{"id":14729,"date":"2022-04-17T18:34:30","date_gmt":"2022-04-17T18:34:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uaaglobal.com\/zone-of-immaterial-pictorial-sensibility-sells-for-1-2-million\/"},"modified":"2022-04-17T18:34:30","modified_gmt":"2022-04-17T18:34:30","slug":"zone-of-immaterial-pictorial-sensibility-sells-for-1-2-million","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/uaaglobal.com\/zone-of-immaterial-pictorial-sensibility-sells-for-1-2-million\/","title":{"rendered":"Zone of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility sells for $1.2 million"},"content":{"rendered":"
In our modern, digital-consumerist society, we are no strangers to paying for\u2026well, nothing. Fleeting online experiences that amount to singular serotonin boosts (hopefully), shiny costumes for digital avatars, or the ability to let people know that a particular .JPEG really and truly belongs to us. But quite possibly the epitome of humanity\u2019s absurdity and the fine line of modern art is seen in work like Yves Klein\u2019s Zone of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility\u2014 which a receipt for just sold at $1.2 million.<\/p>\n
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Yves Klein\u2014the French pioneer of Nouveau r\u00e9alisme whose namesake of International Klein Blue was central to his creative practice\u2014conducted the performance and sale of Zone of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility from 1959 till his death in 1962. Truly ringing more of ritualism than materialism in its transactional nature, Klein would offer empty zones of space to collectors, giving them a receipt in exchange, and finishing the procedure by having the recipient burn the receipt before art world witnesses to verify the claim as he would dump half of the gold he gained from the sale into the Seine river. The endeavour is now considered an early advent of conceptual art.<\/p>\n
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The deep blue known as Klein Blue.<\/p>\n
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