Joan Miro Painting Reproductions

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Joan Miro Art

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0028
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0028

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0029
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0029

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0030
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0030

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0031
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0031

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0032
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0032

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0033
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0033

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0034
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0034

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0035
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0035

Joan Miro replica painting MIR0036
Joan Miro replica painting MIR0036

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Joan Miro Biography

Joan Miro
(1475-1564)


Born in Barcelona, Spain, Miro studied art at the School of Fine Arts at La Llotja and Gali's Escola d'Art. During a convalescence from a serious illness in 1911, Miro found that painting was the key to his mental, emotional as well as physical well-being . Upon his recovery, he devoted himself to his art, eventually moving to Paris in 1919 where he came into contact with Cubism and Surrealism. In 1920, he met Andre Masson and Max Ernst, who encouraged his study of psychic automatism, an expression of the subconscious in freeform writing.


Inspired by psychic automatism. he began creating vibrant canvases which incorporated alien worlds inhabited by whimsical creatures. This signature style was marked by bright. colorful. amorphous forms which seemed to float across the canvas along spirited lines. While frequently identified with the Surrealist movement, Miro never fully accepted the movement 's creed and refused to sign the Surrealist Manifesto.

Throughout his life, Miro felt a deep connection to his Catalan heritage and much of the symbolism that is so prevalent in his work is derived from this culture, In 1940, Miro returned to Spain and began to explore new media including large scale sculpture, ceramics, murals and tapestries. Following his first retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1941. Miro achieved international acclaim and was recognized as a pioneer of Modernism.

 
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