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Mark Rothko: menil collection.


Organized to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the nearby Rothko chapel, "Mark Rothko: The Chapel Commission" provided, more than its title might suggest, a compelling if not fully comprehensive overview of the second half of Rothko's mature career - the last decade of his life, when he was obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with illuminating darkness. Thirty-two paintings, as well as seven graphite-on-paper studies for the chapel, were included; among the paintings were two large unfinished studies that had never been shown, and three pairs of alternate canvases, not previously exhibited together.

In the late '50s, Rothko's lushly fluorescent stacks of vaporous rectangles began to give way to the leaner, fulminating fulminating

see fulminant disease.
 severities that would dominate his paintings in the '60s. The more clearly defined edges and increased scale of the interior rectangles, often seen in these later works, are partially due to his growing interest in responding to the architectural environs in which his paintings would be hung. This exhibition ranged from the monumental Sketch for Mural No. 7, 1958-59, part of the Seagram series that is the first of Rothko's three mural cycles, to the works painted for the chapel specifically designed to house them.

The four paintings from 1963, exhibited at the Menil, are configured with three to five rectangular forms primarily in closely toned shades of darkness against an almost equally dark ground. The sharper edges of the rectangles, their proximity to the physical edges of the canvas, and the precarious shifts in balance set off by the different weight, color, and form of each rectangle conspire in a densely packed, tense compression. The reciprocal pressures exerted between internal rectangle and the edges of the frame are far greater than those found in Rothko's paintings of the previous decade. The frontal implacability of their clenched clench  
tr.v. clenched, clench·ing, clench·es
1. To close tightly: clench one's teeth; clenched my fists in anger.

2.
 rectangularity gradually dissolves in the tenebrous ten·e·brous   also te·neb·ri·ous
adj.
Dark and gloomy.



[Middle English, from Old French tenebreus, from Latin tenebr
 glow emanating from layer upon layer of thinned paint that envelops the eye in velvet mists. Pulsing spatiality, the paintings shift slowly and seamlessly from flat to shallow, from near violence to an elegiac el·e·gi·ac  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals.

2.
 solace. Formally and emotionally, Rothko's paintings grew more intense and monumental, achieved greater clarity and resonance, over the four years that followed.

Composition is pared down to a single form in fraught symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to  with the edges of the canvas in four untitled works and in seven of a group of eight numbered paintings created in 1964. With their single black rectangle against a plum ground, the latter prefigure pre·fig·ure  
tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures
1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow:
 some of the ones completed, between 1965 and the end of 1967, for the chapel - including the pairs of alternate paintings exhibited here. Those three pairs of canvases (done in 1966, ranging in size from about 15 by 8 feet to about 15 by 10 feet) brought the exhibition to a sustained crescendo. Each is configured with one black rectangle on a plum ground; variations in size, the placement of the black form, carefully calculated nuances of color, alternating matte and reflective surfaces keep them in constant motion - now moving toward suffocating suf·fo·cate  
v. suf·fo·cat·ed, suf·fo·cat·ing, suf·fo·cates

v.tr.
1. To kill or destroy by preventing access of air or oxygen.

2. To impair the respiration of; asphyxiate.

3.
 darkness, now toward emerging light, now hard, now soft. The dark internal rectangle and the rectangular support, immateriality im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ty  
n. pl. im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ties
1. The state or quality of being immaterial.

2. Something immaterial.

Noun 1.
 and materiality, wage a struggle for dominance. With their geometric reductiveness, severe frontality, and in their suppression of the autographic touch that had been typical of Rothko's painting since his early maturity, these works bear a superficial resemblance to Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts
. However, the purposeful vacillations and ambiguities of color, form, and surface embody a subjective indeterminacy in·de·ter·mi·na·cy  
n.
The state or quality of being indeterminate.

Noun 1. indeterminacy - the quality of being vague and poorly defined
indefiniteness, indefinity, indeterminateness, indetermination
 at a far remove from the cool, analytical clarities ruling the works of the artists most closely associated with that movement, with the exception of Brice Marden's emotionally nuanced monochromes and Agnes Martin's gridded ethers.

Just how subjective Rothko's choices were and how critical to the works' effect can be measured by two unfinished chapel studies from 1965. Their overlapping charcoal outlines of rectangles and the visible creases at the edges of the canvas record the quest for just the right relationship - in size, shape, and scale - between the painted edges of the interior shape and the physical, exterior edges of the support. Rothko's adjustments of form were as painstakingly nuanced as his layered mists of paint; his canvases are perceived almost subliminally. Though the claims to transcendence of most Abstract Expressionists are now regarded with suspicion, Rothko's paintings, when given the time and attention, have an undeniable power. The mysteriousness engendered by their lack of specificity and the engulfing, constantly shifting struggle between light and dark can readily be seen to figure the battle between these opposites that shapes our mortality.

The exhibition concluded with Rothko's return to those easel paintings created between 1966 and 1969 that are most beholden to the chapel experience. It was accompanied by an insufficiently illustrated catalogue that, however, included a fine essay by Rothko scholar David Anfam as well as an informative disquisition dis·qui·si·tion  
n.
A formal discourse on a subject, often in writing.



[Latin disqus
 by the Menil's conservator conservator n. a guardian and protector appointed by a judge to protect and manage the financial affairs and/or the person's daily life due to physical or mental limitations or old age.  Carol Mancusi-Ungaro on the technique (the various mediums of Rothko's urging of paint into vapor) behind the chapel paintings. Given that Rothko himself preferred his paintings to envelop en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 the viewer, this exhibition was installed with a degree of spaciousness he perhaps would not have liked, but it eloquently and thoughtfully charted the development of his late work.

Klaus Kertess recently published a monograph. on Joan Mitchell (Abrams, 1997) and a book of short stories, South Brooklyn Casket Company (Serpent's Tail, 1997). His latest curatorial project, "Alfonso Ossorio: Congregations," was on view at the Parrish Art Museum in Southampton this summer.
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Title Annotation:exhibit
Author:Kertess, Klaus
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Oct 1, 1997
Words:900
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