Journal d'un Graveur
"Journal d'un Graveur" is an original hand-signed and numbered drypoint realized by Joan Miró in 1975. This is an edition of 85 prints.
Joan Miró (1893-1983) was a Spanish artist. Since the beginning, Miró’s work included a component of fantasy and hallucination. His artistic approach encouraged the free play of associations, and envisaged “accidents” to provoke reactions closely connected to subconscious experiences.
"Journal d'un Graveur" is an original hand-signed and numbered drypoint realized by Joan Miró in 1975. This is an edition of 85 prints.
Bibliography: Joan Miró. Catalogue raisonné des livres illustrés, Patrick Cramer Editeur, 1989, n. 200/14.
While Joan Miró (1893-1983) rejected any formal association with movements or groups, including the Surrealists, André Breton recognised him as “the most Surrealist of us all”. His artistic approach encouraged the free play of associations, and envisaged “accidents” to provoke reactions closely connected to subconscious experiences. Miró’s famous motifs consist of freely reshaped fragments cut from catalogues for machinery on canvases to form black silhouettes – solid or in outline, with dramatic accents of white and red.
To read more about the artist, click here .
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