The White and The Void/ Gallery 14
In 1958, Klein held the exhibition commonly known as The Void (official title: The Specialization of Sensibility in the Raw Material State into Stabilized Pictorial Sensibility). He painted the exterior walls of the gallery entirely blue, removed all the indoor furniture, and painted the interior white over a period of 48 hours. Viewers were astonished by this “empty” exhibition, but for Klein the room was not empty, rather it was a dematerialized space replete with the pictorial sensation of the blue outside the room. The novelist Albert Camus, who visited the exhibition, wrote in the guestbook: “With the void, full powers.”
As a color, white represents the void, the fullness of nothingness, and is pregnant with chance, imagination, and the unconscious, which cannot be logically explained. Artists who were Klein’s contemporaries, such as Günther Uecker, Piero Manzoni, and Enrico Castellani, associated with the group ZERO and with “New Tendecies” in European art, were noted for exploring diverse materials in rapid succession, as if inspired by Klein, and using them in monochromatic works with white as the key color. “The void” was also presented in manifold forms by Japanese artists including Yayoi Kusama, who painted her hallucinatory experiences of infinity nets, and Fujiko Shiraga, a member of Zero Society (Zero-kai, one of Gutai’s predecessors, with an approach that involved eliminating composition), who manifested delicate spaces created by white through wrinkles and tears in paper.