Joan Miró (1893-1983) is considered to be one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. His unique and original style, marked by
simple shapes, primary colours and experimentation with
new materials, has turned him into a benchmark for many creators.
When he was just 14 years old, he started to study commerce as per the instructions of his father, who at the same time accepted having him enrolled in night classes in drawing at the La Llotja in Barcelona “as a pastime”. It was in 1911, during his stay at
Mont-Roig del Camp recovering from an illness, when he firmly decided to become a painter. Neither his international fame, nor his stays in Paris, New York or Japan would alienate him ever from the countryside of the
Baix Camp, the key to his artistic calling and a source of inspiration, nor from his
Catalan roots.After his first artistic stage with
fauvist, expressionist and cubist influences (
Retrat de nena, 1919;
La masia, 1920), his stay in Paris would bring him into contact with surrealism and dadaism, and his painting would evolve and be realised from conventionalism and academicism. In his
particular surrealist vision, Miró was inspired by the irrational and transformed objects and people into symbols and shapes that mixed the geometric with the organic.
El carnaval d’Arlequí (1924) and
El gos bordant a la lluna (1926) are very significant works.
The start of
international recognition of his work, with the purchase of parts for part of the MoMA in New York in 1928, coincided with his most rebellious stage, marked by his
desire to “kill” the classic idea of painting. For this entire life, he would experiment with
new techniques and expressions such as collages, engravings, ceramics, tapestry, sculpture, scenography, swinging constantly
between figuration and abstraction. Starting in the 60’s, we would invent a new language, where his characteristic mythology (woman, bird, star, moon and sun) would take on a very explicit meaning (
L'or de l'atzur, 1967).
He fled from the public eye, often taking refuge in his study in Palma. This did not prevent Miró from expressing his
rage and sensitivity for big events in his time (the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War) through his work:
Natura morta del sabatot (1937) or his series
Constel·lacions (1939-1941). And even his years of international recognition, with retrospectives in the most prestigious museums, did not hinder his fighting spirit. Examples include the fabrics that he burned and put holes into in 1973 in protest against the repression of Franco.
One of the best collections of the artist’s work can be found in the
Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona, which opened its doors in 1975. There are also important collections of his in the Fundació Pilar i Joan Miró in Palma de Mallorca, at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, in the MoMA and Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Tate Modern Museum in London and the Moderna Museet Museum in Stockholm, among others.