Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian (2024)

Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian (1)
Yves Klein’s Untitled Anthropometry,1960, from the Hirshhorn’s collection

May 20 to September 12, 2010
One of the past century’s most influential artists, Yves Klein (French, b. Nice, 1928; d. Paris, 1962) took the European art scene by storm in a prolific career that lasted only from 1954 to 1962, when he suffered a heart attack at the age of 34. Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers was the first major retrospective of the artist’s work in the United States in nearly 30 years. The exhibition included examples from all of Klein’s major series, including his Anthropometries, Cosmogonies, fire paintings, planetary reliefs, and blue monochromes, as well as selections of his lesser-known gold and pink monochromes, body and sponge reliefs, “air architecture,” and immaterial works. The installation also foregrounded the artist’s process and conceptual projects through a range of ephemera, including sketches, photographs, letters, and writings.

Yves Klein created what he considered his first artwork when he signed the sky above Nice in 1947, making his earliest attempt to capture the immaterial. Klein was an innovator who embraced painting, sculpture, performance, photography, music, theater, film, architecture, and theoretical writing. Self-identified as “the painter of space,” he sought to achieve immaterial spirituality through pure color (primarily an ultramarine blue of his own invention—International Klein Blue). The artist’s diverse body of work represents a pivotal transition from modern art’s concern with the material object to contemporary notions of the conceptual nature of art and was informed by Klein’s study of the mystical sect Rosicrucianism, philosophical and poetic investigations of space and science, and the practice of judo.

Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers was co-organized by the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was co-curated by Hirshhorndeputy director and chief curator Kerry Brougher and Philippe Vergne, director of Dia Art Foundation.

The exhibition was made possible by major support from Martha and Bruce Atwater, Judy Dayton, and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Additional generous support was provided by Constance R. Caplan and Lewis and Barbara Shrensky. Major support for the catalogue was provided by Sotheby’s with additional support from L&M Arts in New York and Heather James Fine Art.

The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden’s presentation was sponsored by

Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian (2)

Additional generous support for the Hirshhorn’s presentation was provided by Glenstone and the Lisa and Steven Tananbaum Family Foundation.

Exhibition Airline Sponsor

Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian (3)

Catalogue

Yves Klein Leaps into Facebook and Twitter
For this first US retrospective in nearly 30 years of one of the 20th century’s most influential artists, whose work marks a pivotal transition between modern art’s concern with the material object and contemporary notions of the conceptual natural of art, we felt it was essential to present Klein not only as the maker of beautiful objects, but also as a thinker, a philosopher who paved the way for future generations of artists. His body of work was diverse and moved beyond traditional media such as painting and sculpture to include performance, photography, music, architecture, and theoretical writing as well as plans for projects in theater, dance, and cinema. He may also have been one of the first artists consciously to blur the lines between his work and life, between painting and performance, between object and idea, even between being an artist and a magician. Therefore, it was necessary not only to create an exhibition of his physical works, which are numerous and exist in a variety of forms, but also to present the full range of his creative endeavor and to resurrect the artist himself by allowing him to tell his own story.

Therefore, as we approached the opening of the exhibition, we wanted to try an experiment, to have the artist himself introduce the show and present to viewers the range of his projects and the scope of what they would experience in the exhibition itself. Each day, a different aspect of Klein’s remarkably prolific yet dramatically short career took center stage, presented through quotes, photos, and video and audio recordings that let Klein himself explain his goals, process, artworks, and projects to the audience. Thus, Klein lived on through Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and the Hirshhorn’s website, truly providing him the chance to, as he expressed a desire to do, “realize in my own creations that ‘transparence,’ that immeasurable ‘void’ in which lives the permanent and absolute spirit freed of all dimensions.”

View the Yves Klein social media material archive here.

Yves Klein mobile application available
The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden announced the release of a mobile application for Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers, the first major retrospective of the artist’s work in the United States in nearly 30 years. This was the first mobile application offered to the public by a Smithsonian art museum, representing a commitment to technology that enriches the experience of visitors on- and offsite.

The Klein application, available in the iTunes App Store for download globally at a price of $0.99 until June 21 and $1.99 thereafter, provided users with a full overview of the exhibition, highlighting images of selected artworks alongside video and quotes from the artist himself, giving insight into Klein’s concepts and process.

