Looking back at one of the most remarkable parts of the Rothko exhibition in Florence, which Jeanne, Vilhelm and I visited together during our stay there a few weeks ago.
Two studies for the Seagram paintings were installed inside Michelangelo’s Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana — and suddenly one understood something essential about Rothko that is easy to miss in the gigantic retrospective exhibitions of today.
Christopher Rothko in Rothko - From the Inside Out writes that his father was “clearly moved by Michelangelo’s Laurentian Library in Florence, and used it as a touchstone in his conception of the Seagram space.”
And standing there inside Michelangelo’s extraordinary vestibule and staircase, it became obvious why.
The Laurentian Library foyer is not merely architecture. It is psychological space. The staircase seems almost to flow downward like lava rather than behaving like rational Renaissance structure. Gravity itself feels slightly unstable there.
Rothko became obsessed with the possibility that paintings could create that same sense of enclosure and inwardness.
The Seagram commission itself became one of the great conflicts of his artistic life. Officially, he had been hired to decorate the Four Seasons restaurant in the Seagram Building in New York. But Rothko increasingly began to imagine the room not as a luxury dining space but almost as a total environment — a place where the paintings themselves would determine the emotional atmosphere.
Christopher Rothko describes how the murals were conceived almost architecturally: large dark panels intended to “appropriate the room and dictate its ambience.”
And this was precisely where the tension emerged.
Christopher Rothko writes that his father gradually came to realize “that nothing about the restaurant was designed to let him or his artwork speak.”
There is a famous moment described by journalist John Fischer after a ferry trip with Rothko to Europe in 1959. Rothko spoke enthusiastically about Michelangelo’s Laurentian Library and its oppressive, enclosed vestibule. He explained that he wanted to recreate that same feeling in the Seagram restaurant — a feeling where the room itself almost closes in around you and intensifies your awareness.
Not decoration.
Atmosphere.
Not paintings on walls.
But paintings becoming walls.
Standing inside the Laurentian Library with Rothko’s Seagram works, one suddenly understood what he meant. The paintings and Michelangelo’s architecture seemed less like separate works and more like different voices participating in the same centuries-long conversation about silence, contemplation, enclosure, scale, and human presence.
The final photographs are from the library itself and the adjoining spaces: Atlas carrying an astronomical instrument for measuring the planets, and the extraordinary domed reading room nearby — the Tribuna Elci — whose geometry and light felt almost like a continuation of the same dialogue between architecture and contemplation.
05/20/2026 12:36:20
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- Looking back at one of the most remarkable parts of the Rothko exhibition in Florence, which Jeanne, Vilhelm and I visited together during our stay there a few weeks ago.
Two studies for the Seagram paintings were installed inside Michelangelo’s Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana — and suddenly one understood something essential about Rothko that is easy to miss in the gigantic retrospective exhibitions of today.
Christopher Rothko in Rothko - From the Inside Out writes that his father was “clearly moved by Michelangelo’s Laurentian Library in Florence, and used it as a touchstone in his conception of the Seagram space.”
And standing there inside Michelangelo’s extraordinary vestibule and staircase, it became obvious why.
The Laurentian Library foyer is not merely architecture. It is psychological space. The staircase seems almost to flow downward like lava rather than behaving like rational Renaissance structure. Gravity itself feels slightly unstable there.
Rothko became obsessed with the possibility that paintings could create that same sense of enclosure and inwardness.
The Seagram commission itself became one of the great conflicts of his artistic life. Officially, he had been hired to decorate the Four Seasons restaurant in the Seagram Building in New York. But Rothko increasingly began to imagine the room not as a luxury dining space but almost as a total environment — a place where the paintings themselves would determine the emotional atmosphere.
Christopher Rothko describes how the murals were conceived almost architecturally: large dark panels intended to “appropriate the room and dictate its ambience.”
And this was precisely where the tension emerged.
Christopher Rothko writes that his father gradually came to realize “that nothing about the restaurant was designed to let him or his artwork speak.”
There is a famous moment described by journalist John Fischer after a ferry trip with Rothko to Europe in 1959. Rothko spoke enthusiastically about Michelangelo’s Laurentian Library and its oppressive, enclosed vestibule. He explained that he wanted to recreate that same feeling in the Seagram restaurant — a feeling where the room itself almost closes in around you and intensifies your awareness.
Not decoration.
Atmosphere.
Not paintings on walls.
But paintings becoming walls.
Standing inside the Laurentian Library with Rothko’s Seagram works, one suddenly understood what he meant. The paintings and Michelangelo’s architecture seemed less like separate works and more like different voices participating in the same centuries-long conversation about silence, contemplation, enclosure, scale, and human presence.
