

Van Gogh forgery hangs in YUAG
By C.V. Swift
Oscar Wilde once declared that "All bad art is sincere." If Wilde was
right, then the Yale University Art Gallery's permanent collection may have
just taken another small step towards lasting greatness. But before adopting
Wilde's epigram as a guiding philosophy, the YUAG might have paused remember
that the divine Oscar spent a good many of his earthly years in prison. Indeed,
as revelations of forgery and fraud emerge from the offices of 1111 Chapel St.,
the YUAG seems poised to take a giant leap into the all too sincere world of
retribution.
The scandal began yesterday afternoon when Mark Aronson, chief conservator of
the YUAG, offered his resignation to the Gallery's director, Susan Vogel.
Behind Aronson's resignation is the discovery that, after years of speculation
and study, the Yale History of Art department has finally determined YUAG's
prize possession, the 1888 Vincent van Gogh masterpiece "The Night
Café," to be forgery--a fact that Aronson had been concealing for
years.
"I accept complete resonsibility for this whole affair," Aronson, who claims
to have been, until yesterday, the sole living guardian of the painting's
secret history, said. "Neither Yale or the YUAG should be taken to task."
President Richard Levin, GRD '74, was not available for comment, but Dean
Richard Brodhead, BR '68, GRD '72, expressed regret: "Personally, I'm very
disappointed. Officially, however, I can only confirm that the University had
no hand in this cover-up. Financially and administratively, the YUAG is
entirely self-sufficient."
When money doesn't talk
Whether the YUAG was aware its version of "The Night Café" was a
fake when it acquired it in 1903 is unknown. But according to Aronson, at least
two generations of conservators prior to his tenure had kept the forgery under
wraps, mainly for the purpose of financial security. "I had been warned of the
devastating effect [the revelation of the true status of "The Night
Café"] would have on the Gallery's economy by my predecessor as soon as
I was hired for the job," Aronson said. "Anyone can see that it was in the best
interest of the Gallery to have it be believed to be authentic.... I came to
see my job as similar to maintaining belief in Santa Claus: if it doesn't hurt
anyone, and benefits so many, why reveal it?"
When asked what "benefits" the public might receive from looking a forgery
instead of the work of a great master, Aronson replied: "It's not the
public that I mean. It's the gallery. "The Night Café" has brought money
to the YUAG in a time when funding for museums is at a record low." One need
only look at the near-empty collection boxes in the Gallery's foyer to see that
how pressing a problem funding is for the YUAG at the current time. And with
plans in the works to build a new space for display and storage of the
collection [place TK], many employees at the YUAG are feeling the belt tighten;
with the Khan building in need of repairs and rewiring, the staff has not
received a substantial pay-raise in the past two years. "You can't work here
without feeling financial constraint, both personal and professional," Aronson
said in his defense. Even Vogel agreed: "Working here is becoming more and more
a labor of love," she said.
A "must-have"
"The Night Café" has been the single largest source of revenue
for the YUAG since its acquisition. Art aficionados and even casual art-lovers
from all over the globe star New Haven on their traveling itinerary, in part
because it is home to the world-famous painting. The museum's holdings are also
a draw for potential History of Art majors considering Yale. "Although I'm
encouraging a more personalised college environment for Paul [her son and
prospective Yale student], you just can't overlook this great collection,"
Artie Heimelwitz of South Orange, New Jersey said outside the YUAG on
Wednesday. Heimewitz was one of the approximately 10,943 out-of-town visitors
to the museum so far this year.
Naturally, when visitors come, they fill the Gallery's coffers. "I would guess
that over three-fourths of our annual revenue here [in the Museum Shop] comes
from foreign visitors," said Howard el-Yasin, Museum Shop director. "They come
with their fat wallets and spend, spend, spend."
Reproduction rights to "The Night Café" have also increased the cash
flow into the Gallery. "Van Gogh is hip," said Nancy Armstrong of YUAG's Rights
and Reproductions department, describing the painting as "a must-have. We have
publishing houses and authors from all over asking for permission to reproduce
the image.... My kids all have new shoes--cool ones, too: Reeboks--thanks to
van Gogh's popularity."
Double dutch
So what gave the game away? What prompted Aronson's sudden confession
after fifty years or more of conspiracy and cover-up? Aronson can thank the
perseverance of Willem van der Leeuwen, GRD '99, a graduate student in History
of Art, whose story in discovering the forgery of "The Night Café" is in
many ways as interesting than forgery itself.
A graduate of the Sorbonne, van der Leeuwen knows as much about van Gogh as
many published scholars. Growing up with a father who was a conservator of the
Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, van der Keeuwen has come to know van Gogh's
brushstrokes and bilious greens almost better than his own family; certainly,
he's spent more time with them. "Those paintings were my brothers," van der
Leeuwen declared. "I knew their moods, their complexities. My father sometimes
allowed me to touch them. But only very gently." At this point, van der
Leeuwen, whose calloused hands betray a more than scholarly interest in
painting, placed his hands on his knees and leaned forward. "They became a
code, like Braille, if you will, that I could read. The "Wheatfield with Crows"
has a texture particularly pleasing to the touch."
