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Red Play Guide Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 1 Red TABLE OF CONTENTS CONTENTS 3 4 4 5 5 8 8 9 13 14 WHO WE ARE INTRODUCTION TO THE PLAY CHARACTERS SYNOPSIS MARK ROTHKO WHAT MAKES ROTHKO'S WORK SO IMPORTANT IN HIS OWN WORDS A CONVERSATION WITH JOHN LOGAN ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM ROTHKO AND THE FOUR SEASONS 15 ROTHKO’S V.I.P.S 19 WHAT LEADS TO WHAT? – ISMS AND WHERE THEY COME FROM AND GO 23 THEMES IN THE PLAY 24 APOLLO VS. DIONYSUS 25 GLOSSARY 28 DISCUSSION QUESTIONS It is Arizona Theatre Company’s goal to share the enriching experience of live theatre. This play guide is intended to help you prepare for your visit to Arizona Theatre Company. Should you have comments or suggestions regarding the play guide, or if you need more information about scheduling trips to see an ATC production, please feel free to contact us: Tucson: April Jackson Associate Education Manager (520) 884-8210 ext 8506 (520) 628-9129 fax Phoenix: Cale Epps Education Manager (602) 256-6899 ext 6503 (602) 256-7399 fax Red Play Guide compiled and written by Jennifer Bazzell, Literary Manager Katherine Monberg, Artistic Intern, and Allison Hrabar, ATC Intern. Discussion questions and activities prepared by Cale Epps, Education Manager April Jackson, Associate Education Manager and Amber Tibbitts, Education Associate. Layout by Gabriel Armijo. SPONSORS Support for ATC’s Education and Community Programming has been provided by: Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Foundation JPMorgan Chase John and Helen Murphy Foundation National Endowment for the Arts Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture PICOR Charitable Foundation Rosemont Copper Stonewall Foundation Target The Boeing Company The Donald Pitt Family Foundation The Johnson Family Foundation, Inc. The Lovell Foundation Organizations APS Arizona Commission on the Arts Bank of America Foundation Blue Cross Blue Shield Arizona Boeing City Of Glendale Community Foundation for Southern Arizona Cox Charities Downtown Tucson Partnership Enterprise Holdings Foundation Ford Motor Company Fund Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide The Marshall Foundation The Maurice and Meta Gross Foundation The Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation The Stocker Foundation The William L. and Ruth T. Pendleton Memorial Fund Tucson Medical Center Tucson Pima Arts Council Wells Fargo 2 Red ARIZONA THEATRE COMPANY: WHO WE ARE Thousands of people make our work at ATC possible! WHO WE ARE Arizona Theatre Company is a professional, not-for-profit theatre company. This means all of our artists, administrators and production staff are paid professionals, and the income we receive from ticket sales and contributions goes right back into our budget to create our work, rather than to any particular person as a profit. Each season, ATC employs hundreds of actors, directors and designers from all over the country to create the work you see on stage. In addition, ATC currently employs about 100 staff members in our production shops and administrative offices in Tucson and Phoenix during our season. Among these people are carpenters, painters, marketing professionals, fundraisers, stage directors, computer specialists, sound and light board operators, tailors, costume designers, box office agents, stage crew -the list is endless- representing an amazing range of talents and skills. Herberger Theatre in Phoenix, Arizona We are also supported by a Board of Trustees, a group of business and community leaders who volunteer their time and expertise to assist the theatre in financial and legal matters, advise in marketing and fundraising, and help represent the theatre in our community. Roughly 150,000 people attend our shows every year, and several thousands of those people support us with charitable contributions in addition to purchasing their tickets. Businesses large and small, private foundations and the city and state governments also support our work financially. All of this is in support of our mission: to create professional theatre that continually Temple of Music and Art in Tucson, Arizona strives to reach new levels of artistic excellence and that resonates locally, in the state of Arizona and throughout the nation. In order to fulfill its mission, the theatre produces a broad repertoire ranging from classics to new works, engages artists of the highest caliber, and is committed to assuring access to the broadest spectrum of citizens. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 3 Red Red By John Logan INTRODUCTION TO THE PLAY INTRO Master Abstract Expressionist Mark Rothko, one of the most visionary artists of the 20th century, has landed the commission of a lifetime, a series of murals for New York’s The Four Seasons Restaurant. As he wrestles with the overwhelming task of creating multiple paintings on a grand scale, his new young assistant questions his views of art, creativity and commerce. What follows is a raw and provocative dialogue between master and novice, old guard and new guard exploring the question, “Is art meant to provoke, soothe or disturb?” Based on true events, Red is a searing portrait of an artist’s ambition and vulnerability as he tries to create a definitive work for an extraordinary setting. Red is the winner of six 2010 Tony Awards including Best Play, the most honored play of the Broadway season. Actors Connor Toms and Denis Arndt in Red. Photo by Chris Bennion. CHARACTERS Actor Denis Arndt who plays Rothko in ATC’s production. Actor Connor Toms who plays Ken in Red. Photo by Chris Bennion. Mark Rothko: A famous artist, working on perhaps the most important commission of his career. Ken: Rothko’s new assistant, an aspiring artist himself. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 4 Red SYNOPSIS SYNOPSIS It’s the late 1950s and Mark Rothko, famous Abstract Expressionist painter, has received a commission to create paintings for a brand new restaurant, The Four Seasons. He has also hired a brand new assistant, a young artist named Ken. As the two men get to know each other through conversations about art, they discuss life and death and everything in between. The dynamic between master and apprentice morphs and shifts as lessons are learned, a relationship is forged and questions are asked, ignored or answered. Set slightly more than ten years before Rothko’s eventual suicide, Red examines not only the nature of art and its influence on the world, but, perhaps more profoundly, the life of a man plagued by doubt but also gifted with genius. MARK ROTHKO Mark Rothko, pioneer of Abstract Expressionism, was born Marcus Rothkowitz in Dvinsk, Russia – in what is now Latvia – on September 25, 1903. He emigrated from Russia to the U.S. with his family in 1913 to join his father and older brothers where they had settled in Portland, Oregon, three years earlier. Mark did not have an idyllic childhood; his father passed away soon after Mark’s arrival in the U.S. and Mark was forced to learn English to work and support the family at a very young age. He was highly involved in political and social issues in his youth, and he graduated early from Lincoln High School to enroll at Yale University in 1921, with the intention of becoming a labor Map showing the location of present-day Latvia. leader. After two years at Yale, he withdrew from the university and made his way to New York to become a painter, working at odd jobs to support himself while attending Max Weber’s drawing classes at the Arts Student League, which constituted his only formal artistic training. In 1928, his paintings were chosen to be a part of a group show at the Opportunity Gallery