Window on Infinity - Room 03
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Meditating on colour
Colour, light and texture: Jef Verheyen uses them to make us think about emptiness. He finds inspiration for this in East Asian thinking and in traditional Chinese artistic crafts. To paint with one colour (monochrome) or with the absence of colour (achrome)? After 1957 Verheyen ponders this question. His meeting with Piero Manzoni and Lucio Fontana in Milan at the end of 1958 increases his desire to experiment. Shortly after this he plans an Antwerp exhibition of international monochrome painters.
That project is abandoned. But in 1960 a similar exhibition is held in Leverkusen, Germany. Verheyen and the monochrome painters put themselves firmly on the map. Their ‘artless art’ offers an alternative to the refined touch of the Impressionists and the grand gesture of the Abstract Expressionists. For them, only the poetry of pure matter counts, of colour or absence of colour. Because, as Verheyen writes: ‘In a monochrome or achrome painting, light must be felt rather than seen.’
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Jef Verheyen and Piero Ma...
Jef Verheyen, Piero Manzoni, Frank Philippi, Jef Verheyen and Piero Manzoni (right) in a restaurant in Milan, 1959. Photography, photograph (leica).
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• 0657 • Monochrome - Ach...
Jef Verheyen, • 0657 • Monochrome - Achrome I , 1958. Painting, oil paint on burlap, 92 x 73 cm.
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• 0829 • Schaal
Jef Verheyen, • 0829 • Schaal, 1955. Ceramics, glazed earthenware, 2,5 x 22 x 7,5 cm.
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Kom
Dani Franque, Kom, 1955. Ceramics, glazed earthenware, 20 x 34,5 cm.
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Frank Philippi
After studying at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, Frank Philippi choses photography over painting. It was his greatest hobby, but
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Guy Vandenbranden
*"la géometrie, contrairement à ce que croient les ignorants, donne les plus profondes voluptés"*. (Guy Vandenbranden) De naoorlogse kuns
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Lucio Fontana
The Argentine-Italian visual artist Lucio Fontana (1899-1968) has broadened and deepened the avant-garde of the mid-twentieth century with ne
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Otto Piene
Otto Piene, with Heinz Mack, publishes the review Zero (three issues) starting in 1958. The name Zero was also chosen as a collective name w
