Portfolio with 30 international contributions

0,0,0 – From the Black Square to the Digital Zero Point0,0,0

From the Black Square to the Digital Zero Point

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About the Project

Commemorating the 110th anniversary of the groundbreaking 0,10 exhibition in Petrograd (Russia), this portfolio presents thirty works from non-figurative artists across the globe. Held in Petrograd in 1915, amidst the clamor of war and revolutionary fervor, the 0,10 show is regarded as one of art history's fundamental turning points and a pivotal moment in the development of non-figurative art, particularly through the presentation of Kazimir Malevich's Black Square.

Amidst the intense social and political turmoil of Tsarist Russia, a period of profound upheaval and questioning of established norms, the Black Square emerged as a truly radical rupture with centuries of representational art. It stood as a stark "zero form" that deliberately voided artistic tradition and powerfully crystallized Malevich's revolutionary Suprematist vision: an understanding of art liberated entirely from the constraints of depiction, governed instead by the "supremacy of pure feeling." This unprecedented audacity mirrored the broader avant-garde's revolutionary ethos and its fervent yearning to fundamentally remake society and its aesthetic sensibilities. Closely tied to the iconoclastic energy of Russian Futurism's aggressive assault on bourgeois norms and conventional aesthetics, the painting's deliberate and symbolically charged installation in the exhibition corner declared it a potent secular icon for the burgeoning age of modernity. From this foundational rupture, like a seed taking root in fertile ground, sprang Constructivism — a distinct visual language characterized by its emphasis on geometry, industrial materials, and the embrace of technology. This influential movement rapidly spread globally, adapting and evolving within diverse cultural and political contexts while retaining its core reductivist principles. Much like Malevich's seemingly simple yet powerfully elemental forms, Constructivism emphatically proved that profound simplicity could indeed seed boundless innovation and diverse creative expressions — a fundamental principle that resonates profoundly even today in the algorithmic logic that underpins the very fabric of digital creation.

The deliberate choice of the title 0,0,0 for this portfolio — which in the Python programming language represents the pure state of the color black without any additive information — draws a parallel to the historical moment of the 0,10 exhibition. Both contexts share a common principle: the reduction to elementary forms. Just as Malevich's Black Square represented a "zero form" from which a new artistic language could emerge, so too does "0,0,0" in the digital realm form a starting point for countless visual and functional constructions. The thirty artists in this portfolio each continue this tradition of reduction in their own way, exploring the diverse possibilities inherent in seemingly simple visual vocabularies, and thus showcasing the vibrant evolution of an art form that extends from the revolutionary ideas of the early 20th century to our digital age. As code, it embodies cross-cultural maximum reduction, clarity, and universal applicability. Today, code functions as a lingua franca of the digital era — a boundary-less system of creation that transcends cultural, linguistic, and ideological divides. Like Malevich's universal geometries, it operates as a neutral yet infinitely adaptable framework, enabling collaboration and innovation across continents.

Thus, the historical caesura of the 0,10 exhibition significantly shaped the origins of non-figurative art. This portfolio, 0,0,0, views itself as a contemporary snapshot of its ongoing evolution, emphasizing that the transcultural dissemination of non-representational aesthetics occurred globally and independently of Constructivism, defying simple categorizations.

This portfolio understands itself as an analogy: it presents 30 individual "lines of code" — works of non-objective artists — that have arisen from similar reductive principles and yet present an immense diversity in their concrete execution. Analogous to the modular and combinatorial nature of programming languages, these artists' compendium demonstrates how complex and innovative artistic systems can emerge from seemingly simple, fundamental elements. In the digital age, where code forms the basis of our visual and interactive experiences, the avant-garde's search for a pure, non-illusionistic visual language proves surprisingly relevant and groundbreaking for a deeper understanding of the underlying structures that shape both art and technology.

0,0,0 invites viewers to explore how Constructivist principles continue to inspire creativity, innovation, and cross-cultural exchange in the digital age, and to discover the enduring relevance and innovative power of this movement — which remains an evolving toolkit, reflecting each era's aspirations for art, technology, and society — a cipher that is at once a void and a mirror, perpetually open to new interpretations and possibilities.

