Joan
Miro is known for his playful art. His emblematic
images make a naive, childlike impression at first sight.
In contrast to the image of his art, he was a solid, hard-working
man who preferred to come to gallery exhibitions in dark
business suits.
His
Early Years
Joan was born as the son of a goldsmith and jewelry maker
in Barcelona in Northern Spain. He studied arts at the Barcelona
School of Fine Arts and at the Academia Gali. His parents
would rather have seen him taking a job as a serious businessman.
He even took business classes in 1907 parallel to his art
classes. Joan worked as an accountant for nearly two years
until he had some kind of a nervous breakdown. His parents
finally accepted their son's choice of a career as an artist
without giving him too much support.
In the
beginnings of his career he dabbled in different painting
styles that were fashionable at the turn of the century
like Fauvism and Cubism.
Paris
- the Mecca of Arts
In 1920 Miro made the first of a series of trips to Paris.
In 1921 he settled permanently in the French capital. He
met Pablo Picasso and many of the other great painters and
artists living in Paris - the center of arts in the late
nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century.
From
1924 on, Miro joined the circle of the Surrealist theorist
Andre Breton. His painting style took a turn to Surrealism.
His comrades were Andre Masson and Max Ernst. But he never
integrated himself completely into this group dominated
by Andre Breton. He remained an outsider.
International
Fame
By 1930 the artist had developed his own style. Miro art
is hard to describe. It is characterized by brilliant colors
combined with simplified forms that remind of drawings made
by children at the age of five. Joan Miro art integrates
elements of Catalan folk art. He liked to compare his visual
arts to poetry.
In the
1930s the artist's fame and recognition became international.
From 1940 to 1948 the he was back in Spain. During this
period he experimented in different media - sculpture, ceramics
and murals.
In 1947,
he came to the United States for the first time. He had
several own-man shows. The most important one was a retrospective
at the MoMA - The Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1951
and in 1959. In 1954 he won a prize at the Venice Biennale.
In 1968 the artist finished a commission for two large ceramic
murals at the UNESCO buildings in Paris.
His
Personality
Miro was a disciplined hard working man. He spoke little
and looked like the perfect bourgois. He was orderly, reliable
and punctilious. Nothing of him had any touch of a bohemian.
He was
also a modest man. In spite of international recognition,
his financial situation was tense. He dreamed of a large
studio where he could fulfill the numerous art projects
and ideas that he collected in a little notebook. After
World War II his time had finally come. His first trip to
the USA pushed his popularity and the market value of his
art work. And the modest little man pushed the galleries
to give him a fairer share out of the sales. In a letter
to gallery owners he wrote:
"What
I will no longer accept is the mediocre life of a modest
little gentleman."
In 1956 Miro could finally move into the villa of his dreams.
Located in Palma de Majorca and built by the architect Josep
Lluis Sert. The new home was built in an ultra-modern style
typical for the avant-garde architecture of the fifties.
In 1992 it was transformed into the Miro Museum open for
the public.