Current:Home > NewsPaintings on paper reveal another side of Rothko -WealthMap Solutions
Paintings on paper reveal another side of Rothko
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:00:55
It's easy to interpret the large, dark paintings of Mark Rothko's final months as bleak, the work of an artist whose long struggle with ill health and depression ended when he took his own life in 1970. Too easy, as it turns out. A series of lesser known pieces on paper in dreamy pastel hues from that same period counter an enduring narrative of gloom.
The intimate paintings are the pièce de résistance in a show at the National Gallery of Art in Washington running through March 31 that features more than 100 works on paper of an artist best known for towering color fields painted on canvas in the last two decades of his life. It will travel in May to the National Museum in Oslo for the artist's retrospective in Scandinavia.
"I find them incredibly optimistic," said Pace Gallery founder Arne Glimcher, a friend of Rothko's who was his neighbor in New York. "There's this immediate freshness and minimalist touch to those pictures where he lays the brush down in each color only one time or a couple times, and they're not worked over like the oil paintings are."
'The interpretation is yours'
To conclude that the dark paintings are depressing and the light ones are happy is simply "mindless," according to Glimcher.
Once, he recalls Rothko telling him, a woman came to the studio for a purchase. Rothko liked to pick himself the work he would sell to individual buyers, in an effort to match the painting to the person who would live with it. This time, he chose a piece redolent with burgundy, dark blue and rust. The woman was not pleased, asking instead for a bright red, yellow and orange painting, which she thought would be more cheerful.
"And he said to the woman, 'Red, yellow and orange, isn't that the color of an inferno?'" Glimcher said. "So you see, the interpretation is yours, but it's not necessarily his and it's not necessarily what the work is about."
In his black and gray paintings on paper, as well as a similar series in blacks and browns, Rothko was also investigating the use of a white edge — using masking tape, he created a sort of frame that's absent in other paintings.
"Other paintings are like weather coming across the plains, coming into the face," Glimcher said. "And as soon as you put the white edge around them, you're looking at something that could be interpreted as a landscape."
The 'essence' of a life's work
Glimcher sees in the darker works an artist distilling his oeuvre to "a kind of essence."
"It's a natural effect in an artist's career that they become more and more subtle," he said, citing Picasso and Matisse as other examples.
The National Gallery's show also provides a chronological sample of Rothko's evolution as an artist. Portraits and landscapes in the 1930s that reference European impressionists like Paul Cézanne give way to surrealist compositions of the 1940s that recall Yves Tanguy or Joan Miró.
Origin story
By 1949, Rothko was experimenting with what became his recognizable format. In one painting, soft-edged horizontal rectangles glow atop a sunny background.
"Over the course of the late '40s, Rothko decided that recognizable imagery should be pulverized, that the best way to communicate directly with a viewer was to reduce his compositions to pure color and form," explained Adam Greenhalgh, curator of the show, which travels in May to the National Museum in Oslo for the artist's retrospective in Scandinavia.
Paintings on canvases dominated Rotkho's work during the next decade. In 1958, he accepted a commission to paint murals for the Four Seasons restaurant in New York's Seagram building, hoping the pieces would always be shown as a group. What became known as the Seagram Murals were also his first series to focus on a dark palette of browns, blacks and reds.
Vibrant palette
Ultimately, Rothko grew disillusioned with the project and abandoned it. He then turned back to paper, where the full range of his palette comes through in vibrant yellows, oranges, reds and blues.
"These paintings pulse. They shimmer. They swell. They recede. They're magnetic and compelling," said Greenhalgh, the curator.
After suffering an aortic aneurysm in early 1968, Rothko worked mainly on paper, creating mostly smaller works.
He used dynamic brushstrokes, using quick-drying acrylic and ink.
Peering into Rothko's hazy rectangles of color can be such a visceral experience that some liken it to a spiritual one. Art collector Duncan Phillips, who helped introduce modern art to the United States, used the word "chapel" to describe the room of three Rothko paintings in America's first modern art museum, the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C. And Houston is home to an actual Rothko Chapel. These are non-denominational sanctuaries of sorts, where the visitor is called upon to meditate and turn inwards.
As Rothko once put it, "The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them."
The radio and digital versions of this story were edited by Jennifer Vanasco. The radio version was produced by Mansee Khurana.
veryGood! (2885)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- 2 skeletons found in Pompeii ruins believed to be victims of earthquake before Vesuvius eruption
- Grimes Shares Update on the Name of Her and Elon Musk's Daughter
- Transcript: New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Face the Nation, May 21, 2023
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Inside Reese Witherspoon and Jim Toth's Drama-Free Decision to Divorce
- T3 Hair Tools Sale Last Day: 65% Off Hair Dryers, Flat Irons, Hot Rollers, Curling Irons, and More
- Pottery Barn's 40% Off Warehouse Sale Has the Best Spring Home Decor, Furniture & More Starting at $6
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Designer in Supreme Court ruling cited client who denies making wedding site request
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Injured and exhausted dog rescued after climbing England's highest mountain
- Andrew Lloyd Webber's Son Nick Dead at 43 After Cancer Battle
- Russia's Wagner Group accused of using rape and mass-murder to control an African gold mining town
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Reese Witherspoon and Jim Toth Break Up: A Look Back at Their Family Moments
- As world leaders attend G7 summit in Hiroshima, atomic bomb survivor shares her story
- Ulta 24-Hour Flash Sale: Take 50% Off Peter Thomas Roth, PÜR, BareMinerals, KVD Beauty, and More
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Weekly news quiz: From 'no kill' meat to *that* billionaire cage match
Amazon Reviewers Call These On-Sale Wrist Towels a Must-Have Beauty Hack
Inside Reese Witherspoon and Jim Toth's Drama-Free Decision to Divorce
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Selena Gomez and Zayn Malik Are Raising Eyebrows After Their Rumored Outing
Khloé Kardashian's Good American 70% Off Deals: Last Day to Shop $21 Bodysuits, $37 Dresses, and More
Rare, deadly albino cobra slithers into home during rainstorm in India