— Timo Niemeyer

Publisher

CAFM

CA Franches-Montagnes (CAFM) is a Swiss publisher dedicated to Concrete, Conceptual and Digital Art from Switzerland and Europe. The publications are conceived, produced and presented in an old farmhouse in St-Brais — the northernmost village of the Franches-Montagnes in the Swiss Jura.

Curator

Timo Niemeyer M.A.

Born 1983 in Espoo, Finland. Master of Arts in History of Art, University of Zurich, with additional studies in Swiss and International Art & Inheritance Law. His master's thesis examined The Position of Concrete Art on the International Art Market (2015).

Niemeyer has worked as art historian and sales representative at Galerie Gmurzynska (Zurich / St. Moritz), collection manager at the Chase Art Collection (London), and lectured at the University of Zurich on Transcultural Constructivism and Concrete Art. In 2019 he curated the retrospective of Finnish Constructivist Lars-Gunnar Nordström — A Finnish Avant-Gardist — at the Miettinen Collection (Salon Dahlmann), Berlin.

Earlier he founded Raum für zeitgenössische Kunst in Zurich, a gallery specialising in Concrete, Constructive and Conceptual art, and directed Artusiast.com Berlin, Europe's leading post-auction sale platform, prior to its exit to Artnet AG New York in 2017. With 0,0,0 he builds a bridge between the historical "0,10" exhibition of 1915 and the digital present.

Selected Publications

  • A Finnish Avant-Gardist: Lars-Gunnar Nordström. Salon Dahlmann – Miettinen Collection, Berlin 2019.
  • Value Manifesto: Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner digitalen Reproduzierbarkeit. In: Art Value 21, Welther Verlag, Berlin 2018.
  • Hans Hinterreiter y la ornamentacion hispanomusulmana. Fundación Juan March, Palma de Mallorca / Museo de Arte Abstracto Español, Madrid 2018.
  • Ludwig Wilding und die Wissenschaft des Sehens. In: Farbe im Raum – Bewegung Schwarz / Weiss. Galerie Renate Kammer, Hamburg 2016.
  • Picasso: l'affiche artistique. Symbolic Collection, London 2013.
  • Intro Transcultural Constructivism, Politics of Concrete Forms and Materials. Camille Graeser Lectures 2012, ETH Zürich.
  • Contribution to: Expecting Reality – Connecting Minds: Anticipators in Arts & Education. Ed. Anna Maria Loffredo, Rainer Wenrich, Wanja Kröger. Waxmann Verlag, 2024. ISBN 978-3-8309-4924-4.

Printer

SYMETRIA

Screen print studio based in Saint-Louis, France — at the tripoint of France, Germany, and Switzerland. SYMETRIA collaborates closely with leading figures in Concrete, Constructive, and Geometric art worldwide, with a catalog spanning editions with Olivier Mosset, John Armleder, Nathalie du Pasquier, Jan van der Ploeg, and Gerold Miller, among others.

For 0,0,0, SYMETRIA executed all 29 silkscreen prints in a limited edition of 250, each sheet hand-signed by the respective artist.

Saint-Louis, France — symetria.fr

The Object

29 hand-signed silkscreen prints, each 30 × 30 cm, executed by SYMETRIA, Saint-Louis / France. The wooden cassette (31 × 31 × 3.5 cm) — designed by ZERO artist Christian Megert — is lined with mirrors. A wall sculpture in its own right. Limited edition of 250.

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The Artists

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Exhibitions

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Contact

For inquiries regarding the publication, exhibition, or acquisition of works from the portfolio, please contact the curator directly.

Curator

Timo Niemeyer M.A.

Imprint

Responsible for content: Timo Niemeyer M.A.
Berlin / St-Brais
timo@niemeyer.info

All rights reserved. All artworks © the respective artists.
Website: zerozerozero.info