with Lou Harris and Milton Avery – a huge break for a young painter with little formal artistic education. Arizona Theatre Company By the mid 1930s, Rothko became very involved with the leftist Artists’ Union, where he and several other artists advocated for the creation of a municipal gallery, which was eventually granted. He met many artists in his work with the Easel Division of the Works Progress Administration under the New Deal, but he maintained a true sense of closeness with a specific group of painters, most of whom were Russian Jewish artists: Joseph Solman, Adolph Gottlieb, and John Graham among them. Collectively this group became known as “The Ten,” after showing their work together at Gallery Succession in 1934. Play Guide 5 Red Rothko's Ever-Changing Artistic Style ROTHKO Rothko’s work underwent dramatic stylistic developments in style throughout the course of his career, which he stated was motivated by an ever-developing clarity of content. His first works were produced in a realistic style influenced by Expressionism that resulted in his Subway series in the late 1930s, which highlighted the loneliness of existence in bleak, urban environments. This Expressionism began to incorporate more surrealistic elements in the 1940s to create the semi-Abstract forms of his Baptismal Scene (1945), before he found a highly personalized style of Abstract Expressionism by the late 1940s. In 1939, he took a brief hiatus from painting altogether to study philosophy and mythology, becoming fascinated with Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy and internal expression rather than realistic representation. The impact of this experience led to his best-known paintings, often called “multi-forms,” in which figures do not appear at all and which achieve their impact by juxtaposing large areas of melting colors that seem to float parallel to the plane of the canvas in an atmospheric, undefined space. This style was quite distinct from his fellow Abstract Expressionists whose effects were largely determined by dramatic brushstrokes or the dripping or splattering of paint. Rothko claimed that his multi-forms most accurately fulfilled his need to create universal symbols of human yearning, and produce powerful statements about the condition of man. Rothko forever continued to develop this style by further and further simplifying it, restricting his works to a small number of “soft-edged” rectangles that consume immense amounts of space on his large canvases, whose surprisingly intimate impact is derived from the nuances of localized colors. Rothko’s entire personal life was haunted by his constant battle with depression, which many consider to be an undiagnosed case of bipolar disorder. He married jewelry designer Edith Sachar in 1932, followed by a divorce in 1945 after which he married Mary Alice Beistel, with whom he had two children. He won several acknowledgements throughout his career, but acclaim never seemed to bring him happiness. He became known as an abrasive and unpleasant personality, even refusing an award from the Guggenheim Fellowship on the basis that art should not be competitive. Rothko often stood up for his beliefs, which cost him dearly in financial terms and in commissions he refused to finish when he could not reconcile his social and political beliefs with the missions of the people and organizations who had funded his work. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide Actor Denis Arndt as Rothko. Photo by Chris Bennion. 6 Red ROTHKO In 1964, Rothko received a large commission from John and Dominique de Menil to create massive wall murals for a nondenominational chapel in Houston, Texas on the campus of St. Thomas Catholic University. He created a total of 14 canvases for the chapel, which was renamed the Rothko Chapel after his death and has since been a meeting place for many of the great religious leaders of the world. In 1968, Rothko spent nearly three weeks in the hospital recovering from an aortic aneurysm that left him bitterly contemplative of his own death. He became resentful that his works were not being properly appreciated, and that he was leaving behind a hollow legacy. These feelings spurred him to create his final collection of 25 canvases, Blacks and Grays, which demonstrate a clear shift in his mental state. The combination of ill health and depression brought on by the conviction that he would be quickly forgotten led him to commit suicide at the age of 66 by ingesting an overdose of anti-depressants and slitting his arms and wrists. He was discovered by his assistant on the morning of February 25, 1970, resting on the bathroom floor of his studio, steeped Rothko’s grave in East Marion, NY in his own blood: a tragic end to one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. The Rothko Chapel in Houston, Texas. After his death, the distribution of his property remains one of the most infamous court cases in the history of modern art, taking eleven years to resolve. Throughout his life Rothko hoarded his works which, at his death, numbered 798 paintings and numerous other sketches and drawings. Rothko’s daughter, Kate, accused the executors of the will of conspiracy and conflict of interest in selling her father’s works, and won the battle in court. In 1979, a new board was chosen to head the Mark Rothko Foundation and the works were eventually divided between the Foundation and Rothko’s two children. In 1984, the works distributed to the Mark Rothko Foundation were divided up among 19 museums in Great Britain, the U.S., the Netherlands, Denmark, and Israel, with the largest portion of them assigned to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. -written by Katherine Monberg, Artistic Intern Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 7 Red ROTHKO WHAT MAKES ROTHKO’S WORK SO IMPORTANT? Rothko's mature style – large paintings of saturated color – emerged in the 1950s. They were painstakingly created by a complex process of soaking and staining the canvas with thin layers of paint. He worked on a large scale because he wanted his paintings to function as physical beings, "so when you turn your back to the painting," he said, "you would feel that presence the way you feel the sun on your back." Defending the art of his time, Rothko fought the notion that subject matter was absent in abstract art. His own themes were "basic human emotions - tragedy, ecstasy, doom." So Rothko painted each work with a subject in mind, although like all abstract expressionists he abhorred the idea of explanation. Instead, Rothko believed the paintings constitute an intimate dialogue between the artist and the audience, and understanding comes from serious contemplation by the viewer. Rothko never intended us to see one single painting of his in a museum. He didn't allow his works to be displayed in galleries or public spaces without control over the presentation, and he arranged his works in groups meant to evoke a contemplative mood. At the same time, he wanted his works to eventually hang in private homes, where a single painting would be the focus of a room. In the Tower: Mark Rothko, an exhibit featuring Rothko's 1964 black-on-black paintings from Rothko Chapel. The exhibit is inside the National Gallery of Art's East Building, Tower Gallery, (main tower, pictured) in Washington, D.C. -by Lauren Rabb, Curator of Art, University of Arizona Museum of Art IN HIS OWN WORDS Rothko had much to say throughout his lifetime. Below are some of his words regarding the meaning of life, art and value. • “It is a widely accepted notion among painters that it does not matter what one paints as long as it is well painted. This is the essence of academicism.” • “Art to me is an anecdote of the spirit, and the only means of making concrete the purpose of its varied quickness and stillness.” • “We assert that the subject is crucial and only that subject matter is valid which is tragic and timeless.” Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 8 Red • “Silence is so accurate.” OWN WORDS • “The myth holds us, therefore, not through its romantic flavor, not the remembrance of beauty of some bygone age, not through the possibilities of fantasy, but because it expresses to us something real and existing in ourselves, as it was to those who first stumbled upon the symbols to give them life.” • “Small pictures since the Renaissance are like novels; large pictures are like dramas in which one participates in a direct way.” • “And last, it may be worthwhile trying to hang something beyond the partial wall because some of the pictures do very well in a confined space.” • “I also hang the pictures low rather than high, and particularly in the case of the largest ones, often as close to the floor as is feasible, for that is the way they are painted.” • “If our titles recall the known myths of antiquity, we have used them again because they are the eternal symbols upon which we must fall back to express basic psychological ideas.” • “That is why we profess a spiritual kinship with primitive and archaic art.” • “There is no such thing as good painting about nothing.” • “This would be a distortion of their meaning, since the pictures are intimate and intense, and are the opposite of what is decorative; and have been painted in a scale of normal living rather than an institutional scale.” A CONVERSATION WITH PLAYWRIGHT JOHN LOGAN (Reprinted with permission from The Goodman Theatre) Red playwright John Logan graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, in 1983 before making his mark as a writer in the burgeoning 1980s Chicago theater scene. Longtime Chicago theater fans will recall such titles as Never the Sinner, Hauptmann and the Robert Falls-directed Riverview at the Goodman. But even those who don’t remember Mr. Logan’s early plays have likely encountered his work—for more than a decade he has written screenplays for some of Hollywood’s most successful films, including Gladiator, The Aviator, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and the recent film version of Coriolanus. A few weeks before rehearsals for Red began at the Goodman Theatre for their production, Mr. Logan spoke with the Goodman’s Neena Arndt about his writing process, his fascination with Mark Rothko and why he loves Chicago theater. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 9 Red Neena Arndt: What was the impetus for Red? LOGAN John Logan: My initial attraction was to the Seagram murals themselves. I was in London filming Sweeney Todd, so I was there for months on end, and one day I walked into the Tate Modern and went to the room with the Seagram murals. They had a very powerful effect on me. I knew very little about Mark Rothko, very little about Abstract Expressionism, but I found the paintings themselves profoundly moving and kinetic in a strange way. I went to the wall and read a little description about how he painted them originally for the Seagram Building and then decided to keep them and give the money back. And I thought, “Well, this is an interesting story.” So I decided that I would read a little more about it, and the more I read the more I thought that it was a play. And I almost immediately thought it was a two-hander play with Rothko and a young assistant. The shape of the play came to me very early in the contemplation of the work. NA: Do you have a background or training in visual art? JL: No. None whatsoever. The great, daunting challenge of Red is that Mark Rothko is such an intellectually challenging artist and he knew where he belonged in the continuum of his art. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of painting and of artists, so I realized I would have to gain a significant understanding of art history. I started with The Tate Modern in London where several of Abstract Expressionism and Rothko, and the Seagram Murals are displayed. then I realized I needed to go back to what inspired him, and then I had to go all the way back. I spent eight or nine months researching art history. Going to museums, looking at paintings, and trying to see which artists had inspired Rothko, how he fit into the tradition, and why and how he broke with tradition. In a way it was like learning a new language for me—the language of visual art. It was necessary because that language was Mark Rothko’s frame of reference. Mark Rothko didn’t go to the movies, he didn’t read books, he didn’t listen to radio, he didn’t go to the theater, he didn’t go to the opera. He would listen to records, but his frame of reference, his world, was entirely that of painting. So before the character could speak about anything, I felt as though I had to have some facility in the visual arts and in the specifics of the language of art history. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 10 Red LOGAN NA: In what ways is Rothko important as an artist, or as an Abstract Expressionist? JL: He’s important because of his absotlute, uncompromising purity. He deeply believed that art mattered. He felt that it should be like a religious experience, and his great dream was to create a space that was like a church. He wanted people to take art that seriously because he believed it was redemptive. He believed that it was important to the human spirit to create art, to experience art, to be open to art because he truly believed it allowed an exultation of the heart and the spirit. He was rigorous about exploring those themes in his work. I think he did something that no one else has quite done—particularly in Abstract Expressionism—and that is to create something that is profoundly simple and profoundly moving. There’s no clutter, there’s nothing unnecessary; his paintings are austere and savage. They’re like Greek tragedies. They’re not Racine, they’re not Chekhov, they’re not Ibsen—they’re Aeschylus. They’re that pure and that strong. And I think his contemporaries were influenced by other movements in art: Op Art, Pop Art, Impressionism. Rothko was too, of course, but he stayed the course on his vision, on single-mindedly doing what he believed he could do. He was never as popular as Jackson Pollock or Andy Warhol, but he created art earnestly and completely and with his heart and soul. And I think for any artist that’s admirable. NA: Do you think Rothko’s level of dedication to his art had anything to do with his relationship to religion or faith? He was not religious as an adult, but do you see vestiges of his Jewish upbringing in his work? JL: Yes, I think there’s a rabbinical streak to his work. And he brought a Talmudic seriousness and level of analysis to everything he did, while still letting it be pure and simple. NA: In addition to needing to understand Rothko’s work in the context of art history, you also faced the challenge of portraying an infamous historical person on stage. How did you approach that? JL: Considering he’s such a major artist there’s not a whole lot of biographical information out there. There’s one major biography, by James E.B. Breslin. It’s very detailed and sensitively written, and it not only gives you an overview of his life, but also a lot of interpretation of Rothko’s work. Rothko’s own writings about art are also useful. He was a very important Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 11 Red LOGAN essayist on art and a very challenging thinker. It took me an incredible amount of time to work through the logic to understand them because his thoughts are so complex. So general biographical