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  1. No. 61 (Rust and Blue) is a 1953 painting by the Russian-American Abstract expressionist artist Mark Rothko. The work was first exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1961 but is now in the collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

  2. Rust and Blue (1953) by Mark Rothko. In Rust and Blue (1953), Rothko uses layered color to enrich the hues in the painting and to lend it a quality that the artist described as that of "inner light."

  3. Reproducciónde orden. Marcus Rothkowitz (Daugavpils, Letonia, 25 de septiembre de 1903-Nueva York, Estados Unidos, 25 de febrero de 1970), conocido como Mark Rothko (en letón, Marks Rotko), fue un pintor y grabador nacido en Letonia, que vivió la mayor parte de su vida en los Estados Unidos. Ha sido asociado con el movimiento contemporáneo ...

  4. Mark Rothko is a key figure in Abstract Expressionism, best known for his large color field paintings like No.61 (Rust and Blue) (1953). Born Markus Rothkowitz in Dvinsk, Russian Empire (now Latvia) in 1903, Rothko and his family immigrated to the United States in 1913.

  5. Mark Rothko, Untitled [Blue, Green, and Brown], 1952 (alternatively dated to 1951), Collection of Mrs. Paul Mellon, ... As the principal recipient of the Mark Rothko Foundation's largesse, the National Gallery of Art received more than 1,100 works—paintings on canvas and works on paper—as well as research materials, ...

  6. 25 de jun. de 2019 · Alternate juxtapositions of similar or divergent tones—shades of deep blue against dark purple or bright red against brown—elicit disparate emotional responses. In employing a signature structure, Rothko found infinite variation.

  7. 13 de jun. de 2023 · Moving to the middle part of No. 61, the color blue signifies Mark Rothkos hard work and effort. The unbroken strip of blue talks more about the viewer’s past and himself while making No. 61. It basically intersects with the past, which represents his and his viewers’ pain before the creation of Rust and Blue.