Joan Miro (1893-1983) - Parler Seul






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Joan Miró lithograph Parler Seul, signed on the plate, in excellent condition, 60 × 45 cm sheet (image 42 × 33 cm), made in France, limited edition of 1000 (2004), technique lithography, abstract style.
Description from the seller
Joan Miró Lithograph (*)
This work reproduces one of the illustrations originally created by Miró to illustrate the poetry book “Parler Seul” (**) (Speak Only), written by Tristan Tzara in 1947.
Published by Maeght Editeur in 2004.
Made on high‑count cotton vellum paper.
Signed on the plate.
Publisher’s seal and the Miró Estate seal on the verso of the sheet.
Includes Certificate of Authenticity (COA).
Specifications:
- Support dimensions: 60 x 45 cm
- Image dimensions: 42 x 33 cm
- Year 2004
- Edition: 1000 copies
- References: Cramer 17. Rauch 165
- Condition: Excellent (this work has never been framed or exhibited, and has always been kept in a professional art folder, so it remains in perfect condition).
The work will be carefully handled and packed in a reinforced flat cardboard package. Shipping will be insured with a tracking number.
The shipment will also include full insurance for the final value of the work with full reimbursement in case of loss or damage, at no cost to the buyer.
(*) Joan Miró (1893-1983) was born in Barcelona, where he grew up and began his artistic studies. He attended the La Llotja academy against his parents’ wishes, who wanted him to work in a more traditional way. Later he studied at the Escola d’Art de Francesc Galí and met the Fauves and the Cubists.
His emotional landscapes, which would form him as a person and as an artist, are essentially Mont-roig, Paris, Mallorca and later New York and Japan. Mont-roig, a small town in the Baix Camp region, would be the counterpoint to the intellectual agitation he experienced in Paris, where he moved in the twenties with the surrealist poets and the most creative artists of his time. There he came to know Arp, Magritte, Brancusi and Giacometti and exhibited with Dalí, Tanguy, Meret Oppenheim and Max Ernst in several exhibitions on Dadaism and Surrealism.
The stimulus of abstract expressionism was discovered in New York in the forties. Later, in 1956, during World War II, Joan Miró would leave his exile in France and settle in Palma de Mallorca, a refuge and work space, where his friend Josep Lluís Sert would design the workshop he had always dreamed of. There he focused on sculpture and ceramic work, until his death in 1983.
Rooted first in Mont-roig and then in Mallorca, the landscape would be decisive in his work. The bond with the land and interest in everyday objects and the natural environment would underlie some of his technical and formal investigations. Miró fled academicism, in constant search of a global and pure body of work not attributed to any particular movement. Content in forms and public manifestations, it is through the plastic act that Joan Miró shows his rebelliousness and a great sensitivity to the political and social events surrounding him. This clash of forces leads him to create a unique and highly personal language that places him among the most influential artists of the 20th century.
(**) “Parler Seul” represents a particularly effective collaboration between artist and author. Miró’s brilliantly spontaneous and amorphous images, drawn directly on the stone with very few preparatory sketches, have the inventive brio of Tzara’s random verses.
The original edition was produced by Maeght Editeur and consists of 72 original lithographs by Miró, 49 of them in color, of which 18 are hors‑texte. (*) Joan Miró (1893-1983) was born in Barcelona, where he grew up and began his artistic studies. He attended the La Llotja academy against his parents’ wishes, who wanted him to work in a more traditional way. Later he studied at the Escola d’Art de Francesc Galí and met the Fauves and the Cubists.
His emotional landscapes, which would form him as a person and as an artist, are essentially Mont-roig, Paris, Mallorca and later New York and Japan. Mont-roig, a small town in the Baix Camp region, would be the counterpoint to the intellectual agitation he experienced in Paris, where he moved in the twenties with the surrealist poets and the most creative artists of his time. There he came to know Arp, Magritte, Brancusi and Giacometti and exhibited with Dalí, Tanguy, Meret Oppenheim and Max Ernst in several exhibitions on Dadaism and Surrealism.
The impulse of abstract expressionism was discovered in New York in the forties. Later, in 1956, in the midst of World War II, Joan Miró would leave his exile in France and settle in Palma de Mallorca, a refuge and workspace, where his friend Josep Lluís Sert would design the studio he had always dreamed of. There he focused on sculpture and ceramics, until his death in 1983.
Rooted first in Mont-roig and then in Mallorca, the landscape would be decisive in his work. The bond with the land and the interest in everyday objects and the surrounding environment would underlie some of his technical and formal investigations. Miró flees from academicism, in a constant search for a global and pure body of work not attached to any particular movement. Content in forms and in public manifestations, it is through the plastic act that Joan Miró shows his rebelliousness and a great sensitivity to the political and social events around him. This clash of forces leads him to create a unique and highly personal language that places him among the most influential artists of the 20th century.
(**) “Parler Seul” represents a particularly effective collaboration between artist and author. Miró’s brilliantly spontaneous and amorphous images, drawn directly on the stone with very few preparatory sketches, have the inventive brio of Tzara’s random verses.
