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Yves Klein (French: [iv klɛ̃]; 28 April 1928 – 6 June 1962) was a French artist and an important figure in post-war European art.He was a leading member of the French artistic movement of Nouveau réalisme founded in 1960 by art critic Pierre Restany.
The leap itself took place at 3 Rue Gentil Bernard, Fontenay-Aux_Roses, in October 1960, using about a dozen Judokas from a Judo School opposite, holding a large tarpaulin to land on. [6] Klein himself was a 4th Dan Judo Master. Shunk then montaged a shot of the empty street onto the photo.
Yves Peintures (Eng: Yves Paintings) is an artist's book by the French artist Yves Klein, originally published in Madrid, on 18 November 1954. [1] [2] This publication was Klein's first public gesture as an artist, featuring pages of 'commercially printed papers' [3] that were seemingly reproductions of paintings that, in fact, didn't exist.
Yves Klein becomes a master at judo, receiving the rank of yodan (4th dan/degree black-belt) from the Kodokan in Japan. Awards. Archibald Prize: Ivor Hele – Sir ...
Yves Klein and Iris Clert first met in December 1955, when the still unknown artist approached Clert in her newly opened gallery, attempting to solicit his monochrome artwork. Klein persuaded Clert to keep one of his paintings, a small orange monochrome, as a trial run. She displayed the monochrome in the corner of the one-room gallery.
10 "Aero works" as "Leap into the Void" and redundancy with the "Void" section?
After the Second World War, Yves Klein dined there almost every evening and held judo sessions on the terrace. The bronze cast sculpture which now stands prominently in the middle of the restaurant is called La Terre [Earth] by the sculptor Louis Derbré. It was cast at the artist's foundry and unveiled in 1993.
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