Klein blue represents ideals and purity.
Klein blue is a very pure blue. This blue is known as the ideal blue, pure blue, and the ultimate blue. Klein blue symbolizes the vast sea. The view of freedom and the boundless sky will give people a broad-minded and leisurely life, but also a certain sense of loneliness. Therefore, Klein blue represents a calm mood and often symbolizes deep thinking, with a certain sense of mystery.
Origin of Klein Blue:
Klein Blue is named after the pop artist Yves Klein, who worked with Andy Waugh Hall, Duchamp and Beuys are collectively known as the four artists who have made the greatest contributions to world art in the second half of the 20th century.
At the 1960 Milan Art Exhibition, Yves Klein exhibited eight monochromatic panels of the same size, each panel covered with this blue pigment. This is the first time Klein Blue has officially appeared in front of the world.
Many people’s first sense of seeing this kind of blue may not be particularly comfortable. The saturation is too high and the visual impact is too great. Yves Klein’s understanding of blue is that blue is The sky is water, air, depth and infinity, freedom and life. Blue is the most essential color of the universe.
According to this understanding, in 1956, with the help of material merchant Edward Adam, he blended ultramarine powder into synthetic resin Rhodopas M60A, and prepared for the first time this kind of material that he believed best represented the essence of the universe. blue.
Almost at the same time as the eight panels were exhibited at the Milan Art Exhibition in 1960, Yves Klein patented this blue, "International Klein blue" (IKB) ) name was officially born.