The Atelier des Lumières gallery in Paris is holding an exhibition called Yves Klein: Infinite Blue from 28 February 2020 to 3 January 2021.
It is an immersive digital exhibition in which the artworks are displayed on the gallery’s walls and floors. Created specifically for the Atelier des Lumières gallery, Yves Klein: Infinite Blue focuses on the French artist Yves Klein, who aimed to turn his life into a work of art.
The 10-minute visual work presents the artist’s works beyond his famous International Klein Blue (IKB), a colour that is a combination of ultramarine pigment and a special binder. It also includes the prints in the Anthropometrics works, as well as Cosmogonies and Klein’s Planetary Reliefs.
The exhibition is selected from Klein’s 90 works and 60 archived images. The accompanying music to the visual display is a mixture of Antonio Vivaldi’s violins and Thylacine’s electronic rhythms.
From Nice in France, Yves Klein (1928-1962) loved the Mediterranean sky – the colour inspired his first work. He even inspired a blue cocktail, which he drank when he married Rotraut Uecker. He believed that ‘painting is colour’ and sought to ‘individualize, free, and magnify’ in its purest form. Colour took on a spiritual and metaphysical dimension for Yves Klein.
Yves Klein died of a heart attack at the age of 34.
MARTINA NICOLLS
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MARTINA NICOLLS is an international aid and development consultant, and the author of: The Paris Residences of James Joyce (2020), Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom (2017), The Shortness of Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet (2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).
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