“We launched the Yves Klein iPhone application to give our visitors, and art fans globally, an interactive way to experience this one-of-a-kind exhibition,” said Richard Koshalek, director of the Museum. “The distribution of our application allows people around the world to engage with the Yves Klein show through their smartphones.”

Using Toura for its iPhone application demonstrates the Hirshhorn’s ongoing commitment to educating and empowering a global audience in an increasingly information-driven culture. With Toura’s application technology, the museum will be able to offer smartphone tours for additional exhibitions in the future. Upon the successful launch of this iPhone app, the Hirshhorn, in conjunction with Toura, will make the application available on other platforms and via other sellers, including Google’s Android Marketplace.

Yves Klein: With the Void, Full Powers - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian (2024)

FAQs

Is hirshhorn sculpture garden free? ›

Admission to the Hirshhorn is walk-up and always free. Passes are not required.

Who is Hirshhorn museum named after? ›

In time, Joseph Hirshhorn would become a financier, philanthropist, and well-known collector of modern art whose gift to the nation of nearly 6,000 paintings, sculptures, drawings, and mixed media pieces established his namesake museum on the National Mall.

How did Yves Klein make his art? ›

The only painter in the founding group, Klein was a highly influential artist whose radical techniques and conceptual gestures laid the groundwork for much of the art of the 1960s and '70s. His media were pure pigments, gold leaf, fire, water, live nude models (his “living brushes”), actions, and events.

How long does it take to walk through the Hirshhorn Museum? ›

I would say 1 to 3 hours depending on your interest in each exhibit. Make sure you visit the sculpture garden.

Can you bring food in to the Hirshhorn? ›

SNACKS. Grab a snack at Dolcezza, the museum's lobby cafe or bring your own. For the safety of the art, food and drinks are only allowed in the lobby.

What type of art is at the Hirshhorn museum? ›

The Hirshhorn holds one of the most important collections of twentieth-century art in the world. We also collect significant works by contemporary living artists. Use the search to explore our more than 12,000 artworks, including paintings, sculpture, works on paper, performance, and digital media.

How many Smithsonian museums are there? ›

The Smithsonian is home to 21 museums and the National Zoo. While safeguarding and presenting our nations treasures, our museums and zoo also support education, scholarship, and research. Explore our vast online digital resources or plan your visit.

How big is the Hirshhorn museum? ›

Known for its striking Gordon Bunshaft-designed architecture, the museum has 60,000 square feet of exhibition space inside its elevated circular building and nearly 4 acres outside in its multilevel Sculpture Garden and Plaza.

Why is blue monochrome famous? ›

Klein famously declared the blue sky to be his first artwork and from there continued finding radical new ways to represent the infinite and immaterial in his works. One such strategy was monochrome abstraction—the use of one color over an entire canvas.

Who was the French artist obsessed with blue? ›

Klein was so obsessed with blue that he named a shade of it after himself. International Klein Blue, or I.K.B. for short, is a combination of ultramarine pigment and a chemist's polymer binder that keeps it from fading.

What blue color is named after an artist? ›

Yves Klein Blue is a vibrant ultramarine hue named after the French artist Yves Klein, who is best known for his contributions to the art world in the mid-20th century. The history of Yves Klein Blue is closely tied to the life and work of this influential artist.

Is the nola Sculpture Garden free? ›

The garden is free to access and open to the public seven days a week! Located next to the Sculpture Garden is the magnificent New Orleans Museum of Art, set in the splendor of City Park, with 1,500 acres of walking paths, centuries old oak trees, a small amusem*nt park, lagoons and Storyland.

Does the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden cost money? ›

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden is free, open to the public, and is open from 6 am to 12 midnight every day.

Is the Walker Sculpture Garden free? ›

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden and Bentson Mediatheque are always free. Walker members enjoy unlimited free admission.

Is MoMA Sculpture Garden free? ›

Beginning September 9, The Museum of Modern Art's Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden will be open free of charge to the general public daily, from 9:00 to 10:15 a.m., allowing New Yorkers and visitors alike to start their day in one of the city's most beloved outdoor spaces.

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