Mark Rothko, Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris review - a show well worth the trip across the Channel | reviews, news & interviews
Mark Rothko, Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris review - a show well worth the trip across the Channel
Mark Rothko, Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris review - a show well worth the trip across the Channel
Abstraction with emotion and soul in a landmark retrospective
The vast and various spaces of Frank Gehry’s monumental Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris suit the needs of the thrilling Mark Rothko exhibition now inhabiting its labyrinthine multi-storey suite of galleries.
Some of the 115 works on display require a kind of intimacy – enclosed spaces with the feel of a chapel rather than the classsic antiseptic white cube – and others benefit from wider vistas, in which his relentless explorations can breathe, standing alone while being connected with other works from the same period. With help from the artist’s son Christopher Rothko, the curator Suzanne Pagé has done a marvellous job, balancing backstory and context with a celebration of the work on its own terms.
Rothko’s adventurous journey from figurative to abstract art fills the first few rooms, though those labels hardly do justice to work that eludes art historical definitions. His work in the 1930s, portraits (Self Portrait, 1936, pictured below) and views of the New York subway, suggest an approach to representation that plunges beneath the surface of appearances, playing with the juxtaposition of mostly muted colours and a view that eschews the easier ways of dealing with perspective and depth. These paintings are both subjective and detached, as if already seeking another dimension.
In the 1940s, along with other American artists who had become familiar with the writings of CG Jung, and influenced by the imaginal work of the surrealists, Rothko explored classical mythological themes as well as totemic figures. This move into the archetypal suggests a further move from everyday surface reality, a kind of staging post or transitional phase in which the imagination gradually takes over. The images are drawn from collective cultural heritage, resonating with the artist’s vision. We move, with Rothko, from the particular of a self-portrait or a cityscape to evocations of a dream-world inhabited by images that transcend the particular (Slow Swirl at the Edge of the Sea, 1944, pictured below) and reach for something more universal – or as Jung might have put it, the "collective unconscious". The inner journey reflected in this period of Rothko’s work seems to lead almost seamlessly – or even intentionally – into pure abstraction, as if the insubstantiality of myth, as expressions of energy in its various forms, introduced the possibility of paintings we refer to as abstract. Rothko was at pains to disassociate himself from the notion of abstraction, suggesting instead, over and over, that his work was packed full of emotion, as if the abstraction he rejected were a means of stripping the painted image of felt experience, and focusing instead on the sharp edges and delineations imposed by the intellect. The origins of abstraction in the works of Malevich, Mondrian, Kandinsky and others was indeed always rooted in spiritual exploration, as if their paintings worked as yantras, those combinations of shapes and colours, used as aids to meditation in Tantric and Hindu practice.
With Rothko, contemplation is the key, rather than a search for meaning, or mere pleasure in the experience colour or form. Rothko’s path from the late 1940s on, reaches inexorably towards a kind of purification, and the creation of works that call for the presence of the person before them. A form of dedicated yet relaxed attention that tunes into the painting’s own inescapable presence. It might be easy to dismiss the sheer beauty of his paintings, their power of seduction, but they offer so much more than that. They demand a kind of silence. A silence of the mind’s doubts, chatter and ceaseless questions. Unlike much of his abstract contemporaries, Rothko’s paintings are portals. Not just in the way that all painting opens up a universe within its frame, but as a two-way opening that offers the viewer a way inwards, through the magic of the image itself. Rothko was very conscious of this: the paintings hung, according to his wishes and included in a special very contained space in the Fondation Vuitton exhibition, in the Washington Phillips Collection, were designed to hang close to floor level, so as to invite such a reciprocal encounter. Each of the paintings from the 1950s until Rothko’s death in 1970 offers such an extraordinary encounter: a moment of self-discovery, on a non-personal basis, with one self, or dare it be said “the Self” . The exhibition is inevitably crowded, for this is a crowd-puller, and there’s a wide range of guided tours, from the erudite ones for connoisseurs of art history to others designed for babies up to 18 months old, but the paintings and the generous space of the building ensure that the experience transcends the hustle and bustle – perhaps even speak out on behalf of the moments of reflective engagement that each work so powerfully invites. At least if you can be bothered to stop a while and look, rather than voraciously collect images on a cell phone as so many visitors seem to be compelled to do.
The Rothko room from Tate Britain – the American painter's masterpiece is permanently in the galleries of British art, as he insisted that his works should hang near the Turners he so loved – has been moved to Paris, along with many works from the USA and in the private collections of the Rothko family. The very large dark maroon and black works from London (Black on Maroon, 1958, pictured above) don’t have quite the power that they do at the Tate: they need a contained space for all-embracing absorption. Placing them here in something of a thoroughfare weakens their collective impact – one of the few disappointments in a mostly impeccable presentation.The contrary is true of the very high-ceilinged spaces in which Rothko’s almost monochrome paintings from the early 60s are shown alongside several very large Giacometti figures, striding and standing (pictured above). There had been a plan for a Giacometti-Rothko installation at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, but it never happened. The American painter felt a strong affinity with the sculptor. The greys, blacks and off-whites of this period match the texture and hues of the massive yet delicate sculptures. But, most of all, it’s the indeterminate edge of every form, whether painted or sculpted that stands out. There’s nothing neat or hard-edged here, none of the visual certainties of so much minimalism, only the indeterminacy of that place where matter and space collide, or rather melt into each other.
This is perhaps the feature of Rothko’s mature work that I found most striking: the way in which the edges between shades and colours melt into each other, a seeming lack of focus which invites a mind in constant search of certainty to simply let go. This blurring of edges produces extraordinary vitality, a subtle vibration rather than decisive movement. This helps express the emotion which Rothko sought to communicate, or which imposed itself on the work, as he embraced the impersonal with such unstinting vigour and commitment. This is a very moving exhibition, with a depth and quality that makes it possible to spend much longer than can normally be done with a big art show. My tolerance for looking at art and my capacity for serious attention is usually limited to an hour or two. Here, I found that I was more than willing to immerse myself, painting by painting, room after room, and enjoy a series of unique encounters that filled me with awe, wonder and a good deal of joy.
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