“It is our function as artists to make the spectator see the world our way not his.” - Mark Rothko
To have the guts like Sinatra’s to declare through regrets, tears and despair “I got through it all and did it my way” Oh, to trust the power in me and stay always authentic and true to my point of view no matter how out of sync or what proper poets think
The Rothko chapel with its paintings of black took me completely aback they seemed non-paintings to me but I sat in the changing light and could see the artistry in that quiet urban place I could feel his gentle grace he forced me to see his world in his hues and strokes and curls
A Rothko or Sinatra I am not but if in my lines are caught the sweet or dark breath of my muse if I speak in my voice with its hues maybe a whiff of spirit there will cast a piece of my soul and snare someone’s musing causing them to write and fling out their world in their light.
The Rothko Chapel is on the University of St. Thomas campus in Houston, Texas. It is an irregular octagonal brick building with gray or rose stucco walls and a baffled skylight. It serves as a place of meditation as well as a meeting hall and is furnished with eight simple, moveable benches for meditative seating. About 55,000 people visit the chapel each year. Fourteen of Rothko's paintings are displayed in the chapel. Three walls display triptychs, while the other five walls display single paintings. Beginning in 1964, Rothko began painting a series of black paintings, which incorporated other dark hues and texture effects. [Based on article in Wikipedia]