May 29, 2026

Forecast: moody rectangles ahead

Rothko for your current weather conditions

This artsy weather site has people swooning, nitpicking, and begging for more painter modes

TLDR: A small website now pairs your current weather with a Rothko painting, turning forecasts into an art mood board. Commenters are charmed by the beauty, but one Arizona user says the vibe gets repetitive fast, while others are already asking for spin-offs with different artists.

A tiny weather site that matches your local conditions to a Mark Rothko painting has landed the rare internet miracle: people are actually being nice. The project turns the usual boring forecast screen into something moodier and more poetic, leaning on Rothko’s famous blocks of color and his belief that paintings should make you feel something. And the comment section? Less “what’s the bug report” and more “wait, this is kind of beautiful.” One fan called it “personal software projects that are made as art,” while others were straight-up gushing with “I love this” energy.

But don’t worry, there was still a little drama. The hottest mini-complaint came from Arizona, where one commenter basically said the site keeps serving the same image every time, turning a dreamy art experiment into accidental desert monotony. It’s not a full-blown scandal, but it is the one note of friction: if your weather barely changes, can your Rothko ever really surprise you? That sparked the classic internet side-eye of “beautiful idea, but can it be more tailored?”

Meanwhile, the artsy crowd immediately started sequel-baiting. One person demanded a Josef Albers version, another said this was so inspiring they now want to build a chiaroscuro spin-off. So yes, the real plot twist here is that a weather page didn’t just show rain or shine — it launched a comment section full of art crushes, wish lists, and one extremely relatable regional gripe. Forecast: mostly delighted, with a slight chance of snobbery.

Key Points

  • The article presents a weather-driven interface that matches current conditions to a Mark Rothko painting.
  • Mark Rothko is identified as an American painter who lived from 1903 to 1970.
  • The article says Rothko stopped painting representational subjects in the late 1940s and focused instead on light, color, and emotional effect.
  • It describes Rothko’s compositions as two or three soft-edged rectangles set on a field, with surfaces worked to create an atmospheric effect.
  • The article notes that Rothko wanted his paintings hung low in dim light and experienced slowly while seated.

Hottest takes

"personal software projects that are made as art" — hootz
"living in Arizona it’s always been the same image every time I check" — hannahstrawbrry
"now I want a Josef Albers... version" — samgutentag
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