Vincent van Gogh's display at Les XX, 1890 explained

Vincent Van Gogh was displayed at the 1890 Les XX exhibition—an invitation-only show exclusively for members—in Brussels, Belgium. This served to demonstrate the recognition Van Gogh received from his avant-garde peers during his life. The choices of his works and their arrangements illustrated his thinking about his years of work in Provence.

His argument for their importance was rejected, and was washed away by the scandal his works provoked. The same works were again shown at the annual exhibition of the Artistes Indépendants in Paris which offered space for an expansion of the display. This was done by Theo van Gogh, Vincent's brother, as Vincent was suffering from long-lasting mental problems.

Ivy, the centerpiece of Van Gogh's arrangement, has been lost without trace since World War II. Hermann Göring is the last person photographed (by Hans Hoffmann) with this canvas while it was stored, together with other works of art confiscated from French Jewish collections, in the Jeu de Paume Galleries.

Preparation

In a letter dated November 15, 1889, Les XX organizer Octave Maus invited van Gogh to exhibit at the January 1890 show. Van Gogh accepted in a letter dated November 20, 1889, that listed the six paintings, all size 30 canvases, to be displayed:[1]

1. Tournesols (Sunflowers)

2. Tournesols (Sunflowers)

3. Le lierre (Ivy)

4. Verger en fleurs (Arles) - Flowering Orchard (Arles)

5. Champ de blé; soleil levant (Saint-Remy) - Wheat Field, Sunrise (Saint-Rémy)

6. La Vigne rouge (Mont-Major) - Red Vineyard (Mont-)

This was not the display order or arrangement that Van Gogh desired. No definitive documentation of his intentions or the actual display is known to survive. But on the back of Maus' letter, there is a pencil sketch[2] that gives some hints for the display Van Gogh proposed and for its artistic background. Other hints can be compiled from other parts of Van Gogh's correspondence. In various letters, Van Gogh indicated that his two Sunflowers were to be displayed on either side of Ivy. To the left and right of this upright triptych, he wanted to place the Flowering Orchard and the Wheat Field at Sunrise. Finally, van Gogh indicated Red Vineyard was to be hung (at the top or) underneath this arrangement.

There is now agreement that Van Gogh's exhibit can be reconstructed in the order of paintings below:

"Impressions of Provence"

The four landscapes depict traditional notions of the four seasons: flowering trees in spring, a shaded hiding place in the midst of ivy in summer, the vineyard harvest in autumn, and new wheat on the furrows in winter. In between the seasons were embedded the heraldic flowers of Provence: sunflowers, dear to the artistic and literary circles of the Félibres, the néo-provencal movement around Frédéric Mistral.

These seasonal links are set not only in subject matter, but - and from Van Gogh's point of view even more important - reinforced by the choice of colour. Each of the six paintings is dominated by one of the six primary colours (yellow, red, blue, and their complementaries orange, green, and violet). He uses yellow and orange in the two Sunflowers-versions, red in the vineyard, green in the ivy, blue in the orchard, and violet in the field. Thus, the full colour spectrum is manifested in this selection, which can consequently be read as a single entity, "a whole" (French: un tout).

Earlier in 1889, Van Gogh had already expressed his wish before returning to the North to summarise his "impressions of Provence".

Exhibition

The exhibition of Les XX opened January 18, running till February 23. Two days before the opening, Henry de Groux announced that his works would not be seen side by side with the "abominable Pot of Sunflowers by Monsieur Vincent or any other agent provocateur".[3] At the opening dinner, De Groux once again attacked Van Gogh's paintings and called him:

"an ignoramus and a charlatan. At the other end of the table Lautrec suddenly bounced up, with his arms in the air, and shouted that it was an outrage to criticize so great an artist. De Groux retorted. Tumult. Seconds were appointed. Signac announced coldly that if Lautrec were killed he would assume the quarrel himself."[4]

That same evening, Les XX expelled De Groux from their association; the next day he apologised and was allowed to resign. Thus the duel was averted, and Paul Signac was soon one of two supplementary members elected to Les XX.

One work of Van Gogh's exhibit was sold, The Red Vineyard.[5] The buyer was Anna Boch,[6] a painter and member of Les XX since its foundation and sister of Eugène Boch, who was also a painter and a friend [7] of Vincent van Gogh.

Altered exhibit at the Artistes Indépendants

The Artistes Indépendants, collaborating closely with Les XX in Brussels, were eager to present Van Gogh to the public in Paris in an even broader scale, and finally showed ten paintings in their 6th annual exhibition, March 20 through April 27, 1890:

832. Le cyprès. - The Cypres

833. Paysage montagneux en Provence. - Mountain landscape in Provence

834. Rue à Saint-Rémy. - Street in Saint-Rémy

835. Les Alpines. (!) - The Alpilles

836. Promenade à Arles. - Promenade in Arles

837. Mûrier en automne. - Mulberry tree in autumn

838. Sous-bois. - Underwoods

839. Lever de soleil en Provence. - Sunrise in Provence

840. Les Tournesols. - The Sunflowers

841. Verger d'oliviers en Provence. - Olive orchard in ProvenceEvidently, the first part of Van Gogh's exhibit (832. - 837.) was now chosen by Theo, while the remainders from Brussels were added (838. - 841.) at the end of this selection, excluding one version of the Sunflowers (and The Red Vineyard sold in Brussels).

Again, Van Gogh exhibit was the clou of the show: Gauguin, Guillaumin and other colleagues proposed to exchange works;[8] Duez sent his compliments; and Theo wrote to Vincent on April 23 that Monet had said, "your pictures were the best of all in the exhibition".[9]

Some of Van Gogh's paintings in the Artistes Indépendants show

See also

Resources

Notes

  1. Letter 614b to Maus; see also Letter 614 to Theo.
  2. Roland Dorn 1988, ill. 7
  3. Madeleine Octave-Maus, p. 100; quoted by John Rewald, p. 346
  4. Octave Maus, quoted by John Rewald, p. 346-347
  5. http://annaboch.com/theredvineyard/ More about the Red Vineyard Painting
  6. http://annaboch.com Anna Boch.com Website about the Woman that bought The Red Vineyard
  7. http://eugeneboch.com Eugene Boch friend (or even boyfriend ?) of Vincent van Gogh
  8. Letters GAC 40 from Gauguin to Van Gogh, April 1890 (?) (Paul Gauguin: 45 Letters, ed. Douglas Cooper, The Hague 1983, p. 304-311), Letter T29 from Theo to Vincent, 19 March 1890, and Letter 630 from Vincent to Theo, 1 May 1890
  9. Letter T32 from Theo to Vincent, 23 April 1890

References