View allAll Photos Tagged ROTHKO

light through the obscured toilet window on the grey door gave a Rothko like effect....complete toilet...

i've been thinking about him since i saw 1949 hanging in my professor's office.

 

i wish i could look at the world through a yellow and gold tinted veil.

Aquarelle, 45 x 30 cm, 1933-1934, NGA, Wasgington.

See all the other observers in the National Gallery of Art

Mark Beazley

© scott derby-webb all rights reserved

 

The fountain outside of the Rothko Chapel in Houston. The Rothko Chapel and its surroundings is a low-key, quiet, contemplative place. I was here just as Alex's memorial service was starting in California; thought a lot about him while walking through here.

Aquarelle, 44 x 37 cm, 1932, NGA, Washington.

Untitled, 1954

Marlborough Fine Art (London)

After a brief meditation at Rothko Chapel, Rory was patient enough to let me snap a few pictures of him and the nearby fountain.

Aquarelle, 76 x 56 cm, 1944-1945, Moma, New York.

 

Au milieu des années 1940, Rothko s'est concentré sur l'aquarelle, expérimentant ce médium pour produire des compositions avec des éléments pictographiques ou biomorphiques faisant référence à des formes d'expression préhistoriques telles que des peintures rupestres, des symboles sculptés et des glyphes. Comme son ami et collègue artiste Adolph Gottlieb, Rothko s'est inspiré des œuvres des modernistes européens, en particulier Paul Klee et Joan Miró, pour créer un langage esthétique émergent intégrant une imagerie interculturelle. Inspiré par l'automatisme surréaliste, dans lequel l'artiste a cédé le contrôle conscient pour permettre aux forces créatrices de l'inconscient d'agir, Rothko a développé son imagerie abstraite au cours de cette période. Lumineuses et transparentes, les aquarelles comme celle que l'on voit ici marquent un tournant dans sa carrière et préfigurent ses ultérieures toiles abstraites et lumineuses qui feront de lui une figure incontournable de la peinture américaine (cf. Moma).

Aquarelle sur papier, 38 x 49 cm, 1933, NGA, Washington.

New installation outside of the Rothko Chapel.

In the restaurant at Chatsworth House there is a series of paintings. Looked-at side-on and seen as a single image, it looks like something that Mark Rothko might have done.

The plant is called Rothko. I'm so rubbish at looking after these plants that I'm onto my third one (I think). So this is actually Rothko III. Above it is a print of a painting by Mark Rothko.

Editors, Rothko, 21 January 2006.

Laurentian Library, Florence

Our favorite breakfast. The egg is hidden under the cheese.

MoCA: Mark Rothko Room

Thyssen's Museum. Madrid. November 2007.

When I see Mark Rothko's pieces, I always think what made him that sad.

I took this photograph at the Mark Rothko exhibition. Portland Art Museum. Portland, Oregon.

Aquarelle sur papier, 31 x 38 cm, 1934-1935, NGA, Washington.

Photographed from home in the Waitakere Ranges, West Auckland, New Zealand, with no retouching or colour manipulation.

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