#1903 1970
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bal-bullier · 5 months ago
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Mark Rothko
Green on Blue (1956)
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lonestarflight · 1 year ago
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"Artistʼs painting of the milestone crafts of history in flight around Earth and the Moon, an ocean going ship, the Wright 1903 Flyer, a jet aircraft, satellites, Sputnik and the Space Shuttle."
Date: 1970s
Smithsonian Institution ID: propix.494011760
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rottedthoughtz · 11 months ago
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t-jfh · 1 year ago
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Mark Rothko's "No. 14" (1960) at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko.
(Rothko/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)
Mark Rothko at Full Scale, and in Half Light
Sublime and vulgar all at once, his diaphanous stains of color have come together in a once-in-a-generation show in Paris.
By Jason Fasano - Reporting from Paris
The New York Times - October 25, 2033
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lemuseum · 9 months ago
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terminusantequem · 3 months ago
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Mark Rothko (American, 1903-1970), Untitled, 1968. Acrylic on paper mounted on hardboard panel
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thunderstruck9 · 9 months ago
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Robert Gwathmey (American, 1903-1988), Flower Freshness, c.1970. Oil on canvas, 50 x 35 in.
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lilacsinthedooryard · 1 year ago
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Mark Rothko (1903-1970)
Pink,Purple,Blue 1961
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gacougnol · 8 months ago
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Willi Beutler (1903–1978)
Sheep on the dike
around 1970
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abstrakshun · 1 year ago
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Mark Rothko (American, 1903 - 1970)
Untitled  - 1969
@ NGA - National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
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psikonauti · 1 year ago
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Clare Turlay Newberry (American,1903-1970)
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thefugitivesaint · 3 months ago
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Ricardo (Richard Taylor) (1903-1970), ''The Goblin'', Vol. 7, #6, Feb. 1927 Source
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davidhudson · 2 months ago
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Mark Rothko, September 25, 1903 – February 25, 1970.
Alexander Liberman, Mark Rothko’s Hand, 1964.
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gallifreyanhotfive · 6 months ago
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Random Doctor Who Facts You Might Not Know, Part 51
The Eighth Doctor can play multiple instruments, one of which is the violin. (Novel: The Year of the Intelligent Tigers)
The Master tried to use Kamelion's remaining connection to the TARDIS to prevent the Fifth Doctor’s regeneration. (Audio: Winter)
A version of the Sixth Doctor and Evelyn got imprisoned in 1903. The parallel Sixth lost Evelyn, his mind, both of his legs, and after a century, his life. (Audio: Jubilee)
The TARDIS has a Hostile Owner Destruction System, which will destroy the TARDIS and anyone inside of it. (Audio: Island of the Fendahl)
Nyssa is still able to point out where Traken is in the sky from Earth. (Audio: Autumn) The light from its destruction must not have reached Earth yet, so she can see it while there but never return.
Fegax was a student at the Prydonian Academy who tried to use a time drill to protest against the elite, but his time drill did not work. The Fifth Doctor - who was Lord President at the time - fixed it for him and returned it, and Fegax used it to flood the whole Academy. (Audio: Time in Office)
Types of regeneration include the Blur, the Disciplinary, the Explosion (subtype: the Slow Explosion, the Reverse Explosion), the Morph, the Swirl, the White Light, and the Memory Vortex. (Novel: How to be a Time Lord)
The Eighth Doctor was taken over by the Fendahl once. While taken over, Lucie said he glowed. (Audio: Island of the Fendahl)
Anya Kingdom, who traveled with the Tenth Doctor and posed as Ann Kelso in the 1970s for a while, is the niece of Sara Kingdom. (Audio: The House of Kingdom)
The Eighth Doctor has been known to occasionally sing while piloting the TARDIS. (Audio: The Dalek Trap)
As mentioned in other parts, the Forge was an intelligence agency that often experimented with enhanced or alien life. While many of them were obsessed with Lazarus - the project about the Doctor - one Forge member was much more interested in Project: Wildthyme, which was about Iris Wildthyme. She decided to end it by giving them her blood, which damaged their Oracle system and destroyed one of their bases. (Short story: Project: Wildthyme)
In the Psychodrome, memories and nightmares were brought back to life. The twisted way Nyssa perceived the Doctor at first blended with her thoughts on the Master melded the two together to create King Magus. (Audio: Psychodrome)
Galah attended the Academy with the Doctor, but they were never close to each other due to differences in opinion. She was a sculptor, but one day, she landed her TARDIS on an asteroid and created a dreamscape by hooking herself up to her TARDIS's protyon unit. (Novel: Strange England)
Temporal energy smells like roses to time sensitives. (Short story: Ring Theory)
There was a moment in The Waters of Amsterdam (which takes place immediately after Arc of Infinity) where the Fifth Doctor seemingly left Nyssa and Tegan behind, but he rematerialized seconds later. While it was only seconds for Nyssa and Tegan, the Doctor did: Omega, The Burning Prince, Time Crash, The Gates of Hell, Fallen Angels, Empire of the Racnoss (in which he took on a new companion we never learn what happened to), The Lady of the Lake, A Requiem for the Doctor, My Dinner with Andrew, The Furies, Relative Time, and Collision Course. Considering we don't know what happened to Alayna, his new Gallifreyan companion, this is an incredibly incomplete list of his adventures during this time before he went back for Nyssa and Tegan. Talk about a side quest, Doc!
