NORFOLK, VA.- The
Chrysler Museum of Art presents Mark Rothko: Perceptions of Being, which is on view from September 28 to January 8, 2012. The exhibition includes the Chryslers own No. 5 (Untitled), 1949, that serves as the centerpiece of this focused exhibition of work by the great abstract expressionist. Other works include five paintings on loan from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.each a gift of the Mark Rothko Foundation. The exhibition shows the evolution of the modernists work throughout his career.
Rothkos first paintings of expressionistic cityscapes, landscapes, portraits, and still life eventually led in the 1940s to an exploration of myth and the unconscious using the precepts of Surrealism, as well as the study of ancient civilizations, philosophy, and analytical psychology. The development of his renowned veils of color from 1949 onward related in part to Surrealisms project of unveiling half-formed images in the subconscious. Rothko described his mature works as tragic dramas that continue his earlier work in a more abstract format.
The viewers perception and emotional relationship with his work were a primary concern for Rothko. The Chryslers exhibition replicates the viewing conditions that Rothko considered essential to experiencing his work. He painted large canvases not to emphasize their grandiose quality, but to envelope the viewer in a very intimate and human visual atmosphere, in the artists words. In the early 1950s, he began to dictate that his abstract works be hung low and close together, so that viewers were engulfed by the forms and their chromatic intensity. As Rothkos forms hover indeterminately between being and non-being, they make us acutely aware of our own existence.
The exhibition coincides with Virginia Stage Companys fall production of RED, John Logans Tony-winning play about the artist and his angst. The production will be held at the Wells Theater in Norfolk from October 18 to November 6, 2011.