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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 is not known whether Van Gogh was satisfied with the final painting, but it seems unlikely. He did not mention the work to Theo and the following January, when Gauguin asked to be given what was probably the London picture, he did not offer him this repetition but instead opted to paint a new version -- the work in Amsterdam.

Although he continued to use the schematised flower forms found in the Tokyo still life, the forms in the second repetition were mainly based on the London version, as -- for example -- comparison of the shapes of flowers 5 and 8 in the three versions demonstrates. Van Gogh also introduced several changes, which seem to indicate that he may have considered the reduction in contrast between motif and background in the Tokyo version a little too dramatic.

While he retained the greenish-yellow background, he depicted the flowers with a more contrasting orange in place of yellow, although allowance should be made for darkening. He also introduced several new colour accents, such as the light blue in flower 12 and the use of red contours for the vase and foreground. However, these latter changes can also be explained as part of the artist's effort to achieve a unity with the Philadelphia repetition: the new version could not be too out of step with this work, as both were to be displayed in the same triptych.

Van Gogh appears to have also been less than satisfied with his choice of a thick impasto throughout the Tokyo version: in the brushwork in the Amsterdam version he returned to the treatment employed in the London painting, even further developing the interplay between areas rich in impasto and those of flat brushstrokes. He contrasted the flat foreground with the impasto on the lower section of the vase, whose upper section he then painted with the same kind of flat strokes he employed to depict the petals.

Conclusion

The above discussion makes clear that Van Gogh's artistic problems with the Tokyo still life arose through the unusual com

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