Did the presence of van Gogh's masterwork in New Haven influence van der
Leeuwen's decision to attend Yale? "I was so excited to come to Yale because I
knew this was where the great work was hung. The first thing I did was to come
and see it in the flesh." Van der Leeuwen claims that he had an immediate
presentiment that all was not right with the work. "When I saw it for the first
time, there was something --how do you say?--fishy about it." Van der
Leeuwen's suspicions were aroused as early as five years ago, but he did not
wish to alert the Gallery authorities with no more evidence than a "funny
feeling" in his stomach. He needed proof.
The master race
Van der Leeuwen, whose six-foot, two-inch tall body is topped with a
wide, unfurrowed brow and placid, blue eyes, cites forbearance as his best
quality. "One needs such patience in dealing with great works," he said. He
explained, patiently, the traditional methods of detecting van Gogh forgeries.
"There have been a number of van Gogh forgeries around. Most notably, those
sold by the art dealer Otto Wecker in the late '20s in Berlin. X-rays were used
to prove they were fakes in that case. But often, and especially in the later
paintings, much can be learned from pigment tests."
Why especially in the later works?
"This is a secret that few know; one that my father told me. Once his madness
progressed to a certain degree--by the time he got to Arles--van Gogh began to
mix drops of his own blood in with his paint. In a letter to his brother Theo,
he mentions this briefly, claiming this addition gives the paint a perfect
[consistency] for impasto work. Cutting off an earlobe was nothing for this
man.... What this means, of course, is that modern DNA technology can prove a
late van Gogh to be genuine or forged." Though such technology has not, to van
der Leeuwen's knowledge, been performed before, the results would be
unequivocal. "To everyone, that is, but the Simpson jurors," van der Leeuwen
said, smiling.
But van der Leeuwen felt he could not ask the YUAG to run any such tests: "My
analysis was from instinct, not fact, and conservators are very territorial. To
demand analysis of this work would have insulted the conservator's expertise. I
am a graduate student, I am not a facsist," van der Leeuwen explained.
Instead of using modern technology, van der Leeuwen had to rely on his eyes.
Because "The Night Café" is the only painting in the YUAG that is
mounted behind a pane of glass (due to the fact that van Gogh's impasto
technique--the heavy layering of paint on his canvas--is particularly
susceptible to damage), van der Leeuwen claims his research was greatly
inhibited. Not only could he not touch the painting, close inspection of it had
to be made through this wall of glass. "Basically, my method was to stand and
stare at the painting as close as I could for as long as I could before the
guard would ask me to move on. To meld with the painting, I could not do."
It was only last week, after again staring at every inch of the painting, that
van der Leeuwen noticed something. "It was the problem of the princess and
pasta--or how do you say?--the forest and the trees," he said. "I had been
looking so closely at the thing for so long that I missed the most glaring
errors. I feel a little stupid about it now."
"I guess it was fortune that I realized it, though. I had been reading a book
on light and color theory. The book talked about artificial lighting and its
impact on the color schemes and themes of modern art. It talked at length about
the invention of the lightbulb, which it dated to 1891," van der Leeuwen said.
Van Gogh's composition of "The Night Café" has been unquestionably
identified as 1888--van Gogh was at Arles and wrote to his brother about the
painting. Because the painting in the YUAG shows a café illuminated by
electric light and not gas lamps, the painting must be forgery. "`Bazoom!' I
said when I realized it. `Bazoom! Bazoom! Bazoom!'"
The writing on the wall
Van der Leeuwen mulled over his findings and telephoned Vogel that
night. "She thought I was a kook. A crazy. An improperly-canned artichoke. I
admit it sounds crazy. But I made her promise to meet me early the next morning
so we could have a look at the thing together," van der Leeuwen said.
Once van der Leeuwen's findings were verified and he explained his background
in van Gogh studies, Vogel put her trust in his expertise. "I was
understandably reluctant," Vogel said. "But his passion persuaded me." The
Gallery appointed him to a closer investigation of the work. He took paint
samples and ran them to a DNA lab. There were no traces of van Gogh's blood,
although the famously red color of the walls was found to be obtained by
additions of small measures of another substance (which proved later to be
raspberry jam). Microscopic inspection of the lightbulbs themselves revealed
another interesting feature of the painting. One of the lightbulbs had a small,
black scrawl on its base which van der Leeuwen had to photograph and enlarge
several times before it was found to be handwriting. The missive was written in
a mirror script, not unlike that of Leonardo da Vinci, which, when reversed,
revealed the following legend: "gotcha, suckerz!"
"It was the z in `suckerz' that most offended my intellect. Too vulgar!" said
Vogel. "But running a museum is all about sacrifice. I'm willing to swallow my
pride for the sake of the Gallery. We're going to keep the painting hanging
just as it always has. It is our hope that more people will be interested in a
really convincing forgery of a van Gogh than one they took for genuine."
Will there be any changes to the way the painting is displayed?
"Well, we're keeping it behind glass like it always has been," Vogel said. The
only thing is that we've changed the title. Where the placard used to read `The
Night Café,' it now reads `Gotcha, Suckerz!'"


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