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hard--headed--woman · 5 months ago
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Hi ladies! For this 3rd post I am again going to talk about a woman I mentionned yesterday (in the post about Natalie Clifford Barney) ;
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Romaine Brooks !
Her birth name is Beatrice Romaine Goddard, but we know her as Romaine Brooks. Successful italian american painter, she was born in 1874 in Roma and died in 1970 in Nice (in France) at 96 years old. Her works were successful in the early years of her career, before declining considerably during the 1930s and regaining popularity in the 1960s.
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Both her parents were American and had two other children. Shortly after Romaine's birth, they decided to return to the United States, then broke up.
It was here that life took a difficult turn for young Beatrice: her mother took very little care of her, and abused her, accusing her of being possessed by the devil and of bringing bad luck. When she was seven, her mother abandoned her, leaving her to a poor family in New York. This same family informed the child's grandfather, who then decided to take charge of his granddaughter and her education. He placed her in various religious institutions, and for years she saw very little of her mother.
She began drawing and painting at the age of 16.
In 1893, she moved to Europe, became a cabaret singer in Paris and studied painting in Roma. She returned to live with her mother in 1901, after her brother's death, but her mother died in 1902, leaving Romaine to inherit her grandfather's fortune.
From then on, Romaine began to live a very unconventional life. In 1903, she, an open lesbian, and her homosexual friend John Ellington Brooks decided to marry. It's obviously not a love marriage, but an agreement, an arrangement between the two friends: this marriage will give the impression that they respect social norms and will therefore spare them the comments and pressure of society, and they will be free to love whoever they want, sheltered behind their appearance as a married couple.
Romaine and John never lived together, but to thank him for helping her, Romaine paid her friend a monthly allowance.
Romaine has had many lovers in her life : Dolly Wilde, (yeah this is Oscar Wilde's niece, and an interesting person!), the dancer Ida Rubistein, the marquise Luisa Casati, the pianist Renata Borgatti... but the love of her life was Natalie Clifford Barney. As you know it if you've read my post about Natalie, the two women stayed together for about 50 years, from 1914/1915 (unclear) until Romaine's death in 1970.
In 1904, she began using shades of gray in her work, and these would remain the dominant tones in her later paintings.
One of her best-known paintings is "La France Croisée" (Crossed France), which she painted in reaction to the first Battle of Ypres, at the beginning of the first world war.
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The "patriotism" that transpires from this allegorical painting and inspired her mobilization for France and the Croix-Rouge française earned her the Légion d'Honneur in 1920.
She was a very successful painter. Her paintings were exhibited all over the world, from Paris to London to New York. Her career peaked in 1925, followed by a decline in the '30s. At this point, she gave up painting and concentrated on drawing, creating works inspired by her unhappy childhood. In the 60s, however, the art world started to take a renewed interest in her paintings.
She died at 96 in Nice, in December 1970, and since then, several prestigious exhibitions in her honor have been organized, rekindling public interest in Romaine Brooks and her work.
Here are some of her paintings :
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(This is Natalie Clifford Barney!)
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(This is Ida Rubistein)
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(The Charwoman)
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(This is Renata Borgatti)
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(Chasseresse)
There is way much more to say about her and you should really check her life and her art! She was an interesting person with interesting works and I personally am glad I found her paintings.
See you tomorrow!
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peaceinthestorm · 6 months ago
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Mark Rothko (1903-1970, American) ~ Untitled, 1950–52
[Source: tate.org.uk]
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