Japanese professor Donates Rare Print To Courtauld

Following our report on the hunt for a stolen Japanese print once owned by Van Gogh, a Tokyo colector has donated a copy of the rare Geishas in a Landscape. As The Art Newspaper revealed, Van Gogh's copy, which he had depicted in the background of his Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear was stolen from the Courtauld Institute Gallery in 1981, although the loss had not been reported in the press.

Only two other extant examples of this 1870s print published by Sato Torakiyo are known, both belonging to Professor Shigeru Oikawa, a Tokyo art historian with a special interest in the links between the Post-Impressionists and Japan.
After reading about the theft of the print in The Art Newspaper, he decided to donate a copy of Geishas in a Landscape to the Courtauld, so that it will be in the collection that owns the self-portrait.
Meanwhile, Van Gogh's own copy remains lost, although it is identifiable from damage caused when he tacked the print to his studio wall in the Yellow House in Arles.