Details
- Dimensions
- 18.75ʺW × 0.1ʺD × 22.75ʺH
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Styled After
- Mark Rothko
- Period
- 1990s
- Country of Origin
- Germany
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
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- Materials
- Lithograph
- Condition
- Mint Condition, No Imperfections
- Color
- Orange
- Condition Notes
- Mint condition new old stock. Photographs are detailed and taken under controlled lighting; post-production is performed with calibrated monitors. Thus, … moreMint condition new old stock. Photographs are detailed and taken under controlled lighting; post-production is performed with calibrated monitors. Thus, our photographs accurately capture the work's condition and colors. However, monitors vary and can affect the way art appears online. Contact us for any concerns. less
- Description
-
Beautiful 1998 licensed offset lithograph poster after a 1956 painting by Mark Rothko. The poster's footer provides details of the …
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Beautiful 1998 licensed offset lithograph poster after a 1956 painting by Mark Rothko. The poster's footer provides details of the painting. Poster size: 22-3/4 x 18-3/4 inches. Image size: 18-3/4 x 17 inches.
Mark Rothko (1903 - 1970), born Marcus Rothkowitz, was a Russian-American abstract artist of the mid-20th century. Although Rothko was a well-educated man who spoke four languages, his artistic skills were largely innate, without much formal training. A solo exhibition that took place in 1945 at Peggy Guggenheim's “Art of This Century” gallery in New York catapulted him to great fame and critical acclaim as a member of the first major American artistic movement recognized by the art world, Abstract Expressionism. Along with Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, Willem de Kooning, Lee Krasner and Franz Kline, amongst others, Rothko helped put New York at the center of the Western art world, a role previously filled by Paris. He was a socialist, and had a deep distrust for money and material wealth. Rothko believed that art was truly an expression of emotion and social circumstance, and was deeply concerned that people wanted to buy his paintings because they were fashionable, not because they were moved by them. Thus, his fame and fortune weighed upon him, and Mark Rothko took his own life in his New York studio on 25th February 1970. less
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