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Benoit Landais response to the report published on behalf of the Van Gogh Museum
01 March 2002



Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
THE DATE OF THE AMSTERDAM PICTURE

“According to conventional opinion, Vincent's original 14 Sunflowers, painted in August 1888, is the London picture and the ”repetition”, made in January 1889, is the Amsterdam picture. Conventional opinion is wrong”, Landais said.

“The Amsterdam picture is the original, the London picture the repetition:
— The background of the picture “with 14 Sunflowers” that Vincent painted in August 1888 is “yellow green”. In his letter 528 (circa 27 August 1888) he writes: “The Sunflowers are getting on, there is a new bunch of 14 flowers on yellow green (“jaune vert”) ... size 30 canvas..."

” The background of the London picture is yellow, whereas the background of the Amsterdam picture is “yellow green”. In talking about a painting it is customary to refer to a background by its dominant colour. This explains why Vincent, Gauguin and many writers subsequently call the “yellow green” background of the Amsterdam picture “yellow”. For Gauguin the feature that distinguished the two size 30 Sunflowers decorating his room was not the number of flowers depicted but the very different backgrounds, one yellow, the other green. One cannot disregard Vincent's own description of the background of his 14 Sunflowers by insisting that it was “ just once” that he described it as “jaune vert”. He, indeed, “just once”, took the pain to give a precise characterisation of the background. That was when he described it to his brother. In the first draft of a letter, which he did not send, he wrote “jaune”. In the letter he did send, he corrected to “jaune vert”. When first describing a new picture to his art dealer-brother, Vincent usually made a point of giving precise descriptions of the colours he used. For later identification “jaune” was sufficient. The only candidate for the painting described as having a “jaune vert” background is the Amsterdam picture”, Landais suggested.

“The 14 Sunflowers were in Gauguin's room. When, at the end of December, Gauguin did the portrait of Vincent as the Painter of the Sunflowers, he put a blue heart into the highest flower of the bunch. He borrowed the unexpected colour from one of the flowers in the Amsterdam painting. It has been argued that the “blue heart” in the Amsterdam was a sign of the stylisation typical for second versions. This particular blue heart is indeed a stylisation: it derives from the blue hearts in Vincent's Five Sunflowers on royal blue background painted earlier in August 88,” Landais stated.

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