Mark Rothko - “No. 3, 1967”.






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Description from the seller
Mark Rothko: "No. 3, 1967".
In the margin, in small type, is the artist’s name, the title of the work, and copyright.
The work is in excellent condition.
Never been framed and is stored in a dark archival storage between protective acid-free paper. The photos shown are part of the description, the shown frame (size) is for illustration and is not included.
This artwork is carefully, securely packed and shipped in protective acid-free paper.
Shipping to the Canary Islands is not available.
Mark Rothko (1903-1970) was a Russian-born American painter and a central figure of Abstract Expressionism. He is best known as a leading representative of the Color Field movement, in which expansive fields of luminous color were used to evoke deep emotional and spiritual responses. Rothko sought to move beyond traditional subjects, aiming to create direct encounters between viewer and paintings that, in his words, "addressed the basic emotions of humanity: tragedy, ecstasy, downfall."
His artistic journey began with figurative and surrealist influences, but by the late 1940s he had developed his characteristic style: large-format canvases with softly bounded color fields that seem to drift in repose against subtly modulated backgrounds. These meditative works invited long contemplation and were often placed in immersive, chapel-like environments.
Rothko’s paintings are among the most valuable works of modern art. Several have sold for more than $80 million at auction, with one work in a private sale bringing in more than $186 million, reflecting their rarity and cultural significance. Collectors and institutions regard them as masterpieces of 20th-century abstraction.
Artists of comparable importance: Basquiat, Kandinsky, Hockney, Lichtenstein, Miró, Banksy, Brainwash, Delaunay, Nara, Soulages, Jenk, Orlinski, Wille, Rizzi, Manara, Thiebaud, Herrera, Laurent, Klein, Coa, Dior, Lagasse, Vuitton, Kaws, Valentino, Cappiello, Dalí, Ramos, Warhol, Lautrec, Klimt, Matisse, Hirst, Chagall, Koons, Haring, Indiana, Mondrian, Groening, Richter, Monroe, Kusama, Murakami, Testa, Villemot, Oldenburg, Hopper, Ripolles, Wesselmann, Magritte, among others.
Mark Rothko: "No. 3, 1967".
In the margin, in small type, is the artist’s name, the title of the work, and copyright.
The work is in excellent condition.
Never been framed and is stored in a dark archival storage between protective acid-free paper. The photos shown are part of the description, the shown frame (size) is for illustration and is not included.
This artwork is carefully, securely packed and shipped in protective acid-free paper.
Shipping to the Canary Islands is not available.
Mark Rothko (1903-1970) was a Russian-born American painter and a central figure of Abstract Expressionism. He is best known as a leading representative of the Color Field movement, in which expansive fields of luminous color were used to evoke deep emotional and spiritual responses. Rothko sought to move beyond traditional subjects, aiming to create direct encounters between viewer and paintings that, in his words, "addressed the basic emotions of humanity: tragedy, ecstasy, downfall."
His artistic journey began with figurative and surrealist influences, but by the late 1940s he had developed his characteristic style: large-format canvases with softly bounded color fields that seem to drift in repose against subtly modulated backgrounds. These meditative works invited long contemplation and were often placed in immersive, chapel-like environments.
Rothko’s paintings are among the most valuable works of modern art. Several have sold for more than $80 million at auction, with one work in a private sale bringing in more than $186 million, reflecting their rarity and cultural significance. Collectors and institutions regard them as masterpieces of 20th-century abstraction.
Artists of comparable importance: Basquiat, Kandinsky, Hockney, Lichtenstein, Miró, Banksy, Brainwash, Delaunay, Nara, Soulages, Jenk, Orlinski, Wille, Rizzi, Manara, Thiebaud, Herrera, Laurent, Klein, Coa, Dior, Lagasse, Vuitton, Kaws, Valentino, Cappiello, Dalí, Ramos, Warhol, Lautrec, Klimt, Matisse, Hirst, Chagall, Koons, Haring, Indiana, Mondrian, Groening, Richter, Monroe, Kusama, Murakami, Testa, Villemot, Oldenburg, Hopper, Ripolles, Wesselmann, Magritte, among others.
