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

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
Provenance

Although the correspondence cannot therefore help us to solve the problem of the painting's authenticity, the provenance may provide an indication. If it could be proven that the work came from Theo's estate, the case for considering the painting a forgery would, of course, be nullified. What is required is an examination of the provenance of all five pieces.

The works in Munich, London and Amsterdam are irrefutably from the family collection. Johanna van Gogh-Bonger sold the first to Hugo von Tschudi in 1905; the second to the Tate Gallery in London in 1924. Following this second sale, only the Amsterdam canvas remained in the family's possession. It is not known if the painting in Philadelphia was among the works Jo administered. It is first documented in 1896, when the Paris art dealer Ambroise Vollard sold it as “soleils dans un pot” to Comte Antoine de la Rochefoucauld on 21 December for 400 francs.

Opinions differ regarding the provenance of the Tokyo version. However, opponents and supporters of the work's authenticity all agree that in the spring of 1901 it was included in the Van Gogh exhibition at the gallery of the Paris art dealers Bernheim Jeune, under the title Tournesols sur fond vert très pale. The painting came from the collection of artist Claude-Emile Schuffenecker, whom the exhibition's organiser -- art critic, man of letters and Schuffenecker's friend, Julien Leclercq -- had already described as its owner in a letter dated 16 February 1901.

For many years the history of the work before 1901 was a mystery. In 1988, however, Walter Feilchenfeldt pointed to a family document from which it could be inferred that Schuffenecker had acquired his still life from Jo van Gogh-Bonger in 1894. In March of that year she accepted his offer of 300 francs “pour les fleurs” -- a work she had left at the shop of the recently deceased Père Tanguy. We know that this was in fact a painting of sunflowers thanks to a letter from Tanguy's widow to Andries Bonger, in which she reports that “Monsieur Chouffenecker […] desirerait avoir un tableaux de Mr Vincent c'est le soleil.”

This interpretation of the evidence, however, built as it is upon the knowledge that Schuffenecker owned the still life in 1901, has also become a subject of debate as a result of the controversy surrounding the authenticity of the Tokyo still life.

Landais and others have claimed that the still life purchased by Schuffenecker in 1894 was not the painting now in Tokyo, but the Philadelphia canvas, which they contend the artist sold on to Vollard within two and a half years. Naturally, this theory is intimately connected to their refusal to believe in the Japanese painting's authenticity, for if the Tokyo work is a fake, the piece sold in 1894 must have been another version of the sunflowers. And this could only be the Philadelphia painting, as there is no other version whose earliest history is still unknown.

However, if we consider only the evidence of the provenance, the latter theory appears far more speculative than the former. For while it cannot be demonstrated that Schuffenecker actually owned the Philadelphia still life, we can be certain that this was the case with the Tokyo version. Landais's notion could only gain in plausibility if other paintings could be discovered that the artist sold on soon after acquiring them. To date, however, no such examples have been found.

Four or five versions?

In addition to the matter of this individual work's provenance, we should also consider numbers. How many versions are assignable shortly after Vincent's death? Did a fifth version already exist?

Critics of the Tokyo painting believe not, basing their stance on the catalogue of works in Theo's collection (‘Catalogue des oeuvres de Vincent van Gogh'), probably compiled at the end of 1890 by his brother-in-law, Andries Bonger. This lists only four large format sunflower still lifes from Arles, each described as “Tourne-sol (30)” and given the numbers 94, 119, 194 and 195. Ninety-four is definitely the painting now in Munich, while 194 probably refers to the Amsterdam version, as explained below. The other two numbers in the Bonger list do not immediately reveal their identity, meaning that this document cannot be used to prove the proposition that the Tokyo version was not yet documented in this period.

Unless one agrees with the opinion that a fifth version did not exist at the time the presence of four rather than five versions of the sunflower motif in the Van Gogh family collection at this time can be explained if one painting had already left, either through exchange or as a gift. Here, the work in Philadelphia is the only possible candidate, owing to its unknown provenance. The recipient may have been Gauguin, for Vincent had promised him repetitions of the sunflower pictures.
However, nothing in Van Gogh's correspondence suggests that he actually fulfilled this offer. The artist always thought in terms of an exchange, not a gift . Gauguin would have to reciprocate with “deux tableaux de lui pas mediocres mais mieux que médiocres,” as he informed Theo in early February 1889. Vincent developed his proposal by almost immediately also offering Gauguin a version of La berceuse, indicating that he would rather have been represented in his friend's collection with the recently created triptych than the two repetitions of the sunflower still lifes from the spare bedroom.

Although Gauguin's response to this proposed three-work exchange is not known, the fact that Van Gogh was still considering it in May indicates that nothing had yet been settled. Vincent then informed Theo that he should give Gauguin a version of La berceuse, but, he wrote, if his former companion “veut des tournesols ce n'est qu'absolument comme de juste qu'il te donne en échange quelque chôse que tu aimes autant”. In other words, Van Gogh was ready to compromise by giving Gauguin the central work from his triptych, although he apparently expected the side panels to follow later through an exchange, since he knew his friend was keen on the sunflower still life with a yellow background.

Van Gogh, however, seems to have misjudged the situation. Having been informed by Theo of the gift, Gauguin mentions only La berceuse in his reply from Pont-Aven: “Gardez le tableau à ma disposition” . It was not until 1894, long after the Van Gogh brothers had died, that he claimed the promised work from Theo's widow, without making any mention of the still lifes with sunflowers.

Although the correspondence in no way intimates that Gauguin received one of the still lifes, the artist himself suggested in January 1894 that he had one of the versions with a yellow background in his studio. In a highly literary piece on Van Gogh, he wrote that his « chambre jaune » contained « des fleurs de soleil, aux yeux pourpres, [...] sur un fond jaune, [...] dans un pot jaune, sur une table jaune. Dans un coin du tableau, la signature du peintre: Vincent. » This passage makes it clear, however, that Gauguin was not describing his studio as it actually was, but rather a form of fiction. The painting in Tokyo is not signed, while the other two works with a yellow background – the signed versions in Amsterdam and London – were still in the possession of Jo.

Page précédente 189/662
Retour Retour
Mentions légales Conditions d'utilisation Rédaction Annonceurs Plan du site
Login : Password ArtCult - Made by Adrian Darmon