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Mark Rothko 
Nr. 14, 1951
oil on canvas, 143,5 x 165,1 cm  
private collection
Mark Rothko
Untitled (Violet, Orange, Yellow), 1947
oil on canvas, 172,1 x 106,4 cm
Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporáneo, Conaculta/INBA, Mexico
Mark Rothko
Untitled, 1949
oil on canvas, 206,7 x 168,6 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington
Gift of the Mark Rothko Foundation, Inc.
Mark Rothko
Subway Entrance, 1938
oil on canvas, 86,4 x 117,5 cm
Collection of Kate Rothko Prizel
Mark Rothko
Portrait, 1939
oil on canvas, 101,6 x 76,5 cm
Collection of Christopher Rothko




All Pictures © Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2008
Mark Rothko is one of the most important American artists of the twentieth century. He is famous for his mostly large-format paintings with their horizontally-layered colour planes. Nowadays these meditative abstractions are seen as synonyms of Abstract Expressionism. Under the catching headline New York School, American Abstract Expressionist Art takes over the leading role in the world of arts at the same time that America becomes a leading economical and political world power.

Rothko, however, has always struggled against being classified as a painter of abstract images. Born in 1903 as Marcus Rothkowitz in Russia, he arrives in the United States with his family as a ten year old boy. After studies in Yale and at the New School of Design in New York, he begins to work as an artist from 1930 onwards. Very slowly he makes his way from his figurative beginnings via surrealism towards pure constellations of colour. Even in his early cityscapes does one recognize experiments with formal reduction and it soon becomes apparent how his surreal biomorphic shapes concentrate into increasingly compact clouds of colour, the socalled “Multiforms”. At the end of the 1940s these mark the transition to his most typical, genuine composition scheme, the veils of colour superimposed on one another, achieving a deep, spatial effect in the translucency of their layers. Even though liberated from all representational function, the artist carries on associating his paintings with content meaning.

For this reason he even wants completely non-figurative paintings to be understood as something concrete. Through their proportions in relation to each other and the combination of their colours, his formal structures, developed from the rectangle, produce an expression that each viewer perceives in individual manner, something the artist understands as their immanent meaning. These colour ensembles which can be perceived as harmonious or tension-laden, glowing or sombre, dominating or harmonious, are at the same time cause for and artistic reflection of inner moods and deep emotion. The black in his colour scale represents the void and nothingness. The Blackform and Black on Gray paintings mark a radical break and also stand for refusal. Any beauty that would be too obvious is withdrawn to make room for an iconic austerity. Blackness therefore is not a reflection of illness and depression but much rather a call for the utmost involvement on behalf of the viewer who is in this way confronted with the fundamental tragedy of these last works in inescapable manner. Therefore it is probably not wrong to understand this series in its ultimate logic as the last complete set of images and to see them as a legacy that antecedes the 1970 suicide. (→ Biography)

In European collections Mark Rothko is only rarely represented. Few German museums, like Berlin, Düsseldorf or Stuttgart own a painting of his at all. Because of the extreme fragility of his sensitive picture surfaces and the exorbitant developments on the art market, it is highly unlikely that a survey exhibition of a scale comparable to that currently shown in Munich and Hamburg will once more be realized in Europe in the foreseeable future. All the stronger, therefore, is our gratitude to Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko, the two children of the artist without whose generous support this ambitious project would not have been possible.

The reconstruction of the Rothko Room at the Biennale in Venice in 1958 was the point of departure for an exhibition at the Palazzo delle Esposizione, which can be seen in Rome this winter. Oliver Wick, who has, among other exhibitions already been responsible for the major Rothko exhibiton at the Fondation Beyeler in 2001, has also been the curator for the Italian presentation. Thanks to his dedication the Roman exhibition could be modified and moves on to Munich and Hamburg in altered form.

Twenty years after the only retrospective to date – 1988 in Cologne - and nearly forty years after the first museum exhibition in Germany – 1971 in Berlin – it is high time to present the overall oeuvre of Mark Rothko with more then 100 paintings and works on paper to the German public once more. With key works of modernity and many paintings that have not yet been publicly shown, a wide public is introduced to Mark Rothko and those who esteem his work can make the experience of abstraction in highest intensity.

To accompany the exhibition a special catalogue will be published by Hirmer publishers Munich (→ Hirmer Verlag) with reproductions of all works exhibited and texts by Gottfried Boehm, Hubertus Gaßner, Karin Koschkar, Christiane Lange, Renée Maurer, Jessica Stewart and Oliver Wick. The exhibition in Munich is accompanied by an elaborate programme of films, lectures, guided tours by the curators, a reading in front of the originals and a chamber concert by the Academy of the Symphony Orchestra of the Bayerische Rundfunk.
(→ Begleitprogramm)

After the presentation in Munich the retrospective will be on show at the Hamburger Kunsthalle from 16 May to 3 August, 2008.

For press information regarding this exhibition, as well as images that can be downloaded, please contact the press department of the Kunsthalle. Contact: Leonie Mellinghoff
Tel. 089 - 378 281 62, Fax 089 - 378 489 39, presse@hypo-kunsthalle.de

Opening hours
open daily from 10 am to 8 pm

Entrance fees:
Standard: € 9.00
Groups of 10 persons and over and senior citizens: € 8.00
School-age children, students and the unemployed: € 5.00
School classes (excluding technical college): € 0.50 per individual
→ Additional reductions

Guided tours are organized by the Volkshochschule (centre for adult education):
Mo, Sa: 11:30 Uhr
Tu, Th, Fr: 15:30 Uhr
We: 18:30 Uhr

Private tours, children`s tours,
exclusive arrangements with special guided tours


Accompanying Lessons (in German)

Audio Guide by AntennaAudio (in German)

Flyer

Catalouge by Hirmer Verlag

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