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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.
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In order to perfect his “clair sur clair” effect Van Gogh seems also to have made several changes to the colour scheme, toning down the light-dark contrast between background and subject still further. While the Munich still life featured five flowers with a reddish-brown heart (currently darkened by age), he here reduces the prominence of this element.

He also painted the leaves and stalks in a light rather than dark green, and gave the background another colour, replacing the heavily whitened turquoise in the Munich still life with light yellow, a much better choice for light-on-light painting, due to its inherent light tonal value. The result was a light tone similar to the background of the London version.

In changing the background colour Van Gogh departed from his original intention of painting the series as yellow on blue. The main colours thus became “the three chromate yellows, yellow ochre and veronese green and nothing else”. He subsequently compared the work to his Paris Still life with lemons and quinces , which was also mainly yellow, but whose execution was less “bien plus simple” .

This learning to use yellow and other closely related colours was apparently a project dear to Van Gogh's heart, for in the spring of 1888 he had also attempted to master the artistic problems it entailed, producing Still life with a bottle, lemons and oranges . The challenge of course lay in making the greatest possible use of yellow and its derivatives, without losing definition of form, which theoretically required contrast.

In late November 1888 this exercise suddenly came to the forefront once again. As we know, Gauguin had ventured into the same field with his yellow still life with pumpkin and apples. Doubtlessly his companion wished to respond with a new painting in yellow, choosing his favourite motif: the sunflowers. The flowers, however, had finished blooming long before, preventing him from producing a new work from nature. Apparently this resulted in the decision to paint a free repetition after the still life now in London.

Several features suggest that in the Tokyo version Van Gogh sought an even more radical way to achieve the light-on-light effect. Abandoning the London picture's light-yellow background, with its barely perceptible top layer of greenish-yellow, he chose instead a more saturated form of the same greenish-yellow, further eliminating the contrast with the bouquet. Probably for the same reason he also made the overblown flowers somewhat lighter than in the London work: the orange and greenish-yellow colours seem to have been deliberately toned down by the application of thin layers of dull orange-brown paint on top. Although this reduced contrast to a minimum, Van Gogh apparently wished to retain it to some degree, as he used dark green for the stalks and the leaves, elements which in the London piece are more yellow-green in colour.

In addition to these moves towards the objective of achieving a radical light-on-light effect, the jute support forced the artist to find new ways of obtaining a varied texture in the paint surface -- his second challenge. While the brushstroke used for the flowers and background is virtually identical to that employed in the London painting, Van Gogh was unable to repeat the thinly painted areas in the pot and foreground without encountering problems. Unlike Gauguin, he was apparently less willing to exploit the texture of the jute itself, which would inevitably dominate in areas where the paint was thinly applied (in other works painted on this support and where the texture of the canvas is allowed to play a role, such as in Vincent's chair, it is only in marginal passages).

The artist's only alternative was to fill in the corrugated surface of the fabric with a thick layer of paint, and for this he chose rich, pronounced brushstrokes. He could have applied the paint layer without leaving a mark -- as he had done, for example, in the shawl around the woman in his Novel reader - but evidently he considered this effect too monotonous when applied on a larger scale. For the sake of variety he used long, horizontal strokes for the foreground and vase -- which differed from those employed in other areas of the work, treated more as flat planes. Further, he chose to echo this rich impasto in the petals, whereas in the London painting he had treated these as flat planes.

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