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Joan Miró set out to destroy painting The Spaniard applied free association to the canvas with radical results.
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Joan Miró set out to destroy painting - MSNMiro’s suggestible approach chimed with Leonardo da Vinci’s famous advice about letting small visual prompts trigger the imagination.
“Painting I” is the first of three expressive black, white and red paintings created by Joan Miró on April 12, 1967. Since the early 1960s, as a sign of a new phase in the artist's work, Miró has ...
The Fundació Joan Miró has found an early 20th-century portrait of Dolors Ferrà i Oromí, the artist's mother, beneath Pintura.
An image of a "child-like" Joan Miro painting was circulated on Facebook along with the claim that it was worth $37 million.
In Pictures: Miro's Creative Destruction The exhibit unfolds chronologically, beginning with Miró's spare paintings on raw, toast-brown unprimed canvas and ending with his hallucinatory 1937 ...
A painting by Joan Miro sold for $36.9 million at a London auction Tuesday. The Sotheby’s sale of Miro’s “Peinture (Etoile Bleue)” was an auction record for the late Spanish artist.
Miro’s suggestible approach chimed with Leonardo da Vinci’s famous advice about letting small visual prompts trigger the imagination.
This work has been authenticated by the ADOM (Association pour la Défense de l'oeuvre de Joan Miró).“Painting I” is the first of three expressive black, white and red paintings created by Joan Miró on ...
In 1927, Spanish artist Joan Miró declared, "I want to assassinate painting." Miró spent the next 10 years shattering and subverting the conventions of art through collage, construction and, yes ...
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