It is well known that a (simple undirected) graph $\mathcal G$ may require $k$ or more colors for a proper vertex coloring (adjacent vertices must have different colors) without containing a $k$-clique (complete subgraph on $k$ vertices) when $k \gt 2$. This is often considered in the existence of triangle-free graphs with arbitrarily large chromatic numbers.
My problem is finding the smallest graph $\mathcal G$ (in terms of fewest vertices) with chromatic number $\chi(\mathcal G) \ge k$ which is $K_k-free$ (clique number $\omega(\mathcal G) < k$). See Misha Lavrov's Answer to this Question about the $k=5$ case.
This Question is motivated by a recent one Coloring a Generalized Latin Square in which it might be desired to reach chromatic number $k+1$ (in the off-diagonal entries of the $k\times k$ array considered there) without a clique number higher than $k$.
Misha's answer for $k=5$ links to this graph with seven vertices. It "glues" five tetrahedra ($4$-cliques) together around a common edge. This might suggest constructions for $k\gt 5$.
