Sunflowers of Vincent van Gogh ?
Still Life: Vase with Fourteen Sunflowers, 1889, 100.5 x 76.5 cm, oil on
canvas
(Tokyo, Seiji Togo Yasuda Memorial Museum of Modern Art)
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Sold by Christie's in 1987 for 22 million to a Japanese buyer. Van Gogh had a great liking for Japanese
woodcuts by Hiroshige AMSTERDAM--An international commission has been established to investigate allegations that the
Yasuda "Sunflowers," one of Vincent Van Gogh's most important paintings, is a fake.
The Sunday Times revealed last month that there is growing conviction in the art world that the painting is a copy of
a similar painting by an embittered French art teacher. The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, which first loftily dismissed
the charges as unworthy of comment, announced that it is now taking the allegations so seriously that only a panel of
independent experts can rule on them. If it finds the work is a fake, up to 45 other paintings attributed to the artist
since his death in 1890 will come under scrutiny.
The "Sunflowers" became the world's most expensive painting when it was sold at Christie's 10 years ago for 24.75
million pounds to the Yasuda Fire and Marine Insurance Company of Japan.
London's National Gallery has been invited to join the commission, due to start work early next year, because it owns
the unchallenged original study of sunflowers painted from life in August 1888, of which the Yasuda Sunflowers is
supposed to be a copy made by Van Gogh in January 1889. Geraldine Norman, an art expert who studied the background of the
sunflower series, believes the Yasuda work was faked by Claude Emile Schuffenecker, a turn of the century painter and
friend of Van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, for whose house the original Sunflowers was intended.
The Van Gogh Museum has appointed two senior officials to lead the investigation: Sjraar van Heugten, curator of
paintings and drawings, and Louis van Tilborgh, an archivist. (Excerpts from an article in The London Times, by John
Harlow, November 23, 1997)
My opinion:- I see no reason whatsoever for Gauguin to copy Van Gogh, why? he had a very
different stance on what to paint and how to paint it. The two of them argued so much about painting Vincent cut off part
of his ear. Van Gogh had never sold a painting so there was no money to be gained. Why would Gauguin bother to paint such
an accurate copy when the spirit of the painting would be suffice, as in my copie of
Vincent.
Vincent Van Gogh's painting of sunflowers sold by Christie's in March 1987 for a record
price of US $ 39,921 millions to Japanese insurance magnate Yasuo Goto might simply be a fake, following claims
made by two researchers in July 1997.
The sale of this now challenged work in London caused sensation on the art market ten
years ago but in 1993 Antonio de Robertis, an Italian researcher, claimed that it was a copy produced by the French
painter Emil Schuffenecker, a master of the Pont Aven School who had been a close friend of Van Gogh. However, nobody
wanted to believe de Robertis who was then considered as a little known researcher with no capacity to cope with top
experts. But he still had solid arguments to develop. Meanwhile, several dozens of Van Gogh's works have been classified
as fakes or copies by de Robertis and other researchers and his claims have now been strongly supported, notably by
Benoit Landais, a French writer who sifted through the artist's letters to trace back all listed works.
The painting of sunflowers sold in London on March 30th 1987 is a weak copy of the work
now exhibited by the National Gallery there, according to Benoit Landais who has pinpointed at least 12 flagrant mistakes
in Mr Goto's acquisition. In his letters sent to his brother Tho, Van Gogh only referred to two sunflowers paintings,
with 14 flowers each, produced in 1888. He first painted a canvas with 12 flowers and then another one with 14 and
duplicated both. Therefore, there are only two
14 sunflowers paintings mentioned in his letters, one now in London and the second in
Amsterdam. There is thus no proof of a third canvas. The one sold in London belonged to Schuffenecker and his brother
Amde who have been strongly suspected of having produced copies of Van Gogh's works. But when put on sale by Christie's
the catalogue mentioned that it originated from the artist's family. Now, if the painting comes to be formally
considered as a fake, Mr Goto could sue Christie's for having carried out a fraudulent sale. This would result in a long
judicial battle with enormous financial consequences for the auction house if it were to lose the case. One year after
the 1987 sale, some researchers challenged the provenance mentioned in the Christie's catalogue and supported the
Schuffenecker version and also tentatively thought of the possibility of a gift from Johanna Van Gogh to the Pont Aven
artist. However, the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam did not come up with any document sustaining such provenance. It is
still possible that Schuffenecker was in possession of a painting of sunflowers by Van Gogh but it might well be a
version of the 12 sunflowers instead of the 14.
The Van Gogh Museum would be in a difficult position to act as an arbitrator in the case
since Mr Goto, so much pleased with his acquisition, offered the institution some US $ 20 millions to help build a new
extension to its existing building. So far the Museum has stressed that the painting sold to Mr Goto was genuine but it
might well find itself in a fragile position, firstly following the pending dispute over some 100 dubious Van Gogh works
and secondly , the magnate's gift might be considered as a bribe by its detractors. For a long time, the Museum was
regarded as the sole authority regarding Van Gogh's paintings but with the catalogue raisonn and Mr Goto's piece being
challenged it now faces the dire prospect of having to share its prerogatives with those nasty researchers or at least
other specialists. Now, Mr de Robertis and Mr Landais must prove on their side that they have enough knowledge of Van
Gogh's works to stake their claims because it would be rather childish to believe that the artist's letters to his
brother Theo constitute the only element enabling to determine whether a painting is genuine or not. It would be utterly
ridiculous to claim that Van Gogh listed all his paintings in the letters sent to his brother. In addition, he travelled
a lot, firstly in Belgium, then in England (his London period is not so much documented), in Paris, in Brittany and in
Arles and its region.
As a result, it was probable that he forgot to inform his brother about what he did once in
a while. Most of his works were recovered by his family after his death but there were many others which had been lost or
given away and it is again hard to imagine that Van Gogh referred in these letters to everything, studies, drawings and
paintings, he was producing. Only a close scientific examination of Mr Goto's painting will help give a definite answer
regarding the authenticity of this work because it now cannot be sold back as a result of the suspicion surrounding it.
All the more, there are some collectors who have found in the past 20 years several so-called lost works by Van Gogh in
flea markets, fairs and other places in France, Britain and Belgium. Most of the time, the Amsterdam museum rejected
these as fakes without giving any real close attention to them. Then, it may well be that there are some genuine pieces
among those pieces rejected abruptly by the museum. This at least tends to prove that the Van Gogh controversies are
surely going to poison the art market for quite a time.
Sunflowers by Douglas Carpenter, oil on canvas, 16 x 20
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