We have to talk about Rothko n°2 (2025) Digital Arts by Frank Verreyken

Digital Arts, 43.5x27.8 in
$1,013
Shipping included

Customer's reviews (2)
Shipping from: Belgium (Tube) Ships within 1 week
14-day return policy
Shipping worldwide
100% secure transaction
Free Returns
Delivery by ArtMajeur: The shipping of this artwork is handled directly by ArtMajeur from pickup to final delivery to customer. Customs not included.
  • Packaging (Tube) All artworks are shipped with a premium carrier, carefully protected and insured.
  • Tracking Order tracking until the parcel is delivered to the buyer. A tracking number will be provided so that you can follow the parcel in real-time.
  • Delay Worldwide delivery in 3 to 7 days (Estimate)
  • Customs not included The price does not include customs fees. Most countries have no import tax for original artworks, but you may have to pay the reduced VAT. Customs fees (if any) are to be calculated on arrival by the customs office and will be billed separately by the carrier.
ArtMajeur guarantees you to make every effort to enable you to acquire authentic original works at the fairest price, or reimburse you in full.
  • Trackable Online Certificate of Authenticity Authenticity Certificates can be verified online at any moment by scanning the artwork code.
  • Artist Value Certification Experts study the work and career of an artist then establish an independent and reliable average price value. The average price value situates the artist on a price range for a given period. The experts may also be asked to establish a more precise estimate for a particular work.
100% secure transaction, Accepted Payment Methods: Credit Card, PayPal, Bank Transfer.
Secured direct purchase The transaction is guaranteed by ArtMajeur: the seller will get paid only once the customer has received the artwork.
100% secure payment with SSL certificate + 3D Secure.
Free Returns: 14-day return policy.
Returns Accepted 14 days ArtMajeur is 100% committed to the satisfaction of collectors: you have 14 days to return an original work. The work must be returned to the artist in perfect condition, in its original packaging. All eligible items can be returned (unless otherwise indicated).

Purchase a license to use this image for your website, communications or to sell merchandise.

Download immediately upon purchase
Artists get paid their royalties for each sales
$34.73
Usage: Web Licence
Using the image on a website or on the internet.
  957 px  

1500 px
Dimensions of the file (px) 957x1500
Use worldwide Yes
Use on multi-support Yes
Use on any type of media Yes
Right of reselling No
Max number of prints 0 (Zero)
Products intended for sale No
Download immediately upon purchase

This image is available for download with a licence: you can download them at anytime.

Restrictions

All images on ArtMajeur are original works of art created by artists, all rights are strictly reserved. The acquisition of a license gives the right to use or exploit the image under the terms of the license. It is possible to make minor modifications such as reframing, or refocusing the image so that it fits perfectly to a project, however, it is forbidden to make any modification that would be likely to harm the original work In its integrity (modification of shapes, distortions, cutting, change of colors, addition of elements etc ...), unless a written authorization is obtained beforehand from the artist.

Custom licences

If your usage is not covered by our standard licences, please contact us for a custom licence.

