Crime | rothko Alleged Rothko Vandal Pleads Not Guilty Lawyer says he welcomes trial to talk about art By Liam Carnahan Posted Oct 10, 2012 12:31 PM CDT Copied This isn't the painting vandalized. It's Rothko's 'Orange, Red, Yellow,' which recently sold for $86 million. The vandalized one is called 'Black on Maroon.' (AP Photo/Sotheby's Auction Housse, File) The 26-year-old Polish man accused of vandalizing a Rothko painting probably worth millions pleaded not guilty to criminal damage today. Wlodzimierz Umaniec allegedly stepped over a wire at the Tate Modern in London on Sunday to tag the "Black on Maroon" painting with the cryptic message: "VLADIMIR UMANETS '12, A POTENTIAL PIECE OF YELLOWISM." So what gives? We may find out soon: His lawyer says Umaniec, also spelled Umanets, welcomes a trial "so he can have the discussion he wishes to have about the art." Get a head start if you wish at the thisisyellowism.com website, which has a hard-to-fathom manifesto co-written by the suspect, notes the Huffington Post. Tate officials, meanwhile, think they can restore the painting. Read These Next NYC police encountered a horrific scene after a fire was reported. Charlie Kirk's death has been confirmed. Amy Coney Barrett weighs in a possible third Trump term. Police found a body in the trunk of a singer's Tesla. Report an error