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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
“Van Tilborgh/Hendriks claim (as does the exhibition catalogue) that the London picture is the original because they consider it a less stylised version than the Amsterdam picture. A careful examination of the two paintings shows that the London version is more stylised. Comparing any flower in the two paintings, one notices that in the Amsterdam version Vincent sticks close to nature, whilst in the London version the treatment is freer — note the rhythm in the petals,” he added.

"Van Tilborgh/Hendriks point out that in the Amsterdam painting “Van Gogh returned to the use of charcoal to redefine certain contours at a later stage of painting.”

“This going back is a sign of hesitation which one expects to find in a first version rather than in a replica done by the same artist”, Landais stressed.

“Vincent added a wooden slat to the stretcher of the Amsterdam original. Van Tilborgh/Hendriks confirm this: “In the case of the Amsterdam work, Van Gogh enlarged the picture area by painting directly onto the wooden lat affixed to the top side of the stretcher.” Before hanging his two size 30 Sunflowers in Gauguin's room — the 14 Sunflowers on a yellow background and the 12 Sunflowers on green background—Vincent made a frame consisting of simple rods, which he nailed to the stretcher. When, at the end of April 1889, he sent the painting (as a gift) to Theo it was still on the stretcher surrounded by the four rods. Vincent simultaneously sent the repetition (intended for Gauguin). The repetition was not on a stretcher but loose. This can be deduced from Vincent's comment that he considered the Sunflowers worthy of being put on a stretcher (letter 588) and from Theo's comment "Pour le tournesol, je laisse le petit bord de bois qui est autour " letter T. 12). As the August version of 14 Sunflowers was sent to Theo on a stretcher, and as the repetition was sent loose, it was the Amsterdam work that Vincent painted in August 1888. Consequently the London picture is the January repetition. The physical evidence provided by the wooden slat affixed to the stretcher is conclusive”, Landais noted.

“ Vincent added the wooden slat because he needed more space at the top of the painting. He had miscalculated. To an experienced artist like him, this could happen when painting an original, not when doing a copy”, he suggested.

“The Amsterdam 14 Sunflowers was painted in August 1888. The London 14 Sunflowers — a copy, by Vincent, of the Amsterdam picture — was painted in January 1889. As the Tokyo 14 Sunflowers is a copy of the London picture, the Tokyo copy was not painted in December 1888”, he claimed.

NO COPY BEFORE MID-JANUARY 1889

Unambiguous references in letters by both artists confirm that there were only two size 30 Sunflowers paintings when Gauguin left Arles on Christmas 1888, Landais wrote.

“During the time Gauguin stayed in Arles, it would have been impossible for Vincent to copy the original 14 Sunflowers hanging in Gauguin's room without his colleague being aware of this. If after Gauguin's departure both artists had no knowledge of a copy of the 14 Sunflowers, there was no such copy”, he claimed.

“In early January 1889 Gauguin asked Vincent for “your Sunflowers on yellow background” (referring to one painting) and indirectly confirmed that he knew of only one such painting by saying he considered them as “UNE page parfaite d'un style essentiellement Vincent.” (“one perfect page”, not two),” he noted.

He added: “In his answer, on January 22/23 1889, Vincent refers six times to one painting, thus excluding the existence of a copy. “You talk to me in your letter about ONE of my paintings, THE SUNFLOWERS ON YELLOW BACKGROUND, to tell me that you would like to have IT […] after what has happened it is my intention to categorically contest your right to THE picture in question. But as I approve of your intelligence in choosing THIS picture, I will make an effort in order to paint two exactly alike. In that case it would definitely be possible to come to an amiable arrangement which would allow you to have yours (LA VÔTRE) all the same.” By his wording Vincent indicates his intention to do an identical copy of the original for his friend. He knows that there is no previous copy and he knows that Gauguin knows it.”

On the same day Vincent wrote to Theo: “I said that I should not like to return (to the Goupils) with too innocent a painting. But if you like, you can exhibit there THE TWO PICTURES OF SUNFLOWERS. Gauguin would be pleased to have ONE OF THEM, and I should like to do Gauguin a real favour. So if he wants ONE OF THESE TWO canvases, all right, I will do ONE OF THE TWO over again, whichever he likes.” (letter 573).

“On January 22nd or 23rd Vincent had two size 30 Sunflowers, not one less and not one more,” Landais stated.

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