Art image bank
Artwork signed by the artist
Certificate of Authenticity included
This artwork appears in 2 collections
Because I have always loved Rothko's work, this story! The Commercialization of Rothko: Between Contemplation and Consumption Can we still view Rothko's work independently of its commercialization? Mark Rothko dreamed of an art that would transform the viewer, offering spiritual experience in a world increasingly dominated by materialism. His monumental [...]
Because I have always loved Rothko's work, this story! The Commercialization of Rothko: Between Contemplation and Consumption Can we still view Rothko's work independently of its commercialization? Mark Rothko dreamed of an art that would transform the viewer, offering spiritual experience in a world increasingly dominated by materialism. His monumental color fields were conceived as meditations, as spaces for inner contemplation. But nearly sixty years after his death, his work seems trapped in a paradox: how do you preserve the spiritual essence of art that is increasingly defined by its commercial value? The Silence of Houston In the Rothko Chapel in Houston, where fourteen monumental canvases envelop the visitor in an almost tangible silence, you still experience something of Rothko's original intention. Here, in contemplative solitude, the deep purples and blacks speak their own language. They demand time, patience, surrender. These are works that reveal their secrets only to those willing to slow down, to listen to what remains unspoken. This experience – alone with the work, without crowds, without smartphone flashes – is becoming increasingly rare. In American museums, one can often still view Rothko's paintings in relative peace, but this privilege feels fragile, as though it could disappear at any moment under pressure from the art market and tourism. The Circus of Paris This rupture became painfully clear during the Rothko exhibition at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in 2024. Here, the artist was presented as a luxury brand, his work framed by Frank Gehry's architectural extravagance and LVMH's commercial power. The exhibition drew masses of visitors who consumed Rothko as a cultural product, an Instagram moment, a status symbol. It was Rothko as circus: spectacular, accessible, but stripped of its essence. Where his work demands silence, it received spectacle. Where it yearns for contemplation, it got consumption. The irony was almost palpable: an artist who struggled throughout his life with the commercialization of art became posthumously the ultimate commercial product. The Impossible Question Can we still see Rothko independently of his commercial value? The answer is complex. The art market has transformed his work from spiritual objects into financial instruments. When a Rothko is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, it becomes nearly impossible to look at it purely. Every brushstroke carries the weight of speculation, every color transition is measured in market value. Yet something untouchable remains in his finest works. Under the right circumstances – in the silence of a museum early in the morning, in the meditative space of the Chapel – his paintings can still exert their original power. They can still transform, move, compel contemplation. The Paradox of Accessibility Commercialization has paradoxically made Rothko both more accessible and less accessible. More people than ever know his name, his work hangs as posters in student rooms worldwide. But simultaneously, the commercial machinery has erected barriers between the public and the genuine experience of his art. Rothko wanted his work to function as a drug – a means of consciousness transformation. Instead, it has often devolved into decoration, cultural capital, a marker of refined taste. The question is whether we, knowing what we know about the art market and its mechanisms, can still find the innocence to surrender ourselves to his work. Conclusion: The Viewer's Responsibility Perhaps the answer lies not with the art world, but with ourselves as viewers. In an age when everything becomes commercialized, experiencing art as it was intended becomes a conscious choice. It requires courage to slow down in a world that accelerates, to pause before what cannot be bought in works that seem to have everything for sale. Rothko's legacy depends on our willingness to resist market logic, to see his paintings as more than investment or decoration. In every encounter with his work, we can choose: do we consume, or do we allow ourselves to be transformed? That choice, however small, determines whether Rothko's dream of spiritual art survives in our commercialized world.
• LIMITED EDITION #1 TO 10
• Original will be printed on a very beautiful, stunning Hahnemühle art paper
• With certificate of authenticity, signed by the artist and numbered
• Please feel free to ask about other sizes: more formats are availabl

Related themes

RothkoArtArt DealingGreenBlue

Automatically translated
Follow
Frank Verreyken, digital artist and photographer, received his first camera at the age of 16. From the start, his creative aspiration was to capture absolute beauty, whatever that meant at the time. However, over [...]

Frank Verreyken, digital artist and photographer, received his first camera at the age of 16. From the start, his creative aspiration was to capture absolute beauty, whatever that meant at the time. However, over time he began to seek controversy in his images. At the age of thirty, he decided to enroll in the Academy of Fine Arts.

It was there that he understood that this quest for controversy brought a positive dimension to his works, making his vision of everything he photographed more precious. Despite this, he still felt the need to photograph other subjects, achieve other goals, express different emotions and create original images. Alongside photography, Frank also took up painting in oils, acrylics, watercolors, gouache, exploring different forms of artistic expression.

His artistic career was enriched when the prestigious "Photographer's Gallery" in London selected him for an exhibition on the theme of fear in relation to fascism, putting the concentration camps in the background. This experience led him to seek to rid his photos of what he considered too easy a beauty. He developed a multi-layered approach in his work, seeking to explore different dimensions in his works.

Frank Verreyken's artistic career is a constant journey, a perpetual quest for new forms of expression, emotions and sensibilities through photography and painting.

See more from Frank Verreyken

View all artworks
Painting titled "Landscape no.6" by Frank Verreyken, Original Artwork, Chalk
Chalk on Paper | 27.6x19.7 in
$1,356.57
Painting titled "Commemoration" by Frank Verreyken, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Acrylic on Paper | 22.1x30.3 in
$1,008.28
Photography titled "All the lonely peop…" by Frank Verreyken, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Photography | 20.5x29.5 in
$579.7
Photography titled "American Despair n°4" by Frank Verreyken, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Photography | 26.4x39.4 in
$1,013

ArtMajeur

Receive our newsletter for art lovers and collectors