The final photographs are from the library itself and the adjoining spaces: Atlas carrying an astronomical instrument for measuring the planets, and the extraordinary domed reading room nearby — the Tribuna Elci — whose geometry and light felt almost like a continuation of the same dialogue between architecture and contemplation. (05/20/2026 12:36:20)
- Yesterday evening Jeanne and I attended a fascinating conversation at Lille Mølle on Christianshavn between Madame Nielsen and Ivan Rod, arranged by Mere Levet Liv.
Even attempting to describe Madame Nielsen already feels slightly inadequate. Writer, performer, composer, singer, cultural critic, shapeshifter, constructed identity, dissolved identity — somehow simultaneously theatrical and deeply sincere. A figure permanently resisting stable categories.
The conversation revolved around the boundary between lived life and fiction, between experience and performance, between memory and invention. But what I found most fascinating was the discussion about identity itself — particularly the tension between individual identity and group identities.
In a time where so much public discourse pushes us towards increasingly rigid collective categories — political, cultural, national, generational — Madame Nielsen represents almost the opposite impulse: identity as movement, instability, transformation, contradiction and continuous becoming.
Not identity as essence, but identity as process.
There was something strangely liberating in hearing someone speak so openly about the possibility that the self is neither fixed nor singular. That perhaps we contain multiple selves over a lifetime — some abandoned, some invented, some imposed by others.
And perhaps literature and performance become interesting precisely at the point where the borders between these selves begin to dissolve.
I also bought Min Fars Død afterwards — and received what may genuinely be one of the most beautiful book dedications I have ever been given. Somewhere between drawing, signature, mask, flower and kiss. Almost a small autonomous artwork in itself.
The setting at Lille Mølle only intensified the atmosphere: old wooden interiors, evening light through the windows, people gathered closely around language and thought rather than spectacle.
One leaves evenings like this slightly intellectually destabilised — which is probably a very good thing. (05/20/2026 11:57:07)
- Over the last two years I have had the privilege of seeing two major Rothko exhibitions: first the overwhelming retrospective at Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, and most recently the exhibition in Florence.
Both were extraordinary. And yet, after reading Christopher Rothko’s Mark Rothko: From the Inside Out, I increasingly wonder whether large Rothko retrospectives also contain a kind of paradox.
They are almost too much.
Too many canvases.
Too much visual intensity.
Too much emotional weight compressed into a few hours of museum walking.
You move from room to room trying to absorb painting after painting, while simultaneously feeling that each individual work demands something almost impossible within the format of a blockbuster exhibition: slowness, silence and sustained attention.
One of the most compelling aspects of Christopher Rothko’s book is precisely this insistence that the paintings are not primarily intellectual objects to decode through biography, historical context or theory. They are experiences that only really unfold through prolonged engagement between the painting and the viewer.
The irony is that the great retrospectives, despite their magnificence, can sometimes work against this very encounter.
You leave overwhelmed rather than transformed.
I increasingly think the deeper lesson from both the book and these exhibitions may be something quite simple: perhaps Rothko is best encountered in smaller doses.
One or two paintings.
A quiet room.
Enough time.
Some of my strongest Rothko experiences have actually happened exactly that way — unexpectedly encountering a single painting in a museum collection and remaining with it far longer than museum culture normally encourages.
Christopher Rothko’s book subtly argues that his father’s paintings are less about interpretation than presence.
Not understanding them.
Being with them.
And perhaps that is ultimately much harder in our age of cultural consumption, where even art risks becoming something we “complete” rather than something we inhabit.
Yes, I am aware of the irony of writing a long reflection about paintings that probably ask for fewer words and more silence. (05/15/2026 12:16:01)
- I have had the privilege of collaborating with SUPERFLEX on various projects over many years.
That made it an even greater pleasure to be in Florence for the opening of their installation There Are Other Fish In The Sea at Palazzo Strozzi.
The work transforms the Renaissance courtyard into a flooded reflective space filled with pink travertine columns imagined as potential habitats for marine life.
Part climate fiction.
Part speculative architecture.
Part conceptual joke directed at five centuries of European humanism.
And somehow also deeply beautiful.
What I particularly loved was the strange temporal collision created by the installation:
Renaissance Florence.
The memory of the 1966 flood.
Contemporary climate anxiety.
And a future where buildings may need to coexist with species other than ourselves.
SUPERFLEX has always had a rare ability to combine intellectual precision with irony and openness. Their projects often ask serious political and ecological questions while still allowing room for playfulness and absurdity.
The opening also turned into one of those long Florentine evenings where conversations moved effortlessly from architecture and philosophy to wine and friendship in crowded trattorias.
