Description
Before abstract expressionist Mark Rothko (American, b. Russia, 1903Ā1970) could support himself with his art, he had a part-time job teaching children in Brooklyn. He said this experience allowed him to understand children's ability to communicate their ideas of reality with simple visual images. He saw this as a gift in his search for truth. By the 1950s Rothko had developed his signature motif: large canvases of luminous rectangles that seem to float within a larger color field. To achieve the sense of light emanating from his paintings, Rothko stained the canvases with multiple thin layers of pigments, some of which show through the top layer of paint. Even the deepest hues seem to emit light. In reducing forms to simple shapes presented on a grand scale that viewers were meant to experience in close quarters, Rothko sought to elicit deeply felt spiritual and philosophical reactions. He said he wanted to express "basic human emotionsĀtragedy, ecstasy, doom. . . . The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them." Contains 5 each of the following images: Green and Maroon, 1953 Green and Tangerine on Red, 1956 Ochre and Red on Red, 1954 Orange and Red on Red<(more...) - INDIVIDUAL ITEM RRP £14.99