

Yves Klein
Cultural Positioning
- • Nouveau Realisme
- • Surrealism
- • Minimalism
- • Pop Art
- • Op Art
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
View all exhibitions →Why this artist matters now
Yves Klein worked across painting, sculpture, and performance, becoming one of the most radical figures in post-war European art. His most concentrated obsession was color itself, specifically the ultramarine pigment he patented as International Klein Blue, a matte, immersive tone he applied to canvases, sponge reliefs, and cast figures to reduce form to pure chromatic sensation. A founding member of Nouveau réalisme alongside critic Pierre Restany, Klein treated the act of making as inseparable from the work, staging performances in which models pressed pigment-covered bodies directly onto canvas. His short career, cut short at thirty-four, anticipated the concerns of both minimalism and conceptual art by decades.
Source: Sean Kelly · Trust score: 100% · Updated 1mo ago



















