Klein, Yves
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
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2003
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© The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists 2003, originally published by Oxford University Press 2003. (Hide copyright information)
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Klein, Yves (1928–62). French painter and experimental artist, one of the most influential figures in European avant-garde art in the post-war period. Both his parents were painters, but he had no formal artistic training, and for much of his short life he earned his living as a judo instructor (in 1952–3 he lived in Japan, where he obtained the high rank of black belt, fourth dan). In the mid-1950s he began exhibiting ‘monochromes’, pictures in which a canvas was uniformly painted a single colour, usually a distinctive blue that he called ‘International Klein Blue’. He used this also for other works including sculptured figures, and reliefs of sponges on canvas. In a lecture given at the Sorbonne in 1959, Klein explained his theory of monochrome painting as an attempt to depersonalize colour by ridding it of subjective emotion and thus giving it a metaphysical quality. Klein also made pictures by a variety of unorthodox methods, including the action of rain on prepared paper (these he called
Cosmogonies), the use of a flame-thrower (
Peintures de feu), or imprints of the human body (
Anthropométries). In 1958 he created a sensation (and almost a riot) at the Galerie Iris Clert in Paris by an ‘exhibition of emptiness'—an empty gallery painted white. It was called
Le Vide (The Void). In 1960 he gave his first public exhibition of the
Anthropométries: naked women smeared with blue pigment dragged each other over canvas laid on the floor to the accompaniment of his
Symphonie monotone—a single note sustained for ten minutes and alternating with ten minutes’ silence. Critical reception was very mixed. He became a celebrity in Europe, but an exhibition at the
Leo Castelli gallery in New York in 1961 was a dismal failure. Klein died young of a heart attack, but he produced a large amount of work and had wide influence, particularly on the development of
Minimal art. A great showman, he exemplifies the tendency in 20th-century art for the personality of the artist to assume greater importance than the things he makes—a tendency continued most notably by Joseph
Beuys.
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Phosgene. (Chemical Profile)(Illustration)
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News Wire article from: The Hindustan Times; 9/20/2007; 634 words
; ...Hindustan Times Washington, Sept. 20 -- Phosgene, put to devastating use during the First...Canadian research team has revealed. Phosgene was stockpiled in military arsenals well...but not negligible, concentration of phosgene in the troposphere". The researchers...
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The Effect of Steroid Treatment with Inhaled Budesonide or Intravenous Methylprednisolone on Phosgene-Induced Acute Lung Injury in a Porcine Model
Magazine article from: Military Medicine; 12/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...Toxic industrial chemicals e.g., phosgene, are widely used as reactive intermediates...potential benefit of steroids in treating phosgene induced ALI. Anesthetized pigs were instrumented, exposed to phosgene Ct 2000 mg.min.m^sup -3^ (Ct...
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Magazine article from: Chemical Week; 11/19/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...to French authorities to install a phosgene generator to make pharmaceutical intermediates...learned. The company has been buying phosgene since late 2001, when it was required by authorities to close its phosgene unit at Toulouse, France following...
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Phosgene From Iraq Found in UN Office
News Wire article from: AP Online; 8/30/2007; 700+ words
; ...material, identified in inventory files as phosgene - a chemical substance used in World...out how they got there," Snow said. Phosgene can be used as a chemical weapon - and...World War I - as a choking agent. Both phosgene gas and liquid can damage skin, eyes...
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Phosgene-free process cuts polycarbonate costs.(Research & Technology)
Magazine article from: Process Engineering; 9/1/2003; 644 words
; ...Moreover, the process avoids the use of phosgene, the poisonous gas which is used in...it is complicated by its reliance on phosgene. The process itself is not complex...the interface between bisphenol-A and phosgene, but the safety and environmental equipment...
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A non-phosgene route for the synthesis of alkyl N-phenylcarbamate.
Magazine article from: Chemistry and Industry; 6/17/1991; ; 700+ words
; Recently, a non-phosgene route was reported' for the synthesis of N,N'-diethyldiphenylurea...processes are difficult since they involve the use of toxic phosgene or carbon monoxide. Phosgene, particularly, has been proved to be an undesirable initial...
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Dow shuts phosgene derivatives unit after SNPE ends contract. (Business & Finance News).(Societe Nationale de Poudres et Explosifs)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Chemical Week; 12/18/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...leading to the shutdown of a Dow-operated phosgene derivatives plant at La Porte, TX that...government officials recently banned phosgene production at SNPE's Toulouse, France...but Dow operated the plant and supplied phosgene. SNPE used the plant's output to serve...
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phosgene
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
phosgene , colorless poison gas , first used during...cases death may result within 36 hours. Phosgene is now used in chemical synthesis. It may...of chloroform or carbon tetrachloride. Phosgene has the formula COCl 2 .
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chemical warfare
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II
...such as mustard gas, nerve gas, and phosgene. The Italians used mustard gas in Abyssinia...stockpiled 15,262 tons of mustard, phosgene, and other gases which could be delivered...supplied by the British with 10,000 phosgene-filled bombs. But American production...
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chloropicrin
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Chloropicrin is more toxic than chlorine but less toxic than phosgene . It is relatively inert and does not react with the chemicals...NO 2 . It boils at 112°C with partial decomposition to phosgene and nitrosyl chloride.
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diphosgene
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...a military poison. It boils at 128°C; its vapors have the odor of phosgene . Diphosgene is a lung irritant but is only slightly lachrimatory. Like phosgene, its effects are often delayed. Chemically it is trichloromethylchloroformate...
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Organic Halogen Compounds
Book article from: Chemistry: Foundations and Applications
...xA0; (5) Reactivity The reactivity of organohalogens varies enormously. The war gases phosgene (ClCOCl) and mustard (ClCH2CH2SCH2CH2Cl) are very reactive and highly toxic, whereas most other organohalogen compounds...
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