Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum

Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum

Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum
Beautiful unique lithograph "Green, Red on Orange, 1950", for Guggenheim Museum. Very unique Poster for every design and art lovers. Pictures are part of description.

Mark Rothko (Russian / American 1903 -1970): Mark Rothko was an Russian / American painter known for his abstract canvases featuring blocks of glowing color. The work Orange and Yellow (1956), is a hallmark example of Rothko's method of employing thin washes of oil paint to create luminosity. "Art to me is an anecdote of the spirit, " he once mused. And the only means of making concrete the purpose of its varied quickness and stillness. Born Marcus Yakovlevich Rothkowitz on September 25, 1903 in Daugavpils, Lativia, in 1913 he and his family emigrated to the United States to escape persecution.

Rothko attended Yale University on a scholarship for only a year before dropping out and relocating to New York. Here, he studied under Max Weber and adopted the flattened volumes and rich colors he saw in the paintings of Milton Avery.

During this period, Rothko produced a number of figure paintings and interiors. By the late 1940s, Rothko had shifted into nonobjective abstraction, creating masses of pure color instead of figures in space. Commissioned in 1964 by the Houston art collectors John and Dominique de Menil, Rothko created the Rothko Chapel, a non-denominational chapel filled with many of his paintings.

Deeply depressed throughout much of his life, the artist committed suicide at the age of 66, on February 25, 1970 in New York, NY. Today, Rothko's works can be found in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Gallery in London, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D. Rothko's Green, Red, on Orange is a bold, colorful piece with a careful sense of balance.

Whether you're a lover of Abstract Expressionism or just looking for something lively to fit your space, this high quality art print is a great choice. It is very unique Pace Editions Lithograph for Guggenheim Museum.

Please study item pictures for perfect condition. Any questions - let us help you please. Pictures are part of the description. Appreciate you stopping and checking this treasure item from grandma_treasure_chest. Check out our other items! We do our best to describe them as accurately as possible. We try our best to describe items thoroughly, carefully and correctly. We will gladly provide any additional information you may need about any item.
Rare Artefact M. ROTHKO 1978 Green, Red On Orange Lithograph Guggenheim Museum