The original edition was produced by Maeght Editeur and consists of 72 original lithographs by Miró, 49 of them in color, of which 18 are hors-texte.
Tags:
Picasso, Dalí, Pollock, Miró, Beuys, Warhol, Giacometti, Hodgkin, Moore, Malevich, Mondrian, O’Keefe, Matisse, Kandinsky, Bacon, Klimt, Hooper, Rothko, Chirico, Duchamp, Chagall, Braque, Picabia, Kooning, Ernst, Paul Klee, Modigliani, Calder, Delaunay.
Kiefer, Kusama, Murakami, Koons, Basquiat, Nauman, Sherman, Bourgeois, Polke, Ruff, Ruscha, Holzer, Abramović, Freud, Mendieta, Tuymans, Kruger, Hockney, Saville, Fanzhi, Oehlen, Richter, Scully, Stella, Schütte, Xiaodong, Judd, Peyton, Richard Serra, LeWitt, Kippenberger, Baldessari, Doig, González-Torres, Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró, Magritte, Max Ernst, Leonora Carrington, Dorothea Tanning, Roberto Matta, Man Ray, Varo, Oppenheim, Key Sage, André Masson, Paul Delvaux, Giorgio de Chirico, Marcel Duchamp, Marc Chagall, Paul Klee, Hans Bellmer, Zhang Xiaogang, Savinio, Alexander Calder, Dora Maar Vitra, Poolsen, Jacobsen, Hans Wegner, Charles Eames, Perriand, Philippe Starck, Marcel Breuer, Knoll, Juhl, Verner Panton, Le Corbusier, Mies Vander Rohe, Nelson, Mogensen, Eames, Gio Ponti, Knoll, Isamu Noguchi, Bertoia, Aalto, Urquiola, Eileen Gray, Pesce, Magistretti. Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Chanel, Burberry, Hermès, Prada, Dior, Armani, Cartier, Dolce & Gabbana, Versace, Balenciaga, Ralph Lauren, Rolex, Fendi, Givenchy, Tiffany, Alexander McQueen, Yves Saint Laurent, Valentino, Bvlgari. Adami Alberti Alcaraz Alfaro Baldaccini Baldeweg Barceló Barjola Canogar Cabellut Caruncho Ceesepe Chillida Chirino Clavé Condé Cruz-Díez Dalí Dokoupil Equipo Crónica Gudmundur Feito Genovés Goya Gordillo Guinovart Hernández Pijuan Iglesias Lacalle Joan Miró Misterpiro Mompó Palazuelo Pérez-Villalta Picasso Plensa Rafols-Casamada Reche Redondela Saura Soto Sicilia Tàpies Teixidor Quetglas Úrculo Uslé Varela Valdés Villalba Yturralde
Seller's Story
Joan Miró Lithograph (*)
This work reproduces one of the illustrations originally created by Miró to illustrate the poetry book “Parler Seul” (**) (Speak Only), written by Tristan Tzara in 1947.
Published by Maeght Editeur in 2004.
Made on high‑count cotton vellum paper.
Signed on the plate.
Publisher’s seal and the Miró Estate seal on the verso of the sheet.
Includes Certificate of Authenticity (COA).
Specifications:
- Support dimensions: 60 x 45 cm
- Image dimensions: 42 x 33 cm
- Year 2004
- Edition: 1000 copies
- References: Cramer 17. Rauch 165
- Condition: Excellent (this work has never been framed or exhibited, and has always been kept in a professional art folder, so it remains in perfect condition).
The work will be carefully handled and packed in a reinforced flat cardboard package. Shipping will be insured with a tracking number.
The shipment will also include full insurance for the final value of the work with full reimbursement in case of loss or damage, at no cost to the buyer.
(*) Joan Miró (1893-1983) was born in Barcelona, where he grew up and began his artistic studies. He attended the La Llotja academy against his parents’ wishes, who wanted him to work in a more traditional way. Later he studied at the Escola d’Art de Francesc Galí and met the Fauves and the Cubists.
His emotional landscapes, which would form him as a person and as an artist, are essentially Mont-roig, Paris, Mallorca and later New York and Japan. Mont-roig, a small town in the Baix Camp region, would be the counterpoint to the intellectual agitation he experienced in Paris, where he moved in the twenties with the surrealist poets and the most creative artists of his time. There he came to know Arp, Magritte, Brancusi and Giacometti and exhibited with Dalí, Tanguy, Meret Oppenheim and Max Ernst in several exhibitions on Dadaism and Surrealism.
The stimulus of abstract expressionism was discovered in New York in the forties. Later, in 1956, during World War II, Joan Miró would leave his exile in France and settle in Palma de Mallorca, a refuge and work space, where his friend Josep Lluís Sert would design the workshop he had always dreamed of. There he focused on sculpture and ceramic work, until his death in 1983.
Rooted first in Mont-roig and then in Mallorca, the landscape would be decisive in his work. The bond with the land and interest in everyday objects and the natural environment would underlie some of his technical and formal investigations. Miró fled academicism, in constant search of a global and pure body of work not attributed to any particular movement. Content in forms and public manifestations, it is through the plastic act that Joan Miró shows his rebelliousness and a great sensitivity to the political and social events surrounding him. This clash of forces leads him to create a unique and highly personal language that places him among the most influential artists of the 20th century.
