Resumen:
The experience offered by a museum to a visitor can have different nature and importance for everyone. Each
artwork is perpetually sending a message to the viewer, possibly creating an art-person link. This link can provide experiences
of great significant power to the visitor. The article below aims to delve into the facilitation of these experiences in the case of
the paintings created by the artist Mark Rothko work (1903-1970). Their special characteristics mean that they can be called
"Rothko experiences". As a result, a guide to viewing the work, based on the artist's recommendations, has been developed
which can facilitate the emergence of these so-called "Rothko experience". Specifically, some of the multiple "realityaesthetical-
art" connections experienced between Rothko's work and people whom observation incorporate an aesthetical and
metaphysical dimension of reality are presented. To help in the understanding of these profound experiences and the aesthetical
education of sensibility, the narrative method is used through two chronicles that gather the experiences lived by the authors in
their contemplation of Rothko's work. These chronicles are examples that can help to understand the possibilities of Rothko's
contemplative painting. The result is a synthetic study of Rothko work conceptualization, through one guide and the narrative
dialectics between two "Rothko experiences" to show his aesthetical way of thinking, represented in his paintings.