
Joan Miró Spain, 1893-1983
18 1/2 x 22 7/8 in
framed: 69.5 x 81 x 4 cm
The year 1941 marked a turning point in Miró’s career. It saw his first retrospective at MoMA in New York, which decisively cemented his international prestige and influenced the generation of artists who were to create American Abstract Expressionism, including Arshile Gorky, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell and Jackson Pollock.
By this time, Miró had consolidated a painterly language of his own, integrating the whole picture space into a single surface in which form and content are fused. Miró started using black through his experience as a printmaker and he applied it in his work as a new form of expression. It also comes from the Chinese calligraphy Miró so much admired. Miró himself explained, “I have exercised my tendency to strip away, to simplify, in three areas: modeling, colors, and figuration of the characters”.
The artist was featured in major retrospectives that took place at MoMa in 1941, the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris, in 1962, and the Grand Palais, Paris, in 1974 and 2019. His work is featured in top collections around the world including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Art Institute of Chicago, Reina Sofia Madrid, and many more. Miró recently had a major retrospective at the Beaux-Arts Museum in Mons, Belgium.
Provenance
Exhibitions
Calder & Miró, MARUANI MERCIER, July – August 2023, Knokke, BelgiumJoan Miró, EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art, 4 March 2011 - 12 June 2011, Espoo, Sweden