(**) “Parler Seul” represents a particularly effective collaboration between artist and author. Miró’s brilliantly spontaneous and amorphous images, drawn directly on the stone with very few preparatory sketches, have the inventive brio of Tzara’s random verses.
The original edition was produced by Maeght Editeur and consists of 72 original lithographs by Miró, 49 of them in color, of which 18 are hors‑texte. (*) Joan Miró (1893-1983) was born in Barcelona, where he grew up and began his artistic studies. He attended the La Llotja academy against his parents’ wishes, who wanted him to work in a more traditional way. Later he studied at the Escola d’Art de Francesc Galí and met the Fauves and the Cubists.
His emotional landscapes, which would form him as a person and as an artist, are essentially Mont-roig, Paris, Mallorca and later New York and Japan. Mont-roig, a small town in the Baix Camp region, would be the counterpoint to the intellectual agitation he experienced in Paris, where he moved in the twenties with the surrealist poets and the most creative artists of his time. There he came to know Arp, Magritte, Brancusi and Giacometti and exhibited with Dalí, Tanguy, Meret Oppenheim and Max Ernst in several exhibitions on Dadaism and Surrealism.
The impulse of abstract expressionism was discovered in New York in the forties. Later, in 1956, in the midst of World War II, Joan Miró would leave his exile in France and settle in Palma de Mallorca, a refuge and workspace, where his friend Josep Lluís Sert would design the studio he had always dreamed of. There he focused on sculpture and ceramics, until his death in 1983.
Rooted first in Mont-roig and then in Mallorca, the landscape would be decisive in his work. The bond with the land and the interest in everyday objects and the surrounding environment would underlie some of his technical and formal investigations. Miró flees from academicism, in a constant search for a global and pure body of work not attached to any particular movement. Content in forms and in public manifestations, it is through the plastic act that Joan Miró shows his rebelliousness and a great sensitivity to the political and social events around him. This clash of forces leads him to create a unique and highly personal language that places him among the most influential artists of the 20th century.
(**) “Parler Seul” represents a particularly effective collaboration between artist and author. Miró’s brilliantly spontaneous and amorphous images, drawn directly on the stone with very few preparatory sketches, have the inventive brio of Tzara’s random verses.
The original edition was produced by Maeght Editeur and consists of 72 original lithographs by Miró, 49 of them in color, of which 18 are hors-texte.
Tags:
Picasso, Dalí, Pollock, Miró, Beuys, Warhol, Giacometti, Hodgkin, Moore, Malevich, Mondrian, O’Keefe, Matisse, Kandinsky, Bacon, Klimt, Hooper, Rothko, Chirico, Duchamp, Chagall, Braque, Picabia, Kooning, Ernst, Paul Klee, Modigliani, Calder, Delaunay.
Kiefer, Kusama, Murakami, Koons, Basquiat, Nauman, Sherman, Bourgeois, Polke, Ruff, Ruscha, Holzer, Abramović, Freud, Mendieta, Tuymans, Kruger, Hockney, Saville, Fanzhi, Oehlen, Richter, Scully, Stella, Schütte, Xiaodong, Judd, Peyton, Richard Serra, LeWitt, Kippenberger, Baldessari, Doig, González-Torres, Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró, Magritte, Max Ernst, Leonora Carrington, Dorothea Tanning, Roberto Matta, Man Ray, Varo, Oppenheim, Key Sage, André Masson, Paul Delvaux, Giorgio de Chirico, Marcel Duchamp, Marc Chagall, Paul Klee, Hans Bellmer, Zhang Xiaogang, Savinio, Alexander Calder, Dora Maar Vitra, Poolsen, Jacobsen, Hans Wegner, Charles Eames, Perriand, Philippe Starck, Marcel Breuer, Knoll, Juhl, Verner Panton, Le Corbusier, Mies Vander Rohe, Nelson, Mogensen, Eames, Gio Ponti, Knoll, Isamu Noguchi, Bertoia, Aalto, Urquiola, Eileen Gray, Pesce, Magistretti. Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Chanel, Burberry, Hermès, Prada, Dior, Armani, Cartier, Dolce & Gabbana, Versace, Balenciaga, Ralph Lauren, Rolex, Fendi, Givenchy, Tiffany, Alexander McQueen, Yves Saint Laurent, Valentino, Bvlgari. Adami Alberti Alcaraz Alfaro Baldaccini Baldeweg Barceló Barjola Canogar Cabellut Caruncho Ceesepe Chillida Chirino Clavé Condé Cruz-Díez Dalí Dokoupil Equipo Crónica Gudmundur Feito Genovés Goya Gordillo Guinovart Hernández Pijuan Iglesias Lacalle Joan Miró Misterpiro Mompó Palazuelo Pérez-Villalta Picasso Plensa Rafols-Casamada Reche Redondela Saura Soto Sicilia Tàpies Teixidor Quetglas Úrculo Uslé Varela Valdés Villalba Yturralde
