Oil on canvas
The rectangles within this painting do not extend to the edges of the canvas and appear to hover just over its surface. Heightening this sensation is the effect of chromatic afterimage. Staring at each colored segment individually affects the perception of those adjacent to it. The red–orange center of the painting tints the yellow above it with just a bit of green. The yellow above seems to tint the orange with blue. Despite these color relationships, Rothko did not want his pictures appreciated solely for their spectral qualities. He said, "If you are only moved by color relationships, then you miss the point. I'm interested in expressing the big emotions—tragedy, ecstasy, doom."
Focus: Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko, 2008.
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Mark Rothko
American, born Russia (now Latvia). 1903–1970 19 works onlineMark Rothko sought to make paintings that would bring people to tears.If you…are moved only by their color relationships, then you miss the point.
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Mark Rothko
Gallery 403Like many of his fellow Abstract Expressionist artists, Rothko, in response to unthinkable atrocities—the Holocaust, the vast casualties on the battlefields of World War II, the atomic bomb—believed in the power of abstract art to reassert the highest ideals of humankind.
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