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Old 05-18-2007, 05:33 PM   #1
Richard Bingham Richard Bingham is offline
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Joined: Jan 2006
Location: Blackfoot Id
Posts: 431



Hmm. I kinda like it. Actually, I like a lot of Rothko.

What is healthy about a discussion on this topic is not to question the validity or the value of a piece such as this, but to ask just how indeed, was it possible for the entire "art establishment" to eventually accept, then underwrite the whole of modernism throughout the past century?

Another worthy question is wherefore the valuation of works of art sum total? The fact is that having been dead and gone these 37 long years, after having attained admittance to the "canon" of notable artists, Mr. Rothko is no longer able to produce, and the consequent effect upon supply and demand is what determines the price in those rarified circles, where pickled shark parts bring six figures.

Is it easy to "fool" people? Carol, I beg to differ. If it were easy, I would be very actively "fooling" the public with my own paintings (subject matter or approach certainly wouldn' be at factor in successful deceptions) then laughing all the way to the bank. As it is, my commissions are hard won, few and far between, as are sales of my "spec" pieces.

I truly believe great art in the very near future will be a fusion of the classical/realist approach with the simplest, visceral attributes of abstract expressionism that resonate with sincere honesty. It's already evident in some of the best work being painted curently.

If being an iconoclast "rebel" continues to be the earmark of the "worthy" artist, as it has for a hundred years or more, we who rally to the banner of representational painting are now the revolutionaries The current art establishment which supports this record price for Mr. Rothko's painting is more hidebound, dogmatic and rigidly monolithic in their rule of the "art world" than the French Academie of the late 1800's ever was.
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