Rothko, Mark (1903-70)

Creator details

Name
Rothko, Mark (1903-70)
Nationality
American
Biography
Noted as one of the primary artists of Abstract Expressionism and color field painting. Rothko moved to Portland in 1913. He attended Yale University for two years before moving to New York in 1925, where he attended the Art Students League and studied under Max Weber. He was a founding member of a group of abstract painters called Ten. In 1936, Rothko worked with the WPA Federal Art Project in the easel painting division. In 1945, he had a solo show in Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century gallery in New York. He also taught at the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco with Clyfford Still. Rothko finished his first commission in 1958, a monumental painting for the Four Seasons restaurant in New York. He also painted murals for Harvard University and a chapel in Houston, which was dedicated to him after his death. Rothko committed suicide on February 25, 1970, in New York.

Assets (114 in total)

White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose) 1950 (oil on canvas)
Red, Orange, Orange on Red, 1962 (oil on canvas)
White Cloud Over Purple, 1957 (oil on canvas)
Untitled, 1959 (oil on canvas)
Orange, Red, Yellow, 1961 (oil on canvas)
Untitled (Red) c.1956 (oil on canvas)
Yellow, White, Blue Over Yellow on Gray, 1954 (oil on canvas)
Untitled, 1960-1961 (oil on paper laid down on canvas)
Green, Blue, Green on Blue, 1968 (acrylic on paper mounted on canvas)
No.8, 1952 (oil on canvas)
Homage to Matisse, 1954 (oil on canvas)
Untitled, 1955 (acrylic and mixed media on canvas)

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