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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
Leclercq

Although the provenance offers no reason to doubt that the Tokyo Sunflowers is genuine, sceptics have produced still further arguments to challenge its authenticity. The crucial factor in their misgivings has been the knowledge that the work's owner in 1901, Claude-Emile Schuffenecker, had an opportunity to produce a forgery from another version of the motif.

In June 1900 Jo van Gogh-Bonger sent eight works to Paris for a presentation at Leclercq's home. One of these was a version of the sunflowers, which arrived in a less than perfect condition and required restoration -- as indicated by Leclercq's correspondence. Initially he spoke of lining the canvas, but in early February (when the restorer had apparently just seen the painting for the first time) Leclercq informed Jo that this would be impossible. Consolidating the paint subsequently proved to be sufficient and the treatment was completed in late March 1901, allowing the work to be exhibited for two days at the above-mentioned exhibition at Bernheim Jeune.

The painting sent to Paris was number 194 on the Bonger list. De Robertis and Landais both thought that this was the London version, but in light of the restorer's judgment that lining would be impossible, it seems more likely it would have been the work now in Amsterdam. This painting has a wooden lat at the top, added by the artist, which might not have made lining completely impossible, but certainly more complicated.

Despite the still life's fragile condition, Leclercq was eager to acquire it. He could not afford the asking price, however, and once the exhibition was over he proposed an exchange, by which he would receive the still life in return for Van Gogh's Daubigny's garden, which he had recently acquired, plus an additional payment. Shortly afterwards, he even sent the canvas to Jo in order for her to judge the fairness of his suggestion. Jo, however, was unable to agree to this unusual offer, and the still life was probably returned to her in early May.

De Robertis and Landais gave the following interpretation to these facts. Given Leclercq's ardour to possess the sunflower painting and his sometimes less than transparent commercial activities, they believe the information sent to Jo was intended to deceive her. According to their theory, there was no independent restorer: Leclercq's friend Emile Schuffenecker treated the damaged work and protracted the restoration in order to gain time to produce a free copy -- the work now in Tokyo. The painter then presented his forgery at the Bernheim Jeune exhibition as an authentic Van Gogh, with the full knowledge of Leclercq.

Seen in this light Leclercq's correspondence is part of an intrigue. However, the only important factors for us are the two premises that underlie this conspiracy theory: that Schuffenecker was a forger, and that he and Leclercq were untrustworthy schemers.

Schuffenecker

The notion that Emile Schuffenecker was a forger was first expressed during the late 1920s, when every avenue was being explored in the hunt for the maker of a group of forgeries that had recently been unmasked -- the so-called “Wacker forgeries.” Schuffenecker, along with his brother Amedée, was generally viewed as a possible suspect -- although everyone admitted that they did not know the precise ins and outs of the situation. “It is [...] generally known that Schuffenecker painted pictures like Van Gogh, or copied them, or -- if you wish -- forged them,” was a typical allegation made at the time. The origin of these rumours was -- and is -- unclear, although Julius Meier-Graefe probably played a significant role in their creation. At any rate this influential German critic would declare during the court case concerning the Wacker affair that "the painter Schoeffenecker [sic] has copied many paintings by Van Gogh” and that he was “also aware” that these had sometimes been sold as real Van Goghs.

Landais and De Robertis combined these old stories with information from an unpublished manuscript by Judith Gérard-Moline, stepdaughter of music lover William Moline, whose circle of friends in the late 1880s had included Gauguin.

This manuscript dates from circa 1950 and was inspired by her anger towards Leclercq and Schuffenecker, whom she represents as untrustworthy. Apparently referring to Jo's consignment of 1900, she wrote that Leclercq had managed to get Van Gogh's works to Paris, but that he had handled them with little respect. The paintings had allegedly been damaged during the journey and for this reason he had called on Schuffenecker for assistance, who was then working at the Lycée Michelet in Vanves as a drawing teacher. Subsequently, according to Gérard-Moline, the artist treated Van Gogh's paintings as if they were studies by his students, and with Leclercq's permission he made a number of corrections, adding grey clouds to Houses at Auvers and painting out the cat in Daubigny's garden.

Where, however, lies the truth in this amalgam of accusations? Although a definitive biography of Schuffenecker has yet to be written, the facts as they are presently known suggest the following scenario. While it seems reasonably certain that his brother Amedée (who took over the major portion of Emile's collection in 1903 and subsequently made a lasting career in the art trade) at some point became involved in dubious practices, it is difficult to ascertain whether Emile can be accused of the same. Although in 1909 the artist issued a certificate of authenticity for a work which was considered to be a Van Gogh, this does not necessarily point to deliberate foul play. During this period Van Gogh's oeuvre had not been catalogued in any definitive way, and erroneous attributions were the order of the day.

Nor is it possible to confirm or deny that Schuffenecker produced “many copies” after Van Gogh, as Meier-Graefe contended. Only one such copy is known, a repetition in pastel of Vincent's Self-portrait with bandaged ear , which he must have bought early on. The “small, fragmentary repetition” after Van Gogh's Prisoners at exercise: copy after Gustave Doré, once in Amedée's collection, however, is highly suspect. The piece has since vanished and it is therefore impossible to tell whether Emile painted it or not. In conclusion, although Meier-Graefe may have been telling the truth, the facts are too few to corroborate his statement.

Thus, while Schuffenecker may have produced copies after Van Gogh, there is no evidence that he actually forged works. To date there are no known Schuffenecker forgeries -- unless one presumes a negative outcome to the current research into the authenticity of certain works traditionally attributed to Van Gogh, but which some believe to have been painted by Schuffenecker, like the Tokyo Sunflowers. Furthermore, there is a lack of documentary evidence, nor did the artist's contemporaries characterise him as fraudulent. He was occasionally described as a speculator, but this is certainly not the same as accusing him of being a forger.

Gérard-Moline's recollections are typical in this respect: she wrote down many unpleasant things about the painter, but never exposed him as a forger. Her indignation was aroused purely by his tendency to correct details in Van Gogh's works as he saw fit.

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