Standing Inside Color
My relationship with Mark Rothko has been a slow, unfolding recognition. It has been something like encountering a language I didn’t know I spoke until I heard it aloud. He wasn’t always my favorite artist. In younger years, I craved narrative, detail, and the thick brushwork of recognizable worlds. But as I’ve matured, both as a person and an art lover, I’ve learned to crave something quieter, deeper, and more elemental. Now, whenever I step into a museum, my first question is almost instinctual: Are there any Rothkos here? I move through galleries with a kind of anticipatory searching, knowing what his paintings offer is not representation but experience. To stand before a Rothko is to stand inside color, and standing inside color is, for me, to stand inside emotion, inside pure experience.
This is why the multiforms, especially the 1948 works, exert such power. They reveal the birth of an idea. A concept in its earliest breath. A painter in the process of discovering a new ontology of art: not image, not myth, not symbol, but atmosphere. They are the chrysalis works, evidence of an intellectual and emotional transformation taking shape.
These canvases are transitional in every sense. Their trembling zones of color feel like tectonic plates of affect. Their hazy edges suggest forms dissolving into something more primal. Rothko was shedding a skin. He was stepping away from the mythic figuration of his earlier years and moving toward what would eventually become his signature: the color field as emotional environment.
Art historian James Breslin writes that the multiforms represent “the first appearance of the field, the beginning of a painting without objects.” That is the moment of birth: when color ceases to be a descriptive element and becomes the content itself.
Technique
One cannot understand this transformation without understanding the radical materiality of Rothko’s process. He worked with extraordinarily thin pigments—what he called “recipes”—that approached the consistency of egg wash. These stains did not sit on the surface; they permeated the weave of the canvas. The result is a surface that feels alive, as if the color has seeped into the very skin of the painting.
This technique became inseparable from his emotional goals. Rothko famously remarked, “I’m interested only in expressing basic human emotions—tragedy, ecstasy, doom." But technique was how he got there. The thinness of his paint allowed for transparency, luminescence, and breathing space. The colors become porous, layered like emotional experiences themselves.
The egg-wash consistency produces a psychological metaphor: emotions, like pigment, seep, bleed, and stain. They do not stay neatly contained. They penetrate. They saturate. They remain. To look at a multiform is to see emotion in the act of permeating consciousness.
Color Theory
Rothko inherited a long lineage of thinkers who understood that color is not merely visual but also profoundly emotional. Goethe described color as possessing intrinsic affective qualities, noting that “colors stir us… in particular ways.” Kandinsky pushed this further, asserting that color “is a means of exerting a direct influence on the soul.” Itten argued that the power of color arises from contrast and harmony, from the tension of hues vibrating near one another.
The multiform palette shows Rothko discovering this truth firsthand. The ochre upper register radiates warmth, a quiet intensity. The blue-green expanse below delivers coolness and depth, a sinking sensation. The strokes of orange slicing through the center arrive like sudden ruptures. It is as if the painting is registering the body’s shifts in emotional temperature.
This is color as behavior. Color as sensation. Color as interiority laid bare.
The Pre-Linguistic Self
What strikes me most is how these paintings operate on a psychological register that precedes language. Cognitive scientist Daniel Schacter notes that memory is not a static archive but “a process of reconstruction,” one deeply entwined with affect. The hazy edges and diffused shapes of the multiform resemble the fluidity of recollection much the same way memories soften, shift, and recombine each time they are invoked.
Rothko’s canvases feel like affective states made visible. They evoke what Stern calls “proto-feelings." Those sensations before they crystallize into emotion. Rothko does not paint feelings; he paints conditions in which feelings arise.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty famously remarked that painting reveals “the inside of the outside and the outside of the inside.” Rothko’s multiforms fulfill this description exquisitely. They externalize internal states. They allow viewers to encounter themselves in pre-conceptual form. Experience is not narrated. It is inhabited.
Art Therapy
What Rothko discovered intuitively, art therapists later codified. Judith Rubin notes that abstract forms provide a “safe ambiguity” for clients to project emotions without fear of being wrong. Rothko’s paintings seem expressly designed for such ambiguity. There is no narrative to decode. No figure to identify. Only fields of color that act as emotional mirrors.
Research in art therapy emphasizes that large expanses of color can induce grounding, reduce anxiety, and facilitate emotional release. Rothko’s mature works—vast, luminous rectangles—have become unofficial sanctuaries for such experiences. The Rothko Chapel is perhaps the most literal embodiment of this: a space where color becomes a contemplative practice.
But the seeds of this therapeutic quality are found in the multiforms. These early works show Rothko learning how to create a “holding environment,” a term borrowed from Winnicott, where the viewer is both enveloped and supported by the experience of looking. These works do not demand interpretation. They invite presence.
Immersion
One of Rothko’s ultimate desires was for his works to function as environments. “A picture lives by companionship,” he once said, “it expands and quickens in the eyes of the sensitive observer." The multiforms mark the first time he pushes toward this immersive goal.
To stand before one is to be absorbed into a world with its own emotional atmosphere. The edges dissolve, the forms hover, and the viewer enters what psychologists call a “flow state." A deep focus in which the boundary between self and world softens. The experience is contemplative, even spiritual.
In Closing
In Multiform (1948), I see not just a painting, but the beginning of a revelation. Rothko is discovering that color can act as a psychological instrument, a technology of emotion. His thin washes, his dissolving forms, his willingness to let color radiate rather than describe, all of these developments point toward a new way of understanding art’s purpose.
The multiforms capture the moment an idea is born: that painting can be less about representing the world and more about entering a state of being. Looking at this work, I see Rothko developing a language that would one day envelop viewers, invite introspection, and offer emotional resonance beyond words.
And I understand why I always seek him first. These paintings do not simply show color. They reveal the inner life. They make the silent places of the self visible. They give experience back to us in its purest form.
In me, they fill a primal need. Something I can't express but that I crave to experience. There is nothing like a Rothko.