Showing posts with label Rothko Chapel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rothko Chapel. Show all posts

17.5.09

Rothko Chapel

Rothko Chapel, Southeast, South and Southwest Panels

I have just returned from another brief visit to Houston to do some business. On my first day there, I had a little down time, and decided to make another visit to the Rothko Chapel -- since I've been thinking about those late Rothkos lately, and every time I see the chapel works, they offer some new perception or moment. It was a glorious day with bright clear sunlight and some floating clouds. As always, entering the chapel was a drastic reality shift from the brightness and heat of the outdoors. The place was empty except for a greeter at the front desk and an extremely conspicuous guard sitting in a chair inside the chapel. In addition to the rough hewn benches, the floor of the chapel was strewn with small mats with little round pillows in the middle -- obviously to accommodate lotus sitters, but very distracting interruptions of the space. Their presence made me think about the dichotomy between the paintings, and the space as a "chapel" in which the paintings exist as part of a devotional or meditative environment. Of course the idea of the chapel came first, and the paintings were conceived specifically for that context, both in terms of physicality and content -- just as Rothko was chosen for the project presumably because of the compatibility between his work and the idea of the chapel. But to my mind, the paintings have outlived the original context -- like the Giottos in the Arena Chapel or the Caravaggios in San Luigi -- their sustained importance as paintings has rendered their ecumenical role quaint if not obsolete. The notion of attaching religiosity to Rothko's paintings is a warm and fuzzy product of a past era, and is in reality diametrically opposed to the utter anarchy of the works themselves. These paintings declare a reality of vastness and flux in which any notion of certainty, any doctrine or dogma is patently absurd.

On this day, the light in the chapel was particularly changeable. I sat on a bench for a while watching as the paintings transformed from huge active painterly surfaces revealed by the full (filtered) sunlight, to monolithic almost black slab/spaces devoid of surface as a cloud passed overhead. A few people came in, some alone and some in pairs, and I noticed that they hardly looked at the paintings -- rather, they sat and read the little brochure, or just sort of glanced around for a few minutes then left. The quiet stillness of the chapel can indeed be conducive to an undifferentiated state -- only because the paintings perform a strange trick of temporarily receding from physicality, of becoming absorbed into an experience of the space as a whole, reinforcing their ambiguity. Then just as suddenly, they reassert their fierce presence. For me, the less successful of the works are the two triptychs on the east and west walls with the elevated center panels -- they now seem almost mannered, and pandering to the ideological precepts of the chapel. The verticle painting with the floating black rectangle on the south wall advances Rothko's trademark image to a powerful stark intensity. But to my mind, the paintings on the four corner walls, along with the giant tour de force triptych on the north wall, are Rothko's greatest work. The sheer scale of these paintings is unfathomable -- all monochromes with different variations of layered washed surfaces and deep dull purples. Here Rothko repudiates any preconceptions about painting's parameters, and uses the chapel context as a catalyst to achieve an extravagant radicality. These are without doubt the most portentous paintings of the NY School generation; and their bold singularity, in sharp contrast to the ideological limits of their devotional setting, places them among the most important paintings of any era.

16.8.08

Just Back from HOUSTON

Menil Collection: installation with Barnett Newman


Menil Collection: installation with Yves Klein and Barnett Newman

Menil Collection: site specific piece by Dan Flavin

I try to get down to Houston a couple of times a year. I’m usually so busy when I’m there that I don't have enough time to fully peruse all the galleries and museums. I read somewhere that Houston is the third largest art scene in the US, after NY and LA, in terms of number of venues; and I am always astonished by the depth and quality of the work I encounter there, particularly where abstract painting is concerned. On this trip, my time was very short, but I always reserve a few hours to check in with what I consider to be the real jewel of Houston, the Menil Collection. This amazing collection really affirms Houston as a world class art city, and is so deep and vital that it requires multiple and repeated visits. The main building contains the galleries for rotating shows, as well as the wonderful contemporary collection. There is usually only a small sliver of the collection visible, and it changes much less frequently than I would like; but the work is always presented in a sensitive and engaging way that not only utilizes the beautiful space and natural light of the galleries, but also presents interesting intelligent resonances and conversations among the works, without didacticism. In the same neighborhood as the main galleries, are numerous buildings that highlight special aspects of the collection, including a fantastic Dan Flavin installation in a huge warehouse space, the indescribably beautiful Cy Twombly Gallery, and of course the Rothko Chapel.

Cy Twombly, Say Goodbye, Catullus, to the Shores of Asia Minor, 1994, 13ft x 52ft (Detail)

I think the Twombly Gallery, designed by Renzo Piano, is the most gorgeous exhibition space I’ve ever seen – all natural light, thick raw plaster walls that are so sensuously cool and smooth they demand your caress. The majority of Twombly’s most important paintings (through the mid-‘90s) are here including the 1959 sparse monochromes, Bay of Naples and several related works, the brilliant suite of green landscapes on shaped panels, numerous “blackboard” paintings, and the magnificent Say Goodbye….. completed in 1994.

Rothko Chapel (Detail)

Back in the early '70s when the Rothko Chapel opened, I made the trip to see it -- and ponder it. Since then, I’ve been there dozens of times; and each and every time it’s a different experience. These are among the most enigmatic paintings ever made. Their appearance is constantly altered by the changing light in the chapel – on cloudy days, they look so dark and brooding that you can hardly focus on them – when the sun is bright, they radiate variations of a deep wine red/black, and the surfaces are alive with touch. My feelings about these paintings have vacillated from visit to visit. Initially, I was blown away by their sheer presence – at other times I have felt that they are overwrought or ungiving – but they always insisted on continued dialogue. Over the past fifteen years or so, I have come to regard these paintings as THE defining achievement of the post-WWII generation, and as the single most uncompromising statement in Modern (or contemporary) painting.