In June 1926, London’s Tate Gallery inaugurated its first rooms dedicated to what it then known as “fashionable overseas” photos. King George V and Queen Mary presided over the opening, giving royal approval to the choice to broaden what had been a group of solely British artwork.
It was a grand event, with the gents sporting morning fits and clutching prime hats, in a scene that was captured in an atmospheric portray by John Lavery. The ceremony was held within the Tate’s most spectacular room, then housing work by J.M.W. Turner.
To rejoice the opening of Tate’s fashionable overseas wing, a large mortgage exhibition was held, with over 250 works. The gallery’s personal assortment of worldwide artwork was so modest that it didn’t have sufficient work to fill its partitions. Though then known as the Nationwide Gallery, Millbank, it was already informally often known as the Tate, following British philanthropist Henry Tate’s 1897 donation for the constructing building.
Catalogue itemizing of the Van Gogh loans to the Tate Gallery’s “fashionable overseas” exhibition
Record of Loans on the Opening Exhibition of the Fashionable Overseas Gallery, 1926
The Van Gogh loans, all from British collectors, comprised 4 work and one drawing. These have been hung within the northwest nook room, in an extension funded by Joseph Duveen and constructed on the previous website of the Millbank jail. With advances in scholarship through the previous hundred years, the Van Goghs lent in 1926 have been redated and retitled.
The 5 loans

Van Gogh’s Les Lauriers rose, now often known as Oleanders (August 1888)
Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, New York (present of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Loeb, 1962)
Among the many most vital early collectors of Van Gogh’s work was Elizabeth Workman, a lady who till just lately has obtained little consideration. Tate’s information present that she initially meant to lend Van Gogh’s Au bord de la Rhône, now often known as The Trinquetaille Bridge, (June 1888), however at a late stage this was changed by Les Lauriers rose, now often known as Oleanders (August 1888). When her husband, a rich shipbroker, confronted monetary issues in 1928, she bought the floral nonetheless life. The portray was then supplied to the Tate, which declined to buy it. It then went to New York collector Anna Clark, and was later acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork in 1962 as a present from John Loeb and his spouse.

Van Gogh’s Café at Arles, now often known as Inside of a Restaurant (1887 or 1888)
Personal assortment, courtesy of Simon C. Dickinson Ltd, London
Café at Arles was lent by one other feminine collector, Esther Sutro. Alongside together with her husband Alfred, they have been among the many earliest UK-based collectors to purchase Van Gogh’s work. Café at Arles was acquired as early as 1896. Esther stored the portray till her dying in 1933, and it has since handed by means of a number of personal collections. On the time of the opening, the image was thought to have been painted in Arles in 1888, though it’s now dated to the earlier yr, when Van Gogh was dwelling in Paris. The image has due to this fact been retitled Inside of a Restaurant.

Van Gogh’s Village at Arles, now often known as Stairway at Auvers (June 1890)
Saint Louis Artwork Museum
Herbert Coleman, a Manchester transport magnate, lent Village at Arles to the Tate exhibition. He stored it till it was purchased by the Saint Louis Artwork Museum in 1934. Though in 1926 the portray was dated from Van Gogh’s interval in Arles (1888-89), it was later realised that it depicts the steps very near the inn the place the artist was staying in Auvers-sur-Oise in 1890. The portray was then retitled Stairway at Auvers (June 1890).

Van Gogh’s misplaced Panorama close to The Hague, now often known as The Hut (early 1881)
Personal assortment
Just one Van Gogh drawing was proven on the Tate in 1926: Panorama close to The Hague, lent by a person known as Frank Wilson, of whom nothing is thought. A poor {photograph} of the work was printed in 1928 and the drawing then disappeared. It might nicely have been carried out when Van Gogh was dwelling in Brussels and it’s now merely titled The Hut (early 1881).

The pretend: Nonetheless life with Daisies and Poppies
Picton Citadel Belief, Pembrokeshire
Nonetheless life with Daisies and Poppies was one of many earliest Van Gogh fakes to be inadvertently purchased by a British collector. It was lent to the 1926 Tate exhibition by James Murray, an Aberdeen-based businessman. A yr later he bought it at Christie’s, making it the primary “Van Gogh” to be auctioned within the UK. The customer was Laurence Philipps, the proprietor of Picton Citadel in Pembrokeshire, Wales. The floral nonetheless life was uncovered as a current pretend within the late Nineteen Twenties, having come from the infamous Wacker Gallery in Berlin, the supply of dozens of forgeries. The portray remains to be owned by the descendants of Philipps and stored as a curiosity. It has solely been exhibited as soon as, as a pretend, in an exhibition curated by the writer in 2006 at Compton Verney, Warwickshire and Edinburgh’s Nationwide Galleries of Scotland.

Van Gogh’s Panorama: Arles, now often known as Peach Bushes in Blossom (April 1889)
Courtauld Gallery, London (Samuel Courtauld Belief)
Along with the 5 outdoors loans, the Tate additionally displayed one other Van Gogh, Panorama: Arles, which had been purchased earlier that yr by philanthropist Samuel Courtauld, who had arrange a fund to purchase fashionable French artwork for the Nationwide Gallery. Now on the Courtauld Gallery, the panorama has been retitled Peach Bushes in Blossom (April 1889).
The gallery that when housed the Van Gogh loans and different “fashionable overseas” artwork is at the moment often known as room 4 and presents a dense show of British work from 1760 to 1815. The Millbank constructing is now Tate Britain, with worldwide work from round 1900 having been hived off to Tate Fashionable at Bankside in 2000.

Tate Britain’s room 4 in the present day, the place the Van Goghs hung in 1926
The Artwork Newspaper
Tate has solely acquired Van Gogh works on one event, due to a bequest. In 1933, the Dutch stockbroker and collector Frank Stoop gave three works on paper, that are usually in retailer for conservation causes, and one portray, Farms close to Auvers (July 1890), which is on long-term mortgage to the Nationwide Gallery.
Though Tate’s Van Gogh holdings stay small, it has nonetheless efficiently acquired a number of thousand worldwide works through the previous hundred years, and now has completely no issues in filling its partitions.
Martin Bailey is a number one Van Gogh specialist and particular correspondent for The Artwork Newspaper. He has curated exhibitions on the Barbican Artwork Gallery, Compton Verney/Nationwide Gallery of Scotland and Tate Britain.

Martin Bailey’s current Van Gogh books
Martin has written quite a few bestselling books on Van Gogh’s years in France: The Sunflowers Are Mine: The Story of Van Gogh’s Masterpiece (Frances Lincoln 2013, UK and US), Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence (Frances Lincoln 2016, UK and US), Starry Evening: Van Gogh on the Asylum (White Lion Publishing 2018, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale: Auvers and the Artist’s Rise to Fame (Frances Lincoln 2021, UK and US). The Sunflowers are Mine (2024, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale (2024, UK and US) are additionally now obtainable in a extra compact paperback format.
His different current books embrace Residing with Vincent van Gogh: The Properties & Landscapes that formed the Artist (White Lion Publishing 2019, UK and US), which gives an summary of the artist’s life. The Illustrated Provence Letters of Van Gogh has been reissued (Batsford 2021, UK and US). My Pal Van Gogh/Emile Bernard gives the primary English translation of Bernard’s writings on Van Gogh (David Zwirner Books 2023, UKand US).
To contact Martin Bailey, please e mail vangogh@theartnewspaper.com
Please notice that he doesn’t undertake authentications.
Discover all of Martin’s adventures with Van Gogh right here









