Photo by Elizabeth Halt
Photo by Elizabeth Halt

at what point does mark rothko become a category

January 10, 2012

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i guess three photographic odes to mark rothko isn’t really very many, given that my blog is over two years old.

wait. only three? clearly i need to do more of them.

mark rothko for everyone!

speaking of mark rothko, did you know that the portland art museum is curating a mark rothko exhibition? it opens in february. i will be visiting. i’d invite you to come with me, only i suspect i will sit myself in front of a painting and not be able to move for ages, which is what i did the last time i saw one of his paintings in person. did i mention that i am kind of a fan?

5 comments... (add a comment)

  1. Jan

    I’ve long been a Mark Rothko fan, myself.

  2. tammy

    i don’t know why artists can’t be appreciated in their own time… to think he committed suicide because he felt his work didn’t reach anyone! then again, maybe he had the inner melancholy that haunts many baltic writers and artists. and yet his work is so amazingly vibrant.
    i love your last one. it’s shimmering and alive. and wonderful! wonder what it would be like, on a wall size canvas like his? you could hang it in your home. it would be fantastic.
    cheers to elizabeth’s tribute to mark rothko!
    you have captured the magic of a raindrop in mid air… your ode to living in oregon!
    ahem. as you can see, i get carried away.

  3. I learned something… all new to me! I’m kinda loving abstract lately. These are so cool!!!

  4. Tracy

    Ooooo… I would LOVE to see that Mark Rothko exhibit! Your tribute images dazzle, Elizabeth, they really do. More and more I love abstraction. Abstraction, symbolism and expressionism are all finding their ways into my art & photos these day. The emotional level found in abstraction is underrated, I think. ;o) Thanks for this! Happy Day ((HUGS))

  5. elizabeth @ retinal perspectives

    @jan: yay! if you were here, we could visit the exhibit together!
    @tammy: that makes me sad to think about. i hope he knows how much his work is appreciated wherever he is – i suspect he does. (ooh! a raindrop in mid-air! i like that interpretation!)
    @patty: mmm. i always love it.
    @tracy: thank you! now you’ve got me thinking .. i wonder if it’s sometimes easier to feel emotion with abstract, because you sort of have to interpret it yourself. hmmm. i wonder.

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