Often heralded as one of the most important and influential artists of the twentieth century, Mark Rothko would not live to celebrate the 1971 opening of the chapel in Houston bearing his name. Rothko’s death by suicide in 1970 at the age of sixty-six sent shockwaves through an art world that he and his co-conspirators, in what became known as The New York School, had helped fundamentally to transform through their experimentations with abstract expressionism. Though he flirted with social realist aesthetics early in his career, Rothko became enamored by surrealism’s explorations of the power and possibilities of the unconscious mind, especially for artmaking. Attendant concerns about faith, myth, and spirituality led him to develop a practice that would ultimately yield hundreds of iconic works that have become celebrated for the “atmosphere of piety and wonder” they tend to arouse.1 “So seductive is the quality of Rothko’s color, and...

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