(1893 – 1983), Spain

Joan Miró Artworks

In Joan Miró's art, the Catalan native, uses simple shapes and symbols to form a complex and novel visual grammar. This surreal, formally driven style features across paintings, drawings, etchings, ceramics and sculpture.

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Escaping Convention

As well as a Surrealist, Miró was also a leader among the associated artists in explorations of the subconscious, particularly with automatic drawing. Most of his paintings began as automatic drawings in an attempt to escape the conventions of representation and the painting medium itself. Describing his 1925 painting The Birth of the World, Miró said 'Rather than setting out to paint something I began painting and as I paint the picture begins to assert itself, or suggest itself under my brush ... The first stage is free, unconscious.'

In each of his works, Miró is highly selective of which formal features of the landscape to accentuate, and which to discard. A prime example of Miró's poetic rendering of everyday scenes, The Hunter (Catalan Landscape) (1923–4) shows the Catalan landscape reduced into flattened planes. Minimal symbols represent the animals and vegetation; the titular hunter is a bare few set of lines against a flat pink representing the ground and a flat yellow sky.

The Dutch Interiors

In 1928, Miró visited the Netherlands and became interested in the Dutch masters. Bringing home a set of postcards from the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, he began a series of three paintings combining the Dutch regional style with his own unique visual vocabulary.

In Dutch Interior (I), a painting by Hendrick Martensz Sorgh is transitioned from an atmospheric image of a lute player performing for a woman to an energetic gathering of symbols across a flattened picture plane. Some aspects—such as the man's collar—have been accentuated, while others—such as the woman at the table—have been diminished or replaced. In this series, Miró's direct references to other images allow the audience to follow his path of inventive abstraction.

The Assassination of Painting

In the late 1920s, Miró became interested in the idea of the 'assassination of painting', within which he sought to escape or even destroy the traditions of bourgeois art and instead pursue more experimental forms. A work exemplary of this period, Painting (1936) was made with a mixture of gravel, sand and oil paint. The artist assured his dealer that rather than the work being ruined if some of the materials came loose when it was sent to an exhibition, the loss would 'make the surface . . . look like an old crumbling wall, which will give great force to the formal expression.'

In this period, he also experimented in collage and sculptural assemblage, as well as making costumes for ballet.

Spanish Paintings

Throughout his entire career, Miró's Spanish and Catalan nationalism remained a key influence on his work.

Ernest Hemingway, spoke highly of Miró's Spanish pastoral painting The Farm (1921), which he purchased: 'It has in it all that you feel about Spain when you are there and all that you feel when you are away and cannot go there. No one else has been able to paint these two very opposing things.'

During the Spanish Civil War, Miró was living in Paris. Deeply affected by the tragedy and tumult consuming his homeland, he was inspired to employ social criticism in his art. Works of this period also became more representational, such as in The Reaper—a mural for the Spanish Republic's pavilion at the Paris World Exhibition of 1937 that showed a peasant revolt.

Sculpture

Miró was also known for his Surrealist sculptures.

His earliest pieces were formed out of collections of found objects, such as Object (1936), whose media list is lengthy: 'stuffed parrot on wood perch, stuffed silk stocking with velvet garter and doll's paper shoe suspended in hollow wood frame, derby hat, hanging cork ball, celluloid fish and engraved map.' In the mid-1940s he turned towards ceramics, for which he embraced the full materiality of clay, often making intentionally imperfect pieces.

Browse Artworks
Femmes et Oiseaux (Women and Birds) by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting
Joan Miró Femmes et Oiseaux (Women and Birds), 1963 Oil and gouache on cardboard
104 x 74.6 cm
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Le Numéro de music-hall by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting
Joan Miró Le Numéro de music-hall, 1938 Pencil and gouache on paper
25 x 19 cm
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Fusées-Nous avons by Joan Miró contemporary artwork print
Joan Miró Fusées-Nous avons, 1959 Etching
28 x 38 cm
Galerie Lelong & Co. Paris Request Price & Availability
Bague d'Aurore by Joan Miró contemporary artwork print
Joan Miró Bague d'Aurore, 1957 Etching
38.5 x 27.5 cm
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Femme et oiseau devant lune by Joan Miró contemporary artwork print
Joan Miró Femme et oiseau devant lune, 1947 Etching
20.8 x 25.3 cm
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Fusées-Nous avons by Joan Miró contemporary artwork print
Joan Miró Fusées-Nous avons, 1959 Etching
32.5 x 50.2 cm
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Deux femmes, arbres, oiseaux, étoiles by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, drawing
Joan Miró Deux femmes, arbres, oiseaux, étoiles, 1938 Pencil, watercolour and India ink on paper
56 x 76 cm
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Gargantua by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, print
Joan Miró Gargantua, 1977 Etching, aquatint and carborundum on Arches paper
159.5 x 120 cm
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Ubu Roi by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, drawing
Joan Miró Ubu Roi, 1967 Pastel and pencil on paper
42.2 x 32.2 cm
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Peinture II by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting
Joan Miró Peinture II, 1972 Oil and pencil on masonite
15.5 x 111.5 cm
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Peinture I by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting
Joan Miró Peinture I, 1972 Oil and pencil on masonite
15.5 x 111.5 cm
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Peinture I and Peinture II by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting, drawing
Joan Miró Peinture I and Peinture II, 1972 Oil and pencil on masonite
15.5 x 111.5 cm
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Gaudí XVII by Joan Miró contemporary artwork painting, print
Joan Miró Gaudí XVII, 1979 Etching and aquatint on Arches paper
90.2 x 62.9 cm
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Lola by Joan Miró contemporary artwork sculpture
Joan Miró Lola, 1977 (draft) Bronze, lifetime cast
Beck & Eggeling International Fine Art Request Price & Availability
L'Equilibriste by Joan Miró contemporary artwork sculpture
Joan Miró L'Equilibriste, 1969 Bronze with dark patina
92 x 36 x 21 cm
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Sans titre by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, drawing
Joan Miró Sans titre, 1981 Oil, gouache, India ink and charcoal on paper
54.6 x 40 cm
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Femmes, oiseau, étoiles by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, drawing
Joan Miró Femmes, oiseau, étoiles, 1942 Pencil, pastel, India ink and watercolour on paper
31 x 24 cm
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Untitled by Joan Miró contemporary artwork drawing
Joan Miró Untitled, 1930 Graphite on paper, 17/IX/1930
46 x 62 cm
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Vigneron by Joan Miró contemporary artwork sculpture
Joan Miró Vigneron, 1972 Bronze (lost wax casting)
34 x 20 x 14 cm
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Composition by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper, drawing
Joan Miró Composition, 1929 Charcoal on sandpaper
108.5 x 73 cm
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Figurine III by Joan Miró contemporary artwork sculpture
Joan Miró Figurine III, 1956 Stoneware
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Figure by Joan Miró contemporary artwork sculpture
Joan Miró Figure, 1981 Bronze
126 x 50 x 28 cm
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Oiseaux by Joan Miró contemporary artwork works on paper
Joan Miró Oiseaux, 1976 India ink, wax crayon and pastel crayon on grey cardboard
75.5 x 106 cm
Galerie Lelong & Co. Paris Request Price & Availability
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