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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
Nevertheless, the 1889 date has proven incorrect. As indicated above, the painting was executed on jute from the 20-metre roll Van Gogh and Gauguin used in November-December 1888. As Lister, Peres and Fiedler have shown in their reconstruction of the artists' output -- based on the individual alignment of all their works within the roll -- the 20 metres must have been depleted by the end of December, when Gauguin left Arles.

This suggests the Tokyo still life should instead be dated to some time in the last two months of 1888. Moreover, the composition of the priming layer allows us to date the work with still more precision. If this layer does indeed prove to consist of both barium sulphate and lead and/or zinc white, it would be reasonable to assume that the still life was painted in late November, when the two artists replaced the first type of primer with the second. Should it turn out that only a white oil ground is present, this would still situate the painting to some time between this date and the end of December.

Furthermore, the picture seems to have formed part of a specific artistic dialogue between Gauguin and Van Gogh, as suggested, for example, in a later account by the former concerning his activities in Arles. In 1902, when Gauguin felt André Fontainas had given too much credit to Van Gogh in a review, the artist sought to correct his claims by informing the critic that in fact the Dutch painter had learned much of what he knew from him, Gauguin: “Van Gogh, influencé par les recherches néo-impressionnistes procédait toujours par grandes oppositions de ton sur une complémentaire jaune, sur violet, etc. Tandis, que plus tard, d'après mes conseils et mon enseignement, il procéda tout autrement. Il fit des soleils jaunes sur fond jaune, etc., apprit l'orchestration d'un ton pur tous les dérivés de ce ton. »

This anecdote has always been dismissed as Gauguin's attempt to discredit his former painting companion, as neither the still life in London nor the later repetitions were thought to have been painted during Gauguin's sojourn in Arles.

However, if Van Gogh did indeed produce the Tokyo version in this period, it seems reasonable to assume that the reference to “soleils jaunes sur fond jaune” was not an allusion to the painting now in London but rather to the Tokyo version.

Although it is difficult to determine if Gauguin actually gave Van Gogh advice regarding the Tokyo still life, this would seem plausible. He was certainly occupied with « l'orchestration d'un ton pur tous les dérivés de ce ton » during his time in Arles: it is known that in late November he began « une grande nature morte de potiron orangé et des pommes et du linge blanc sur fond et avant plan jaune ».

Given that Van Gogh in his subsequent letter reported a great liking for this, now lost “still life with yellow fore- and background”, it is conceivable that he produced the Tokyo Sunflowers in response.

This inferred artistic dialogue also finds a parallel in the portraits the two artists made of each other in late November/early December. In his Portrait of Paul Gauguin Van Gogh represented his companion at work in front of a predominantly yellow painting, which has been identified on the basis of the spherical form to the left on the canvas as the still life with pumpkins.

Shortly afterwards Gauguin responded with his Portrait of Vincent van Gogh painting sunflowers, whose conception in turn may have been inspired by Vincent's painting of the Tokyo still life. The highly stylised flowers provide grounds to support this theory, as they could not have been painted from life and appear to be based on Van Gogh's schematised flowers in the Tokyo work: their green hearts are represented as circles in the same unrealistic fashion. On the grounds of all this evidence, it may be conjectured that the Tokyo still life was painted in the last week of November, or during the first days in December 1888, between Gauguin's pumpkin still life and his Portrait of Vincent van Gogh painting sunflowers.

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