- philip silbernberg Offline
- Berichten: 304
- Lid geworden op: 01 sep 2008, 21:06
Re: The sad story about modern Vincent van Gogh expertise
Bericht door philip silbernberg »Something rotten in the State of Holland :
The awkward and completely unscientific report of Jan Van Gelder from 1958 , which was the basis
of the pointless falsification of the honest painting the Glaneuse, nr. 23 from the first Official Oeuvrecatalog of the paintings of Vinccent van Gogh.
For the sake of the reader I will now show this report in the English language so that everybody outside this tiny country can verify the content of this expertise :
The painting with a woman turned to the right in a sloping cornfield measures r4, 8 x 32,3 cm is painted on canvas and afterwards glued on cardboard. It comes from the art-dealer de Vries in Arnhem ( Steenstraat 109 ) and was described as an authentic work of Vincent van Gogh by J.B.de la Faille and W.van Beselaere. The piece was also provided with an expertise of Albert Plasschaert, artcritic. W. van Beselaere situates the painting in the so called Drente-period, de la Faille earlier. The painting is signed down under on the right side " Vincent ". After careful study I am convinced that this work cannot be of the hand of Vincent .
The colour scheme is completely different and also
the touch differs from the early works we know from the Hague, Brabant or Drente. I don,t know any painting to match directly with this one ; neither could I find a name of a painter, nor could I find an example of Millet ( etching or painting ). I thought a moment of Van Rappard or a Belgian painter, but more is to say about a dating after 1890 and then by one of the many painters from the Hague-, Laren - or Gelderland- school. I think here of painters like Van Ingen, Van der Weele etc. Against Van Gogh speaks in fact every touch and also the unplastical form of the allongated woman.
The lighter colour scheme hardly appears befoe 1890 :in general this is heavier, darker. After 1895 though a lighter palet becomes more normal under the influence of for example the pointillists. One only thinks of the paintings of Van looy or P.Rink and many others. If we accept that we have to do with a painter, working in the manner of the Hague-school ten we have to date the productiondate even around 1900 or 1905. A date of this kind is in my opinion not impossible for this painting, but when this assumption is correct, Van Gogh cannot be the maker. A technical
research of for example Prof. Froentjens could determine if the paint of the signature has the same consistence as the rest of the paint.
Is there a difference, what I presume,then the most probable assumption is that a scetch of a painter from around 1905 , later, around 1910 when the work of Van Gogh became wellknown, was provided with a false signature.
In general the early paintings are not signed; the signature differs from the signature on the few signed paintings from the Dutch period, but corresponds most with the writing of Vincent from the Etten- period ( April- December 1881 ).
So it is most probable that a drawing, known by reproduction and photograph ( for example 24 drawings from the "Dutch period " , collection Hidde Nyland 1907 ) has been chosen as an example for this signature.
I am sorry that the result of my research is negative, in other words surely no V.van Gogh;
another painter who could have made this little painting is not known by me.
Jan Van Gelder
In the next contribution I will give an objective but critical analysis of this report.
Philip Silbernberg
The awkward and completely unscientific report of Jan Van Gelder from 1958 , which was the basis
of the pointless falsification of the honest painting the Glaneuse, nr. 23 from the first Official Oeuvrecatalog of the paintings of Vinccent van Gogh.
For the sake of the reader I will now show this report in the English language so that everybody outside this tiny country can verify the content of this expertise :
The painting with a woman turned to the right in a sloping cornfield measures r4, 8 x 32,3 cm is painted on canvas and afterwards glued on cardboard. It comes from the art-dealer de Vries in Arnhem ( Steenstraat 109 ) and was described as an authentic work of Vincent van Gogh by J.B.de la Faille and W.van Beselaere. The piece was also provided with an expertise of Albert Plasschaert, artcritic. W. van Beselaere situates the painting in the so called Drente-period, de la Faille earlier. The painting is signed down under on the right side " Vincent ". After careful study I am convinced that this work cannot be of the hand of Vincent .
The colour scheme is completely different and also
the touch differs from the early works we know from the Hague, Brabant or Drente. I don,t know any painting to match directly with this one ; neither could I find a name of a painter, nor could I find an example of Millet ( etching or painting ). I thought a moment of Van Rappard or a Belgian painter, but more is to say about a dating after 1890 and then by one of the many painters from the Hague-, Laren - or Gelderland- school. I think here of painters like Van Ingen, Van der Weele etc. Against Van Gogh speaks in fact every touch and also the unplastical form of the allongated woman.
The lighter colour scheme hardly appears befoe 1890 :in general this is heavier, darker. After 1895 though a lighter palet becomes more normal under the influence of for example the pointillists. One only thinks of the paintings of Van looy or P.Rink and many others. If we accept that we have to do with a painter, working in the manner of the Hague-school ten we have to date the productiondate even around 1900 or 1905. A date of this kind is in my opinion not impossible for this painting, but when this assumption is correct, Van Gogh cannot be the maker. A technical
research of for example Prof. Froentjens could determine if the paint of the signature has the same consistence as the rest of the paint.
Is there a difference, what I presume,then the most probable assumption is that a scetch of a painter from around 1905 , later, around 1910 when the work of Van Gogh became wellknown, was provided with a false signature.
In general the early paintings are not signed; the signature differs from the signature on the few signed paintings from the Dutch period, but corresponds most with the writing of Vincent from the Etten- period ( April- December 1881 ).
So it is most probable that a drawing, known by reproduction and photograph ( for example 24 drawings from the "Dutch period " , collection Hidde Nyland 1907 ) has been chosen as an example for this signature.
I am sorry that the result of my research is negative, in other words surely no V.van Gogh;
another painter who could have made this little painting is not known by me.
Jan Van Gelder
In the next contribution I will give an objective but critical analysis of this report.
Philip Silbernberg