work, specific art history analysis and his own writings became the bedrock of under-standing what his voice was going to be. NA: And what about Rothko’s young assistant in the play, Ken? Was he inspired by an actual person? JL: No, he’s not based on an actual assistant. I just wanted him to be an emotionally agile person who begins the play in a really vulnerable position: wanting a hero. The point about writing a two-person play is that it’s a binary relationship. You have to let the characters respond to one another and segue back and forth. I knew that Rothko would have to be the prow of an ocean liner cutting through the ocean and Ken would have to be the wave that billows around it for most of the play. NA: One of the major ideas in the play is the idea that the son has to eventually kill the father, metaphorically speaking. Is that something that comes directly from Rothko? JL: No, that was entirely me. To me the play is really not about art at all, it’s not about painting; it’s about fathers and sons. I think people respond to the flamboyant grandeur and intensity of the character, but what really moves them is the father-son relationship. I wanted to write a play about teachers and students, mentors and protégés, fathers and sons. To me the piece has always been very domestic. Rothko had an awareness of young artists and an awareness of responsibility to young artists, but he wasn’t a teacher in any traditional sense. In fact, the relationship he has with Ken, his assistant, is not like the relationships he had with his actual assistants, which were very utilitarian. They were servants who did what he wanted them to do, but for the purposes of the play I allowed them to build a relationship. NA: Why did you choose to tell this story on stage rather than on screen? Actors Connor Toms and Denis Arndt in Red. Photo by Chris Bennion Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide JL: I thought painting on stage would be really arresting and exciting. Movies are metaphorical by nature—things seem to be literal but they’re not. But when two men prime a canvas on stage, you’re seeing a real thing happen; the paint is really splattering over the actors. I wanted to do a work play, a play about all the things artists do. They’re not sitting around talking about painting—they’re painting. They’re stretching canvases, washing brushes, eating, doing all the minutiae of what they do. And from the very beginning, I knew it was going to be a play about language. The characters talk, I hope, in an exciting, muscular, 12 Red visceral way, but they’re talking. And one thing cinema doesn’t do, at least not for great stretches of time, is dialogue. It doesn’t deal with the nuances of language. And since Rothko, as a man and as a character, is such a verbally dexterous person, everything about it said theater to me. NA: You’re very busy as a screenwriter, but do you also plan to write more plays? JL: Yes. I started out writing plays, and theater has always been incredibly important to me. I have an active and satisfying career in screenwriting which I hope to continue for as long as I live. But the theater especially is something I’m drawn to. I always say, “Movies are my wife but theater is my mistress.” With Red, I rediscovered what it’s like to be a playwright and that was very fulfilling. As soon as Red was up and running, I started working on a new play because it’s satisfying work. And I’m working on the book for a couple of musicals, so my plan is to keep stepping between both worlds. I hope my movie work will inform my stage work and my stage work will inform my movie work. I’ve only ever wanted to be one thing: a dramatist. Whether I’m writing lines that are going to be spoken on film or on stage, or book scenes for musicals that will then segue into songs, it’s still being a dramatist. People frequently ask me, “Is writing plays different from writing movies?” My answer is no, not at all. Every day I wake up to write lines for actors and I hope I will continue to be able to do that for many years, in many venues. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM The art movement known as Abstract Expressionism began in America after World War II. The movement, combined with the after-effects of the war, put New York City at the center of the art world for the first time. The movement had its roots in Surrealism and included artists such as Jackson Pollock, Louise Bourgeois, Norman Lewis, and, of course, Mark Rothko. While the styles and themes of artists differed, they were linked by the fact that they all examined the human experience in their work. Most of the artists we now refer to as Abstract Expressionists developed their styles and voices in the 1930s. The art of the movement was heavily influenced not only by the era’s radical political views and economic struggles, but by a new focus on personal, authentic experiences. Abstract Expressionist art – especially that of Pollock and Rothko – was hailed as being the first truly American contributions to the avant- Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide An example of an Abstract Expressionist Statue Cubi VI by David Smith (1963) 13 Red ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM garde scene. It is difficult to definitively categorize the style of abstract expressionists, but there were two major trends: an emphasis on energetic gesture, and a reflective focus using fields of color. An emphasis on gesture was first introduced to the art world by Jackson Pollock, who developed the style of pouring and dripping paint onto a canvas laid on the floor. To artists like Pollock, the authenticity and value of a work lay in the immediacy of expression. Each Abstract Expressionist artist had his own “gesture,” or signature, that defined the artist’s identity and process. The idea of gesture emphasis was explained by critic Harold Rosenberg as the idea that “what [goes] on the canvas was not a picture but an event.” The other path that Abstract Expressionists followed was color. Mark Rothko and Norman Lewis belonged to this group and created simple, large, and color-filled fields. Rothko, Lewis, and their colleagues desired to create the expressive rather than the beautiful, and distanced themselves from art made to calm or comfort by creating things that challenged their viewers. Abstract Expressionists desired to elicit an almost religious experience from their viewers, which contributed to the trend of creating large scale pieces that were often viewed in smaller environments. This was done to force viewers to be enveloped in the work. Rothko once explained that he “paints big to be intimate.” Abstract Expressionism began to decline in the 1950s as new artists, such as Andy Warhol, entered the scene. The movement eventually died out in the 1960s as pop culture and irony became a more frequent focus for art. However, its influence lived on through the artists of the 1970s and 1980s. - by Allison Hrabar, ATC Intern ROTHKO AND THE FOUR SEASONS When the Mies van der Rohe-designed Seagram Building was completed in 1958, it brought a bold new look to the New York skyline: lean, icily spare and unmistakably contemporary. Planned by designer Phyllis Lambert (the daughter of Seagram's director, Edgar Bronfman) and architect Philip Johnson, the imposing new structure housed what was intended to be Gotham's most opulent restaurant, The Four Seasons, which was elegantly nestled in a pavilion folding out of the Seagram's ground floor. Amid the restaurant's pools, foliage and sumptuous stone and metal fittings, Lambert and Johnson created space for the installation of art whose modernism matched the revolutionary feel of the building as a whole. Their choice to create