-
Dream job: US soccer fans paid to watch every World Cup game
-
England left frustrated by Ghana in World Cup draw
-
Europe wilts under record heat as AC sales soar
-
Grieving Deschamps to miss France's final World Cup group game
-
Rubio rejects Iran tolls on Hormuz as deal strains multiply
-
Two-goal Ronaldo delights in silencing critics after 'attacks'
-
Cubans bid farewell to revolution hero Valdes
-
Morocco squad 'supporting' Hakimi despite impending rape trial
-
Ronaldo delights in silencing 'attacks' after making World Cup history
-
Airbus to inspect 16 A380s after cracks found on plane wings
-
'Paris in this heat is awful': Tourists change plans as sites close early
-
Bolivian government says cleared all protest roadblocks
-
'I'm back': Ronaldo scores at sixth World Cup as Portugal run riot
-
France has hottest-ever day as 'unbearable' heatwave keeps scorching Europe
-
US TV news host begs for info after kidnap note says mother is dead
-
Ronaldo double fires Portugal, England eye last 32
-
Ronaldo scores at sixth World Cup as Portugal run riot
-
Hollywood powerhouses bring AI fight to Europe
-
Portugal's Ronaldo first man to score at six World Cups
-
What is driving Europe's heatwave?
-
Rubio says US will not accept Iranian tolls on Hormuz
-
Spain's Oyarzabal happy to play through pain at World Cup
-
Marco Rubio in Gulf to reassure allies hit hard by Mideast war
-
US Supreme Court rules against man whose dreadlocks were cut off in prison
-
American Michele Kang agrees deal to buy French club Lyon
-
UN to begin evacuating stranded Mideast sailors after US-Iran talks
-
French farmers suffer arid crops, heat-stricken animals
-
Tech drags down world stocks, oil dips on supply hopes
-
Scorching heat shuts Paris landmarks early as France swelters
-
Shootout traps tourists at Rio sunrise lookout
-
Ipswich hire Gary O'Neil as manager
-
Heatwave sparks health warnings across Europe
-
Lake wins Wales captaincy race ahead of Morgan
-
Hundreds of schools close as UK braces for record-breaking heatwave
-
Tech names drag down world stocks, oil dips on supply hopes
-
Starmer vows 'orderly' transition as Labour MPs mull bid to be PM
-
Reports of Dupont inclusion in France squad 'bordering on annoying' says Galthie
-
ACTIVIST SHAREHOLDER FILES SCHEDULE 13D IN EQUUS TOTAL RETURN, INC.
-
England coach McCullum denies rift with 'good friend' Stokes
-
Europe: the world's fastest-warming continent
-
Taliban officials hold EU migration talks in Brussels
-
Gennaro Gattuso returns to coaching with Lazio after Italy debacle
-
Kenya halts US Ebola facility: health minister tells court
-
Why the heat is wreaking havoc on Europe's trains
-
Zelensky to skip key Ukraine conference in Poland over WWII row
-
Seoul leads rout for tech shares as oil prices dip
-
Europe heatwave closes schools, threatens health
-
India monsoon sweeps north but brings less rain than usual
-
Germany eyes longer working lives in pension reform plan
-
UK and markets await Burnham's economic plans
'Great vibrations' of Mark Rothko at blockbuster Paris show
A huge show of 115 works by Mark Rothko opens in Paris this week. His son says he combined a "European soul" with "the freedom of America" to become an icon of 20th-century art.
The show at the Louis Vuitton Foundation spans Rothko's entire career, from the more traditional figurative pictures to the huge rectangles of brooding colour for which he is best remembered.
Rothko's stated goal was to "raise painting to the same level as music and poetry", said his son Christopher Rothko, who helped curate the exhibition and has written a new collection of essays to coincide with it.
"My father died when I was six but we talked about music a great deal," he told AFP ahead of the opening on Wednesday.
"He spoke of Mozart, smiling with tears in his eyes, and I think it's the same effect with his paintings," he added.
Marcus Rothkovitch was born to a Jewish family in 1903 in Daugavpils, then known as Dvinsk, in modern-day Latvia -- his family emigrating 10 years later to the United States.
He discovered his vocation fairly late, in the 1930s, but his early works already capture a dark mood, full of isolated and melancholy figures.
Figurative art did not come naturally -- "he became aware of not being able to paint without mutilating it," said co-curator Suzanne Page -- and by the 1940s he was dabbling in surrealism.
- New language -
As for many artists, the horrors of World War II and the Holocaust forced him to seek out a new language in art.
And it was with the "Multiforms" of the late 1940s that his work evolved into abstract shapes -- at this stage looking like brightly coloured ink blots but with the famous rectangles lurking among them, waiting to take centre stage.
He settled into his late style in the 1950s and stuck with it until his death in 1970 -- vast ragged rectangles of incredible colour that somehow give off "a great vibration", as Page puts it.
Seventy of these works are displayed at the Louis Vuitton Foundation, which has funnelled the vast profits of the LVMH luxury brand into a series of blockbuster shows lately, most recently an unprecedented collection by Jean-Paul Basquiat and Andy Warhol.
Rothko's shifting moods are on display, from the blood-reds and maroons of the "Seagram Murals", to the near-monochrome "Blackforms", to a sudden burst of brightness after he suffered a mild aneurysm that led to warnings from his doctor.
"There's an inner glow even in the lighter paintings," said his son. "He only gives you the suggestion of the idea. You have to bring a large piece of yourself in order to communicate with him."
Years of heavy drinking and a marital breakdown took their toll. He was 66 when he took an overdose of barbiturates and slit open a wrist.
"He sought to express fundamental human emotions -- tragedy, death, ecstasy," said Page.
It is all there "if you take the time and the risk to look inside the painting and look for a very long time".
J.Gomez--AT