
"Hirsch E.P. Rothko by Hirsch E.P. Rothko, a memoir of a year spent in the mountains living and working in a license plate shed, is a dramatized account of a lived experience. The nine-chapter narrative also contains a polemic about regional painting's relevance in a world in which the United S[t]ates might be a regional, rather than international, power, and in an artworld in which established methods of critical art--predicated on negation, subversion, parody and deconstruction--seem increasingly ineffective. Instead, it proposes a kind of creative critique based on invention and synthesis, the privileged form of which is fiction. In Rothko's own words: Regionalism is not a style, but a mode of and model for making. It not so much suspends the viewer's disbelief as it enables an artist to suspend his selfconsciousness. The respite from criticality opens a fictive space where a conceptual artist can be a painter, a painter a writer, an art dealer a publisher. Regionalism is the protective shell that allows us to be real artists again"--Artist's Web site.
Page Count:
89
Publication Date:
2010-01-01
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