And the following day Jeanne and I had lunch with our two SUPERFLEX friends, Bjørnstjerne and Rasmus, continuing conversations that somehow felt perfectly at home in Florence. (05/15/2026 10:03:54)
- I have for many years been deeply fascinated by the music of Olivier Messiaen.
Every Christmas I make a point of hearing his monumental organ work La Nativité du Seigneur performed in Trinitatis Church in Copenhagen. And whenever his Quatuor pour la fin du Temps is performed here in the city, I try to be there. Few composers have managed to combine ecstatic intensity, spirituality, sensuality and rhythmic complexity in quite the same way.
Yesterday evening Jens and I went to DR Koncerthuset to hear Esa-Pekka Salonen conduct Messiaen’s Turangalîla-Symphonie with Bertrand Chamayou as piano soloist.
The title itself is difficult to translate precisely. “Turanga” suggests movement, time, rhythm and life-force, while “lîla” refers to play, love and divine cosmic playfulness in Sanskrit-inspired interpretation. Together the title points toward something like a hymn to love, life, movement and ecstatic existence itself.
And ecstatic it certainly is.
I love both Messiaen’s almost jazz-like rhythmic energy and the enormous orchestral sound masses that erupt throughout the work — nowhere more overwhelmingly than in the fifth movement, Joie du sang des étoiles (“Joy of the Blood of the Stars”), where the orchestra seems to dissolve into pure cosmic celebration.
But Messiaen could also suspend time completely. The sixth movement, Jardin du sommeil d’amour (“Garden of the Sleep of Love”), is among the most beautiful and meditative stretches of music I know. Listening to it almost feels less like following a composition than drifting slowly through a dream.
What continues to fascinate me about Messiaen is that his music never really sounds historical. It remains strangely outside ordinary musical time — simultaneously ancient, modern and futuristic.
And perhaps that is exactly what great art does. (05/15/2026 09:33:08)
- Last night Jeanne and I went to Cinemateket to see Blade Runner as part of its 35mm series. I must have watched this version — not the Director’s Cut, and not the sequel — countless times since the early 1980s.
There was a period where I could recite almost the entire film from memory.
From Deckard’s first line:
“Sushi. That’s what my ex-wife used to call me. Cold fish.”
To the final monologue that has become almost detached from the film itself and entered cultural memory:
“I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe…”
I knew the pauses, the rhythm, the timing. I knew when the rain would fall.
Returning to it decades later, I had expected nostalgia. Instead I was struck by something else.
When I first saw the film, its future felt impossibly distant — a strange world of giant screens, global cities, artificial beings, and blurred boundaries between human and machine. Today much of it feels less like science fiction and more like a distorted mirror. Not because we have flying cars or replicants, but because we increasingly live inside questions the film raised: memory, identity, authenticity, technology, and what remains human when more and more can be simulated.
And perhaps the strangest thing is that while I remembered almost every line, I discovered that I had not been watching the same film all these years.
Or perhaps I had changed.
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
Yes, I am aware of the irony of writing that on social media. (05/14/2026 16:58:56)
- Yesterday evening Jeanne and I went to Lille Mølle on Christianshavn for one of the cultural evenings organised by Mere Levet Liv — the association Jeanne has helped establish around conversations, literature, art, and lived experience.
The guest was Liv Helm: author, theatre director, and one of the more interesting literary voices in contemporary Denmark right now.
With Ivan Rod as moderator, the evening became much more than a traditional literary interview. Through the conversation about Med hjertet i hånden and Hvis du er bange, så ryk tættere, her two autobiographical novels, one gradually sensed that the books are not simply “about” the events they describe. They are equally about memory, narration, performance, shame, class, and the strange instability of identity itself.
The interesting thing with autobiographical literature is often not whether it is objectively true, but what kind of truth emerges through the act of retelling.
So rather than explaining too much, I would simply recommend reading the books yourselves and trying to work out what they are really about.
Incidentally, Liv has also written a very thoughtful essay in the latest issue of Atlas on copyright and theatre productions — highly relevant reading at a time where questions about authorship, interpretation, reproduction, and AI are becoming increasingly blurred. (05/13/2026 08:27:53)
- It may be pouring rain in Copenhagen, but apparently I am participating in one of the city’s defining cultural rituals: eating a BMO.
Today’s @ftglobetrotter in the Financial Times asks whether Copenhagen’s coolest breakfast is simply “a cheese roll”. Which is both absurdly reductive and — according to the article — entirely correct.