that art? Mark Rothko, considered by many the preeminent Abstract Expressionist painter of his day. Despite his well-known loathing of commercialism, Rothko apparently accepted the commission gladly, perhaps to trump the greater popular fame of contemporaries like Jackson Pollock. Journalist John Fischer, an acquaintance of Rothko's, offered a different motive: in a Harper's article published after the artist's death, Fischer wrote that Rothko's Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 14 Red THE FOUR SEASONS intent was characteristically subversive, hoping to offend the "richest bastards in New York" who would patronize the restaurant, famously declaring, "I hope to ruin the appetite of every son of a bitch who ever eats in that room." Indeed, Rothko's main aesthetic model for the room was Michelangelo's vestibule of the Laurentian Library in Florence, an environment that Rothko admired because it made viewers feel "that they are trapped in a room where all the doors and windows are bricked up, so that all they can do is butt their heads forever against the wall." In order to replicate the room's space, Rothko leased a studio in the Bowery whose dimensions matched those of The Four Seasons and began work in late 1958. The assignment The Four Seasons Restaurant proved torturously difficult; the artist eventually created three different series of paintings for the room over a period of about eight months. Although given carte blanche for the project by Lambert and Johnson, Rothko eventually butted heads with them, especially over the height at which the paintings would be displayed; Johnson's intent that the paintings be hung high up on the wall so that the heads of diners would be below the works was antithetical to Rothko's insistence that his works should be hung no higher than four and a half feet off the ground. Completing work in the spring of 1959, Rothko and his family embarked on a European tour during which the Four Seasons project apparently continued to gnaw at him; upon his return to New York that summer, he dined with his wife in the newly opened restaurant, and that evening called a friend to say that he was sending back the commissioning fee and withdrawing his work. "Anybody who will eat that kind of food for those kinds of prices," he reportedly told his assistant, "will never look at a painting of mine." Over a decade later, Rothko completed a series of lengthy negotiations with London's Tate Gallery for display of nine of the Four Seasons paintings, which he allowed only after assurances that they would be displayed in their own room. Ironically, the paintings arrived at the Tate on the morning of Rothko's suicide, on February 25, 1970. Today, some of the murals are still housed in the Tate's newest gallery building, the Tate Modern. -by Steve Scott, reprinted with permission from The Goodman Theatre ROTHKO's V.I.P.s Just as Rothko remarks early in the play, “You cannot be an artist until you are civilized. You cannot be civilized until you learn.” Clearly, you had better get to know the people below! Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 15 Red V.I.P.s REMBRANDT– (Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn) Dutch painter associated with the Dutch Golden Age and Baroque movements, perhaps best known for his portraits. TURNER – (J.M.W. Turner) English painter associated with Romanticism, most famously known as a landscape painter. Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn J.M.W. Turner MICHELANGELO – (Michelangelo Buonarroti) Italian sculptor, painter, architect and poet, served as a leading figure in the High Renaissance. MATISSE – (Henri Matisse) French painter and sculptor associated with the Fauvists, known for his use of nonnaturalistic color. Michelangelo Henri Matisse POLLOCK – (Jackson Pollock) American painter associated with Abstract Expressionism. PICASSO – (Pablo Picasso) Spanish painter, sculptor and graphic artist, known for his avant-garde style and for developing Cubism. NIETZSCHE – (Friedrich Nietzsche) German philosopher whose revolutionary ideas on morals and the individual helped shape modern Existentialism, Nihilism and Postmodernism. He is best known for arguing against Christianity’s compassion for the weak, exalting the “will to power,” and formulating the idea of Übermensch (superman), who can rise above the restrictions of ordinary morality. In his book, The Birth of Tragedy, he explores classic Greek tragedy and its ability to capture meaning and the human condition. Friedrich Nietzsche Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 16 Red V.I.P.s FREUD – (Sigmund Freud) Austrian neurologist and psychotherapist who founded psychoanalysis as both a theory of personality and a therapeutic practice. He proposed the existence of an unconscious element in the mind that influences consciousness. JUNG – (Carl Jung) Swiss psychologist who originated the concept of introvert and extrovert personality and the four psychological functions of sensation, intuition, thinking and feeling. BYRON – (Lord Byron) English poet whose work exerted considerable influence on the Romantic movement. He is perhaps best known for “Don Juan.” Lord Byron WORDSWORTH – (William Wordsworth) English poet whose collection of poems “Lyrical Ballads” (composed with Samuel Coleridge) was a landmark in Romanticism. He was Britain’s Poet Laureate from 1843 to 1850. AESCHYLUS— Ancient Greek dramatist best known for his trilogy The Oresteía, consisting of the tragedies Agamemnon, Choephoroe and Eumenides. He is also credited with expanding the number of characters in plays to allow for conflict among them, as previously characters had only interacted with the chorus. TURGENEV – (Ivan Turgenev) Russian novelist, playwright and short-story writer whose work (most famously his novel Fathers and Sons) examines the lives of individuals to illuminate the larger social, political and philosophical issues of the day. Ivan Turgenev SOPHOCLES – Ancient Greek playwright known for complexity of plot, depth of character, and examination of the relationship between mortals and the divine order. He is best known for Oedipus Rex and Antigone. SCHOPENHAUER – (Arthur Schopenhauer) German philosopher known for his work The World as Will and Idea, which states the will is identified with ultimate reality and happiness is only achieved by rejecting the will. DALI – (Salvador Dalí) Spanish painter of the Surrealist movement best known for portraying images with almost photographic realism against backgrounds of arid Catalan landscapes. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide Arthur Schopenhauer 17 Red DE KOONING – (Willem de Kooning) US painter born in the Netherlands on the leading edge of Abstract Expressionism. He usually retained figurative elements in his work, either represented or merely hinted at. V.I.P.s NEWMAN – (Barnett Newman) An important figure in color-field painting, he juxtaposed large blocks of uniform color with narrow marginal strips of contrasting color. While often associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement, he is also tied to the Abstraction and Minimalist movements. MANET – (Éduoard Manet) French painter who adopted a Realist approach that greatly influenced the Impressionists, using pure color to give a direct unsentimental effect. VELAZQUEZ – (Diego Velázquez) Spanish painter who was the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV, associated with the Baroque movement and most famous for his portraits. Éduoard Manet YEATS – (William Butler Yeats) Irish poet and playwright often credited for stimulating Ireland’s theatrical, cultural and literary revival. He is perhaps best known for his poem “Sailing to Byzantium.” CARAVAGGIO – (Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio) Italian painter influential in the transition from late Mannerism to Baroque. His paintings combine a realistic observation of the human state (both physical and emotional) with a dramatic use of lighting. William Butler Yeats VAN GOGH – (Vincent van Gogh) Dutch painter best known for his Post-Impressionist work. Suffering from severe depression, he cut off part of his own ear and eventually committed suicide. JOHNS – (Jasper Johns) US painter, sculptor and print maker. A key figure in the development of Pop Art, he depicted commonplace and universally recognized images. STELLA – (Frank Stella) US painter, an important figure in Minimalism known for his series of all-black paintings. Vincent Van Gogh Arizona Theatre Company RAUSCHENBERG – (Robert Rauschenberg) US artist who incorporated three-dimensional objects such as nails, rags and bottles into his paintings, associated with the Neo-Dada movement. Play Guide 18 Red LICHTENSTEIN – (Roy Lichtenstein) US painter and sculptor on the leading edge of Pop Art, known for paintings inspired by comic strips. V.I.P.s WARHOL – (Andy Warhol) US painter, graphic artist and filmmaker. Also a major figure in the Pop Art movement, he achieved fame for a series of silkscreen prints and acrylic paintings of familiar objects (such as Campbell’s soup cans) and famous people (like Marilyn Monroe) that are treated with objectivity and precision. BRUEGEL— (Pieter Bruegel the Elder) Flemish painter known for his landscapes and peasant scenes. He is associated with the Dutch and Flemish Renaissance. VERMEER— (Jan Vermeer) Dutch painter known for painting domestic genre scenes with clear design and simple form, associated with the Dutch Golden Age and Baroque movements. -by Brian Jones, courtesy of The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis Pieter Bruegel the Elder WHAT LEADS TO WHAT? – ISMS AND WHERE THEY COME FROM AND GO Art has a lot of “isms,” i.e those genres used to describe works that fall together in the same basic time period/place and share characteristics. Sometimes the artists purposefully collaborated on creating a new form and other times historians look back and classify a group of artists together who did not necessarily know one another’s work. These definitions are not absolute and artists can sometimes be placed into more than one category. These discrepancies are what make categorizing art so difficult but also interesting and interrelated. Realism: Dated from somewhere between 1800 and 1850, Realism is generally defined as an artistic genre by its rejection of the Classical and Romantic categorizations of art. The Realists focused on the everyday. Realism took as subject matter the lower classes, the mundane, the “unimportant,” and elevated these things to make them the subject of art. As opposed to the perfectionist tendencies of the Classicalists and Romantics, Realism focused on an objective artistic experience, and, rather than the life of the elite, depicted the lives of the masses, including Abendstimmung in der Campagna by customs, clothing, work and attitudes. Realism focused Oswald Achenbach, 1850. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 19 Red ISMS on the replication of life through the realistic use of light and imagery. Realists rejected earlier artistic frameworks requiring more formalized portraits, instead preferring to demonstrate human beings in their more natural environments and postures. As with their human subjects, the Realists depicted nature in a realistic manner as well, focusing on creating believable outdoor landscapes. Famous Realists: Marie Rosalie Bonheur, John Singleton Copley, Gustave Courbet, Honoré Daumier, Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas, Thomas Eakins, Ignace Henri Theodore Fantin-Latour and Wilhelm Leibl. Impressionism: Though today Impressionists are viewed as popular across a spectrum of art lovers, in their day, they were quite radical. Instigated in many ways by the 1863 painting Le déjeuner sur l'herbe ("The Luncheon on the Grass") by Édouard Manet, Impressionism continued to gain notoriety in Paris in the 1870s and 1880s. Impressionist work was a reaction to the rules of French painting that were governed by the Académie des Beaux-Arts, which taught that paintings on historical subjects, religious themes and portraits were important but still life and landscape paintings were not. Additionally, Le déjeuner sur l'herbe ("The Luncheon on the goal of painting as taught by the Academie the Grass") by Édouard Manet, 1863 was to imitate life to the point that even up close, a painting looked like reality. The Impressionists made no attempt to directly recreate the realistic look of earlier eras – they purposefully left colors unmixed and used short strokes that were easily visible even after a painting was completed. They were more concerned with overall effect and feeling rather than detail and paved the way for later artistic movements that rejected the idea that art had to be detail and reality-driven. Famous Impressionists: Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt and Édouard Manet. Un dimanche après-midi à l'Île de la Grande Jatte (A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte) by Georges Pierre Seurat, 1884 Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide Post-Impressionism: As the name indicates, the artists associated with Post-Impressionism took Impressionism as a starting point (and many of them began their career as Impressionists). However, soon each artist of the genre branched out in his or her own way, exaggerating one or two characteristics of the Impressionist movement to make the PostImpressionist style more personal to the artist. While they shared the Impressionists’ use of vivid color and many continued to use short brushstrokes, they rejected what they saw as the limitations of Impressionism, which they viewed as too intent on objective versions of the world: light and color. Instead, the Post-Impressionists focused on their own distinct styles and techniques, and, while 20 Red ISMS many knew each other, often worked in a vacuum away from influence of the others. Thus Georges Seurat’s Pointillism (in which he created images from numerous tiny dots of pure color), Vincent van Gogh’s sweeping thick lines, and Paul Cezanne’s sweeping swaths of color all evolved from the same origin, but ended up following very different artistic paths. The artists who were defined as Post-Impressionists were younger than those artists who had begun the movement of Impressionism and were dissatisfied with the idea of conforming to all of the rules of Impressionism, despite the debt they recognized and owed to their predecessors. Famous Post-Impressionists: Georges Seurat, Vincent van Gogh, Paul Cezanne, Paul Gauguin, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Expressionism: Resulting from a direct rejection of art as a realistic genre, Expressionism came to prominence in Germany at the beginning of the twentieth century. Expressionists were influenced by the work of the Impressionists and Realists in that they rejected the qualities for which both of those movements had strived. The direct rejection of art as an objective experience set the Expressionists in contrast to the Realists of earlier times. They also found inspiration from works by non-visual artists such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Composition VII by Wassily Kandinsky, 1913 August Strindberg, Walt Whitman and Sigmund Freud. Expressionist artists were less concerned with depiction of a specific person or an event than with representing an emotional truth. The primary focus of Expressionist art pieces was to evoke a