticity.” The non-conclusive evidence is not even compelling. For whatever reason the painting's owners did not permit a scientific and technical examination of the Tokyo picture. It is somewhat surprising that reputable institutions like the Chicago Art Institute and the Van Gogh Rijksmuseum should have accepted to undertake a study under preconditions that precluded any serious analysis of paint and support. Only a scientific examination would have told us whether the cloth support of the Tokyo picture was from the roll of jute fabric used by Vincent and Gauguin in Arles. The “same kind of cloth” does not mean anything. All over Europe jute was mass produced by machines which came from Dundee's in the U.K. The authors found precisely the "same thread count” as in the Tokyo painting in material that was manufactured in 1908. Cloth used by Vincent and Gauguin in 1888 was available to Schuffenecker in 1901”, Landais retorted.

“The use of jute as a forger's trick to let potential customers and experts believe that the painting was a work by Vincent would only have occurred to a copyist who knew that Vincent had worked with this type of support. Schuffenecker was among the happy few who did know,” he claimed.

“As early as December 13th 1888, when both Gauguin and Vincent were still busy painting on jute, he wrote to Gauguin to let him know what he thought of jute as support — not much. Examining a freshly painted study that Gauguin had sent to Theo in Paris, Schuffenecker noticed at once the drawbacks of the support. After precipitately leaving Arles on Christmas day Gauguin went straight to Schuffenecker where he stayed for several weeks. Whilst staying at Schuffenecker's home he wrote to Vincent asking for the Sunflowers. Schuffenecker always envied Gauguin and coveted what Gauguin admired. In 1901, when he copied the London Sunflowers he owned at least four of the Arles pictures that were painted on jute, two by Gauguin as well as “L'Arlésienne” and “Memories of the Garden of Etten” by Vincent. A Sunflowers picture, copied from an authentic painting by Vincent and painted on material demonstrably used by Vincent in Arles had a good chance of being accepted as a genuine van Gogh. The cunning use of jute also makes it clear that the Tokyo Sunflowers was not an innocent copy but a deliberate forgery”, he added.

GREEN

“What remains of all the “evidence” that might lead us to believe that the Tokyo picture is an authentic work by Vincent? Nothing", said Landais.

“The colour of the background of the Tokyo Sunflowers is another nail in the coffin in the thesis proposed by the advocates of the painting. This background is midway between the yellow of the London picture that Schuffenecker copied and the blue green of the Philadelphia picture that he used to own and that, in 190l, belonged to Schuffenecker's former pupil and admirer Count Antoine de La Rochefoucauld”, he said

“Forgers do not create. They combine different elements from authentic paintings. In the Tokyo picture one notices a lack of definition and contrast. To achieve definition and contrast when both the flowers and the background are yellow is devilishly difficult. The pale green background did not help and neither did the too dark green of the stalks, which are not to be found in Vincent's subtle harmonies nor in his pallet. Schuffenecker would have needed to know how to darken a background and still preserve the contrast. He did not, unlike a certain Vincent who had undergone his apprenticeship in the gloomy straw-huts of his native land”, Landais noticed..

Page précédente 17/62
Retour Retour
Mentions légales Conditions d'utilisation Rédaction Annonceurs Plan du site
Login : Password ArtCult - Made by Adrian Darmon