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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 INVENTORY

Landais said that there are four size 30 Sunflowers mentioned in the inventory of Vincent's work (the so called “A.B." or “Bonger-list") drawn up by Andries Bonger, Emile Bernard and Julien Tanguy at the end of 1890, beginning of 189l, after Theo's internment. They have the numbers 94, 119, 194 and 195 and evidently correspond to the four Vincent painted. Van Tilborgh/Hendriks, playing the same game of musical chairs as Roland Dorn before them, write that “the four still lifes in Bonger's inventory can be identified as follows: 94, as already stated, is the painting now in Munich ; 119 is the version in Philadelphia or Tokyo; 194 is probably the still life now in Amsterdam ; and 195 either the painting in Tokyo or the Philadelphia version.” The London version painted by Vincent and sent to Theo is the one left standing, whilst the Tokyo picture is given the pick of two chairs, 119 or 195.

“There is no need for playing musical chairs. Mastermind is safer. Documentary evidence reveals the true identity of Vincent's four size 30 Sunflowers in the Bonger inventory. Once the order in which the four pictures were painted is clear, everything falls into place. Numerous references tie the Amsterdam picture to the Munich picture. The London and the Philadelphia pictures share flowers painted over the already finished background. They form a “calm” couple. The sweetness, both in line and tone, of the two repetitions — "répétition calmes" (574), "toiles calmes pas inférieures à d'autres" (580) — help us understand what the artistic debate between Vincent and Gauguin was about. By aiming for douceur, sweetness and lightness, Vincent not only made a concession to his friend but he also pursued a careful public relations strategy. Gauguin had told him that he considered his Sunflowers better than Monet's. Gauguin's “complete crush on the Sunflowers” and the fact that Gauguin had pinned one of Vincent's lithographs on the wall of his Paris studio, led Vincent to suggest the exchange of the two Sunflowers painting and the Berceuse, which Gauguin then would hang as a triptych. The triptych would be seen by the numerous Paris artists and critics who admired Gauguin and who went to his studio. Gauguin was bound to sing the triptych's praises and thus advance Vincent's reputation,” he noted.

“The planned exchange of paintings never took place. The “true” triptych, which Vincent imagined that would be shown at Gauguin's place (see Vincent's sketch in letter 592 for the arrangement), in which the Berceuse is flanked by the Philadelphia and the London pictures has never been publicly exhibited. The three pictures have also not been placed side by side in the illustrations of a book (not even by happenstance),” he added.

“The two Sunflowers painting and the Berceuse made for Gauguin, which Vincent sent as loose canvases (not mounted on a stretcher) at the end of April 1889, were kept together for the next two years. They are all three next to one another in the Bonger inventory of 1891. The London picture has number 194, the Philadelphia picture 195 and the Berceuse 196. The framed Amsterdam original, which Vincent would not let Gauguin have, is number 119 and the framed Munich picture 94. They had been exhibited in different locations and were not side by side when the Bonger inventory was drawn up”, he indicated.

“During the many years that Johanna van Gogh was in charge of the family collection, neither the Amsterdam nor the Philadelphia pictures were not mentioned in any of her lists of paintings that she sent to dealers, collectors and exhibitions. The Amsterdam picture that Theo had given pride of place in his apartment — "dans notre salle à manger contre la cheminée. Il fait l'effet d'un morceau d'étoffe brodé de satin et d'or, c'est magnifique" (letter T.12) — always remained with the family and was not for sale. The Philadelphia picture stayed in Paris, when the family collection, including the Munich, the Amsterdam and the London Sunflowers, was shipped to the Netherlands in the spring 1891. The Philadelphia picture was part of a consignment of twenty paintings — all with Bonger numbers — that was left with the art dealer Julien Tanguy. In 1892 Tanguy lent it to the show organised by Emile Bernard at the gallery owned by Le Barc de Boutteville (cat. #12 Soleils). Reviewing the exhibition in La Revue Indépendante, Camille Mauclair mentions the bunch “of radiant sunflowers in bloom” which “astonish and charm par leur douceur.” The rough Tokyo picture with its somewhat faded flowers would not have merited this lavish compliment. Tanguy died without selling the Philadelphia Sunflowers which he had not wanted to let go for less than 600 francs. Immediately after his death in February 1894, Emile Schuffenecker approached Tanguy's widow and (by letter) Johanna van Gogh. He pestered them into selling him the picture for half price. Although he had told Johanna that he would not part with it, two years later the Philadelphia picture turned up with his favourite dealer Ambroise Vollard, who sold it to Schuffenecker's patron and pupil Count Antoine de la Rochefoucauld”, Landais went on to say.

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