mood or feeling, often through distorting images (thus its common association with angst-ridden imagery). Direct forebears of Expressionism include Edvard Munch, Vincent van Gogh and James Ensor. Famous Expressionists: Wassily Kandinsky, August Macke, Franz Marc and Willem de Kooning. Cubism: Cubism made its first appearance in pre-World War I Europe and remains one of the most visually distinctive artistic styles. Cubists were Impressionists who admired the power and visuals of African art. The artist who is often credited with first combining these influences with his own distinctive aesthetic was the legendary Pablo Picasso in his work Les Demoiselles d'Avignon. These artists took the rebellious nature of Fauvism (another artistic genre) and moved it one step forward, rejecting the idea that art should try and replicate nature and consciously moving away from the traditional techniques of perspective. Cubists would break up objects into geometric forms and reassemble the subject using a scrambled assortment of viewpoints. As the Cubist movement developed, it became even more Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide Les Demoiselles d'Avignon by Pablo Picasso, 1907. 21 Red ISMS abstract. In early Cubism, the figure being painted was usually able to be identified, but as the movement shifted into its second stage - Analytic Cubism - artists would reduce their subjects even further. While the representation of subjects differed, the actual subjects of Cubist works remained the same: everyday objects and human figures. Although the Cubist movement was short-lived, it and its influence lived on through future anti-establishment art movements like Dadaism and Surrealism. Famous Cubists: Pablo Picasso, Paul Cezanne, Henri Matisse and Paul Gauguin. Dadaism: The history of Dadaism can be traced to Zurich during World War I. Many artists from all over Europe fled their war-torn countries for the relative safety of neutral Switzerland. While Dadaists were not exactly a well-organized group, they could agree on one principle: never conform to anything. They adhered to the belief that any established rules should be broken and anything that had come before should be viewed skeptically. The word “Dada” even has unclear origins with some historians claiming it was literally the most nonsensical word the artists/theorists could imagine and others claiming it derived from the French word for “hobbyhorse.” Dadaist art took numerous forms, including painting but also collage, “found” art pieces and statues. The major factor involved in all of these types of artistic expression was the rejection of the modern world, a world that the Dadaists viewed as having lost all meaning and rationality due to the ongoing horrors of World War I. Dadaists were frustrated with nationalism and colonialism and other “–isms” they viewed as responsible for the atrocities being committed. Some Dadaist art shocked and horrified viewers because of its sarcasm and scatological humor. When Dadaism started to become more accepted, it could not continue because being accepted violated the most basic tenant of Dadaism, and thus the movement imploded. Dadaism was influenced by Expressionism and somewhat by Cubism and was also a precursor to Surrealism. Famous Dadaists: Marcel Duchamp, Jean Crotti, Francis Picabia, Man Ray and Hans Arp. Surrealism: The history of Surrealistic art is intrinsically bound with the cultural and literary movements also labeled Surrealism. The spokesman for the movement was Andre Breton, who published "The Surrealist Manifesto" in 1924. Surrealism purposefully challenged the more rational thinking and artistic styles that had pervaded European thoughts because Surrealists (like Dadaists) believed that such thinking had created the atmosphere that allowed World War I to happen. The destruction, death and horrors visited on Europe during World War I caused the Surrealists to look for answers outside of logic. Using the earlier Dada movement helmed by Tristan Tzara as inspiration, the Surrealists continued to explore the anti-war politics of the Dadaists. However, rather than focus on the negative “meaninglessness” of the modern world, the Surrealists attempted to fuse the unconscious world with the conscious. Highly influenced by the work of Sigmund Freud, Surrealists believed that the unconscious was the key to the truer version of the self and the world. The strange juxtapositions and illogical combinations of images or ideas in Surrealism give it a very dreamlike quality. Famous Surrealists: Salvadore Dalí, Frida Kahlo, René Magritte, Joan Miró and Pablo Picasso. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 22 Red ISMS Pop Art: Though the term “Pop Art” is now synonymous with the American movement popularized by Andy Warhol, the style actually developed in post-World War II Britain. Pop Artists in both countries appropriated imagery from popular culture to ask questions about modern society and its obsession with both consumer brands and celebrity. The central idea of pop art is that there is no difference between “high” and “low” culture (think fine art vs. billboard advertisements). This facet of the movement has its roots in Dadaism, which mocked society’s obsession with reason and logic. Pop Art started many a heated discussion about art’s role in culture, which is unsurprising when one thinks about the ideas behind Pop Artists’ subject matter. In the same way that Abstract Expressionists searched for answers about pain and joy in the soul of an artist, Pop Artists sought to find trauma and excitement in popular imagery like advertising and cartoons. By blurring the line between culture and art, Pop Artists asked questions about people and their passions by simply holding up a mirror. Famous Pop Artists: In addition to Andy Warhol, Eduardo Paolozzi, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, George Segal and Claes Oldenburg. -written by Jennifer Bazzell, Literary Manager and Allison Hrabar, ATC Intern THEMES IN THE PLAY Art: What is it; what makes it valuable; what makes it important and who decides? All of these questions are at the heart of Red. The play’s central figure is an artist, as is his assistant. The two men challenge each other’s conceptions of art throughout the play, questioning when art becomes a commodity, and whether its meaning belongs to the artist, the buyer or the viewer (or all three)? Rothko struggles throughout the play with the concept that his paintings are being purchased, commissioned and “appreciated” by people with no real concept of his style or intentions. Instead, it is being bought by people being told they “should” like it because it’s a Rothko (or a Pollock, or a Van Gogh, etc.). Is beauty and value truly in the eye of the beholder, or is there some element that makes works of art great in and of themselves? The old and the new: They say that every generation reinvents itself, and throughout the play the conflict between the old and the new comes to a head. Rothko discusses the idea that Abstract Expressionist artists replaced the Cubists who came before them. When he talks about this transition, it is expressed as if it is a normal and eventual part of life. However, later when the conversations turn to who will be (or are) replacing the Abstract Expressionists as the youngest and most modern artists on the scene, Rothko displays Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 23 Red THEMES scorn. Is it the responsibility of the generation coming up to push their way into the fold, or is it the responsibility of the older generation to know when their time being the most influential is done? Who decides and to what end? Red: Though the word is the title, what exactly “red” is