Rothko
a dramatic photographTragedy, ecstasy, destruction.
Mark Rothko (1903-1970), who resisted existing interpretations and classifications, was a prominent artist who defended complete freedom of expression as an artist.Although he was a key figure in the abstract expressionist movement that first formed in New York, Rothko left the box and insisted on a complete experience between painting and viewers.
Based on a variety of conceptual repertoires, Rothko developed his own iconic canvas of bold color blocks such as red, yellow, ocher, reddish brown, black and green.Rothko emphasized that the figure was not removed through this shiny, pulsating block of color, but that symbols and figures were placed there.This intense form of color contains all the tragedies of human conditions, and at the same time Rothko explicitly gave the audience the expressive potential of the work.He believed that paintings were revived by expanding and accelerating companionship in the eyes of sensitive observers.
This book introduces the intelligence and influence of his dramatic, intimate and revolutionary works, from Rothko's early works to his most famous areas of color.
The aurhor: Jacob Baal-Teshuva
Born in 1929, Jacob Baal-Teshva is an author, critic, and independent curator of museum exhibitions.I studied at Hebrew University and New York University in Jerusalem.He has published a number of books on Mark Chagall, Alexander Calder, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Andy Warhol, Christo and Jeanne Claude.Jacob Baal-Teshba lives and works in New York and Paris.
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