Dorothea Rockburne
Golden Section Painting: Square Separated by Parallelogram with Diamond, 1974-76
chalk, varnish, and gesso on linen
64 1/8 x 104 1/2 in (162.9 x 265.4 cm)
Further images
In the mid '70s, Rockburne began the Golden Section Paintings, 1974-1972, a series of shaped canvases based on the ancient Greek theory of proportional interrelationships. Throughout history, many well known...
In the mid '70s, Rockburne began the Golden Section Paintings, 1974-1972, a series of shaped canvases based on the ancient Greek theory of proportional interrelationships. Throughout history, many well known thinkers have credited the proportions of the Golden Section with various mystical properties. In the 16th century, Luca Pacioli, a Franciscan monk and a famous mathematician who was a friend of Leonardo and Piero della Francesca, wrote a book on the Golden Section called Divina Proportione, 1509. Divided into three parts, Pacioli's book is based in part on the writings of Piero and contains more than fifty drawings by Leonardo.
Within the terms proposed by Rockburne's use of the Golden Section, geometry is a system of proportional interrelationships rather than a system of measurements. In this regard, her work parallels Mondrian's who distilled the grid underlying Cubism to what he called a "dynamic equilibrium" of architectonic balances and chromatic disruptions. By using the irreducibility of proportions as the foundation of their geometry, both Mondrian and Rockburne are able to make their work allude to the figure, as well as what exists beyond the limits of human knowledge.
Within the terms proposed by Rockburne's use of the Golden Section, geometry is a system of proportional interrelationships rather than a system of measurements. In this regard, her work parallels Mondrian's who distilled the grid underlying Cubism to what he called a "dynamic equilibrium" of architectonic balances and chromatic disruptions. By using the irreducibility of proportions as the foundation of their geometry, both Mondrian and Rockburne are able to make their work allude to the figure, as well as what exists beyond the limits of human knowledge.
Exhibitions
Dorothea Rockburne: Time Measures Itself, David Nolan Gallery, New York, NY, February 25—April 18, 2026Dorothea Rockburne: Drawing Which Makes Itself, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, September 21, 2013—January 20, 2014
A Personal Selection: Paintings 1968-1986, Xavier Fourcade, New York, NY, February 15—March 28, 1986
Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, February 15—April 3, 1977
Dorothea Rockburne: Working with the Golden Section, 1974-76, John Weber Gallery, New York, NY, October 30—November 27, 1976
Literature
Dia Beacon, Dorothea Rockburne, Eva Diaz, 2024André Emmerich Gallery, Dorothea Rockburne: New Work: Cut-Ins, John Yau, 1989
Fourcade, Xavier, A Personal Selection: Paintings, 1968-1986, Brian O'Doherty, 1986
John Weber Gallery, Working with the Golden Section, 1974-76, Naomi Spector, 1976
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