continues to be unclear throughout the play, at least in terms of the exact definition of the color. In the same way that the play questions the value and perspective of art, the title proposes the same question of the color. What is “red?” Ask a hundred people and their vision of exactly what “red” means would be different. Is it scarlet? Magenta? Barn red? Rose red? Blood red? That is the struggle Rothko faces both as a painter and a human being. Each person has their own perceptions, their own demons and their own struggles to face. To Rothko, red also is indicative of life (and blood). He discusses his fear of black and that someday the black will swallow the red (seemingly either depression or death will overtake either his will or ability to live). Color imagery is important throughout the play (not surprising as the play is about an artist) but the idea of red’s perpetual existence in life pervades the entire narrative. As you watch, look for all the ways in which the playwright and the designers have integrated the color red into the production. APOLLO VS. DIONYSUS In Greek and Roman mythology, Apollo is a deity of extreme importance as the god of the sun, of light, truth, prophecy, healing, plague, music, and poetry. The son of Zeus and Leto and twin brother to Artemis, Apollo is often depicted as the ideal kouros, a young, athletic, beardless man. He is associated with the guardianship of colonists, flocks, and herds, and holds the position of the leader of the Muses – the goddesses of the sciences, literature, and art. This association created him as the patron god of music, poetry, and knowledge, and the keeper of the basic order and rhythms of life. Statue of Apollo “Apollo is the god of order, method and boundaries…intellectual; rabbinical; sober and restrained. The raw experience leavened by contemplation.” (Red) Statue of Bacchus (Dionysus) by Michelangelo Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 24 Red Apollo and Diana by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, c. 1757 In contrast, Dionysus, the son of Zeus and the mortal woman Semele, is the Greco-Roman god of wine, theatre, and ecstasy. Known as Bacchus by the Romans, he is often depicted in a state of triumphant disorder, embracing the chaos of drink and revelry, attended by a raucous band of women and satyrs while being drawn in a chariot by wild, exotic animals. He is known for a spirit of liberation and freedom, and a subversive refusal to engage in the oppressive nature of order, restraint, and the hierarchies of power. “Dionysus is the God of wine and excess; of movement and transformation…wild; rebellious; drunken; and unrestrained. The raw experience itself…” (Red) Thus the sons of Zeus offer contrasting means of perceiving the world: Apollo with a sense of order and logic, and Dionysus with a sense of carefree abandonment, the two perspectives forever in a tug-of-war in the grand experience that is mortal life. -written by Katherine Monberg, Artistic Intern Bacchus by Caravaggio, c. 1595 GLOSSARY These words are used in Red. Listed below in the order they appear in the script, familiarize yourself with their meaning for an even greater understanding of the play! Pulsate: expand and contract with strong, regular movement; also quiver with excitement. Peripheral: of secondary or minor importance; marginal. Empathetic: possessing the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. Discernment: the ability to judge well. Poignant: evoking a deep sense of sadness or regret; keenly felt. Panoply: a complete or impressive collection of things. Pentimento: a visible trace of earlier painting beneath a layer or layers of paint on a canvas. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 25 Red GLOSSARY Luminescence: the low-temperature emission of light by chemical or physiological process. Cognition: the mental action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding. Disquieted: a feeling of anxiety or worry. Frieze: a broad horizontal band of sculpted or painted decoration, especially on a wall near the ceiling. Inexorable: impossible to stop or prevent. Charlatan: a person falsely claiming to have special knowledge or skill; a fraud. Superfluous: unnecessary, especially through being more than enough. Audacious: showing a willingness to take surprisingly bold risks, also showing an impudent lack of respect. Abut: touch or lean upon. Flux: a continuous flow or movement. Paean: a thing that expresses enthusiastic praise. Bioluminescent: the biochemical emission of light by living organisms such as fireflies and deep-sea fishes. Effulgence: radiant splendor; brilliance. Enigmatic: difficult to interpret or understand; mysterious. Multifarious: having many varied parts or aspects. Symbiosis: a mutually beneficial relationship between two different entities. Dissonance: lack of harmony. Ephemeral: lasting for a very short time. Bohemian: a person who has informal and unconventional social habits, especially an artist or writer. Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 26 Red GLOSSARY Malevolent: having or showing a wish to do evil to others. Chromatic: of, relating to, or produced by color; highly colored. Anthropomorphizing: the attribution of human characteristics or behavior to a god, animal or object. Declension: a condition of decline or moral deterioration. Ubiquitous: present, appearing or found everywhere. Prosaic: commonplace; unromantic. Arriviste: an ambitious or ruthlessly self-seeking person, especially one who has recently acquired wealth or social status. Zeitgeist: the defining spirit or mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideals and beliefs of the time. Futility: pointlessness or uselessness. Solipsistic: pertaining to the theory that the self is all that can be known to exist. Hermetic: complete and airtight; insulated or protected from outside influences. Salient: most noticeable or important. Capricious: given to sudden or unaccountable changes in mood or behavior. –by Brian Jones, courtesy of The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 27 Red DISCUSSION DISCUSSION QUESTIONS • Rothko’s method of painting - adding layer upon layer, slowly building the image - is very similar to the technique of creating theatre. Do you agree? Why or why not? • When Rothko is initially grilling his new employee he cites certain poets, writers, and philosophers that have had an impact on his work. How do these different artistic mediums cross over and influence each other? How could the philosophy of Nietzsche affect the outcome of a Rothko painting? What connections do you see? • Rothko’s color palette was extensive, and many of his works include no red at all. Why do you think the playwright chose to focus on the color for this play? • There is an ongoing power struggle in the play between Rothko and his assistant Ken. Aside from the dialogue, what creative choices hinted at this power struggle? • Was the power struggle between Rothko and Ken symbolic of a greater cultural struggle? • After seeing the play, do you have greater insight into or respect for Mark Rothko’s work? Is the passion described in the character’s monologues evident in the artist’s paintings? • There is a fine line between a painting speaking for itself, and the artist speaking for the painting. What is your own personal reaction toward Rothko? Are you moved/ excited by his paintings? Or by his technique? • Do you think the process of creating art is more or less important than the finished product? • There is much discussion in this play about the differing styles of Rothko and Pollock. Who do you prefer? Rothko or Pollock? What is it about either artist that speaks to you? Arizona Theatre Company Play Guide 28