The Copenhagen BMO (“bolle med ost”) has now evolved from a very ordinary Danish breakfast into something approaching a metropolitan identity marker. What was once merely bread, butter and cheese has been reinterpreted by bakeries such as Hart, Juno and Lille Bakery into an object of near-philosophical seriousness.
Naturally, Copenhagen has also produced anonymous mathematicians who rank BMOs through formulas involving crumb texture, butter balance, cheese volatility and consistency metrics.
Of course it has.
But beneath the semi-ironic hype there is actually something interesting going on. The Financial Times article correctly points out that the BMO phenomenon reflects a city obsessed with mastering fundamentals. Good bread. Good public spaces. Functional infrastructure. Clean water. Trust. Simplicity. Everyday quality elevated almost to civic ideology.
And perhaps that is also why Copenhagen functions relatively well compared to many modern cities. Not because it constantly reinvents civilisation, but because it keeps refining the basics.
Before you can change the world, you apparently have to master bread, butter and cheese.
Civilisation occasionally arrives in a grease-stained paper bag. (05/13/2026 08:10:35)
- There is a particular kind of pleasure in returning to a city you already know well enough to stop behaving like a tourist.
I lived in Florence from 1991 to 1992, and over the years I have revisited most of its churches, museums, cloisters, palazzi and paintings several times over. The city gradually changes character when you know it like that. The “must-sees” become less important than the details, the light, the conversations, the routes between places.
And yet Florence still has the ability to surprise me.
For the first time — together with Jeanne and Vilhelm during our stay in Florence almost three weeks ago — I finally visited the Vasari Corridor.
The corridor was built in 1565 by Giorgio Vasari for Cosimo I de’ Medici in order to allow the ruling family to move safely and invisibly through the city, elevated above ordinary Florentine life. It connects Palazzo Vecchio with Palazzo Pitti, crossing the Arno through the Ponte Vecchio and winding through churches, private buildings and hidden passageways along the way.
For centuries it functioned almost like an architectural ghost: known, discussed, occasionally glimpsed through small windows, but inaccessible to almost everyone. Only recently has it reopened properly to the public after extensive restoration and new safety measures.
Walking through it now feels strangely contemporary.
A private infrastructure of power suspended above the public city. A physical network designed for controlled movement, surveillance, separation and security. Renaissance Florence suddenly begins to resemble a premodern version of today’s invisible systems of privileged access — private terminals, encrypted channels, executive layers of society hidden behind public interfaces.
But the corridor is also unexpectedly beautiful in a quieter way.
Not because of grand decoration — much of it is remarkably plain — but because of the windows. The city appears in fragments: rooftops, narrow streets, sudden glimpses into churches, people moving below entirely unaware that others once passed overhead unseen.
At one point I found myself looking at Florence through heavy iron grilles while crowds moved beneath us in the afternoon heat. The city felt simultaneously intimate and distant, almost like observing history through a firewall.
Yes, I am aware of the irony of writing about hidden elite passageways on social media. (05/12/2026 15:52:33)
- Today I had the privilege of attending the Copenhagen Democracy Summit 2026 here in Copenhagen.
The summit brought together politicians, activists, dissidents, journalists, technologists, and civil society actors from across the world around a question that increasingly feels less historical and more immediate: how democracies defend themselves against authoritarian regimes that no longer respect borders, norms, or even the distinction between war and peace.
One of the strongest moments for me was a panel discussion titled Overthrowing Dictatorships with Carolina Barrero, Leopoldo López, Masih Alinejad, moderated by Damon Wilson.
There was something striking about hearing people who have personally experienced prison, exile, surveillance, violence, and state repression discuss freedom in a calm conference setting in central Copenhagen. It was a reminder that democracy is not an abstract constitutional condition. For many people, it is still a physical struggle involving fear, sacrifice, and survival.
Masih Alinejad made a particularly forceful point. She argued that many Western societies still fail to understand that the Iranian regime has for years conducted operations inside Western countries — including intimidation, attempted assassinations, and killings of dissidents and opponents abroad. According to her, this conflict is no longer geographically distant. It is already present inside our own societies, increasingly outsourced through local sympathizers and criminal intermediaries.
The session ended in a deeply moving way when two Iranian women, who had been blinded by Iranian police during recent demonstrations, were led onto the stage to tell their stories. Their testimonies about violence, loss, courage, and their continued fight for freedom transformed the conversation from geopolitics into something painfully human.
One leaves such a conference with a certain paradoxical feeling: both more worried about the state of the world — and at the same time more hopeful because of the extraordinary courage some people continue to display in defense of liberty.
And perhaps that is ultimately what democracy depends on: not systems alone, but individuals willing to risk everything for them. (05/12/2026 15:30:39)