Mark Rothko Information
Mark Rothko painted in the cusp between the Modern Art era, beginning in the 1890s, and the Postmodern era, which began in the late 1940s. Rothko identified with the Abstract Expressionist movement.
-
History
-
American Abstract Expressionism grew out of the German Expressionist movement in the 1940s. Like other Abstract Expressionists, Rothko painted nonrepresentational works focusing on the emotional and mystical aspects of reality rather than particular images.
Style
The Rothko Chapel
Influences
-
In the late nineteenth century, Symbolists spearheaded the ideology that art should reveal truth beyond physical reality. This belief permeated many Modern Art movements that followed, including Abstract Expressionism. German Expressionism's emphasis on emotion over representation also contributed to the American movement's philosophies.
Contemporaries
-
Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Barnett Newman and Helen Frankenthaler all worked at the same time as Mark Rothko. Newman and Frankenthaler used color field techniques like Rothko while Pollock and de Kooning preferred action art methods.
-
References
Resources
- Photo Credit Mark Rothko