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Mark Rothko Biography

Artist

Name at birth: Marcus Rothkowitz

Mark Rothko was one of the most highly-regarded painters to emerge from the New York art scene after the end of World War II. Born in Russian-controlled Latvia, he emigrated with his family to the United States, settling in Portland, Oregon in 1913. His academic success in high school led to a scholarship at Yale University, but he dropped out during his second year and moved to New York City in 1923. There he found his niche in a crowd of like-minded artists (sometimes called "the Ten") and he began painting. During his career he became less and less interested in representational art and more drawn to art as a transcendent experience. Between the mid-1920s and the end of the 1940s, Rothko's paintings evolved from distorted figures and pseudo-primitive figures to less distinct figures known as "multiforms," then finally to the large, rectangular fields of color for which he became famous. His work is considered an example of Abstract Expressionism, though Rothko eschewed such labels during his career. His most famous works are untitled or have unmemorable titles such as "Black, Maroons and White" (1958), "Four Red" (1957) and "No. 6 (Violet, Green and Red)." A key figure in modern 20th century painting, Rothko was an art world celebrity during his lifetime, and his reputation as a tortured artist was guaranteed for eternity when he slashed his own arms above the elbow and bled to death in 1970.

Extra credit: Contemporaries of Rothko's include Jackson Pollock and Georgia O'Keeffe.

Four Good Links

Mark Rothko

Background and selections from Washington's National Gallery of Art

Mark Rothko

Online text of a short work on his career and life

Feeding Fury

One critic's take on Rothko's series of murals in the Tate Modern

Mark Rothko in 1949

Critic-talk aplenty in this review of the year Rothko came into his own

Vital Stats

Birth

25 September 1903

Birthplace

Dvinsk, Russia (now Daugavpils, Latvia)

Death

25 February 1970
(suicide, age 66)

Best Known As

Abstract expressionist painter of 1958's "Black on Maroon"

Something in Common with Rothko