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JOAN MIRO 1893 - 1983
Joan Miró Ferra was born April 20, 1893, in Barcelona. At the age of 14, he went to business
school in Barcelona and also attended La Lonja’s Escuela Superior de Artes Industriales y Bellas
Artes in the same city. Upon completing three years of art studies, he took a position as a clerk.
After suffering a nervous breakdown, he abandoned business and resumed his art studies, attending
Francesc Galí’s Escola d’Art in Barcelona from 1912 to 1915. Miró received early encouragement from
the dealer José Dalmau, who gave him his first solo show at his gallery in Barcelona in 1918. In
1917, he met Francis Picabia.
In 1920, Miró made his first trip to Paris, where he met
Pablo Picasso. From this time, Miró divided
his time between Paris and Montroig, Spain. In Paris, he associated with the poets Max Jacob, Pierre
Reverdy, and Tristan Tzara and participated in Dada activities. Dalmau organized Miró’s first solo
show in Paris, at the Galerie la Licorne in 1921. His work was included in the Salon d’Automne of 1923.
In 1924, Miró joined the Surrealist group. His solo show at the Galerie Pierre, Paris, in 1925 was a
major Surrealist event; Miró was included in the first Surrealist exhibition at the Galerie Pierre that
same year. He visited the Netherlands in 1928 and began a series of paintings inspired by Dutch masters.
This year he also executed his first papiers collés and collages. In 1929, he started his experiments
in lithography, and his first etchings date from 1933. During the early 1930s, he made Surrealist
sculptures incorporating painted stones and found objects. In 1936, Miró left Spain because of the civil
war; he returned in 1941. Also in 1936, Miró was included in the exhibitions Cubism and Abstract Art
and Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism at the
Museum of Modern Art, New York. The following year, he was commissioned to create a monumental work for
the Paris World’s Fair.
Miró’s first major museum retrospective was held at the
Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1941.
That year, Miró began working in ceramics with Josep Lloréns y Artigas and started to concentrate on
prints; from 1954 to 1958, he worked almost exclusively in these two mediums. He received the Grand
Prize for Graphic Work at the Venice Biennale in 1954, and his work was included in the first Documenta
exhibition in Kassel the following year. In 1958, Miró was given a Guggenheim International Award for
murals for the UNESCO building in Paris. The following year, he resumed painting, initiating a series
of mural-sized canvases. During the 1960s, he began to work intensively in sculpture. Miró
retrospectives took place at the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris, in 1962, and the Grand Palais,
Paris, in 1974. In 1978, the Musée National d’Art Moderne exhibited over 500 works in a major
retrospective of his drawings. Miró died December 25, 1983, in Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
ADDITIONAL INSIGHT INTO MIRO'S ART
Miró's surrealist works, with their subject matter drawn from the realm of memory and imaginative
fantasy, are some of the most original of the 20th century.
His work before 1920 shows wide-ranging influences, including the bright colors of the Fauves, the
broken forms of cubism, and the powerful, flat two-dimensionality of Catalan folk art and Romanesque
church frescoes of his native Spain. He moved to Paris in 1920, where, under the influence of surrealist
poets and writers, he evolved his mature style. Miró drew on memory, fantasy, and the irrational to
create works of art that are visual analogues of surrealist poetry. These dreamlike visions, such as
Harlequin's Carnival (1925, Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo) or Dutch Interior (1928, Museum of Modern
Art, New York City), often have a whimsical or humorous quality, containing images of playfully
distorted animal forms, twisted organic shapes, and odd geometric constructions. The forms of his
paintings are organized against flat neutral backgrounds and are painted in a limited range of bright
colors, especially blue, red, yellow, green, and black. Amorphous amoebic shapes alternate with sharply
drawn lines, spots, and curlicues, all positioned on the canvas with seeming nonchalance. Miró later
produced highly generalized, ethereal works in which his organic forms and figures are reduced to
abstract spots, lines, and bursts of colors.
Miró also experimented in a wide array of other media, devoting himself to etchings and lithographs for
several years in the 1950s and also working in watercolor, pastel, collage, and paint on copper and
masonite. His ceramic sculptures are especially notable, in particular his two large ceramic murals
for the UNESCO building in Paris (Wall of the Moon and Wall of the Sun, 1957-59).
"The spectacle of the sky overwhelms me. I'm overwhelmed when I see, in an immense sky, the crescent of
the moon, or the sun. There, in my pictures, tiny forms in huge empty spaces. Empty spaces, empty
horizons, empty plains - everything which is bare has always greatly impressed me."
- Joan Miró, 1958, [quoted in Twentieth-Century Artists on Art]
More 20th Century Modern Art ......
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