Adding item to the basket

× Item added

This item has been added to your basket.

Proceed to checkout
Search the site...

  • Publisher: Dover Publications Inc
  • Edition: BC Paperback
  • Publication: 28 March 2003
  • ISBN 13/EAN: 9780486244372
  • Stock: Temporarily Out of Stock
  • Size: 210x278 mm
  • Illustrations: 0
  • Pages: 48
  • RRP: $5.99
  • Series: Dover Fine Art, History of Art

Miró Lithographs

$5.99

by Joan Miró

Out of Stock
Book Description

"As regards my means of expression, I try my hardest to achieve the maximum of clarity, power, and plastic aggressiveness; a physical sensation to begin with, followed up by an impact on the psyche." Miró

Miró's line recalls Picasso's in clarity and power; the Catalan's "plastic aggressiveness" led him, as it did his Andalusian friend, to bold, successful experiment and innovation in ceramics, sculpture and printmaking, especially lithography. The lithographic print medium suited and encouraged the artist's lifelong, often radical, obsession with stripping art to the marrow. The 40 plates reproduced here sample the pith of his lithographic production a series produced in 1944, full of the eerie images and droll distortion he had sought on canvas for decades.

"It's never easy for me to talk about my painting," wrote Miró, "since it is always born in a state of hallucination induced by some kind of shock, objective or subjective, for which I am not personally responsible in the least." Miró hallucinates on stone for these prints, filling them with monstrous beasts and one-eyed aliens adrift in a heaven of moons and stars and black nebulae, floating breasts and generative organs. These lithographs were executed shortly after finishing the famous "constellation" series of paintings (called by one critic "the most intricate, most elaborately developed of all Miró's compositions"), right around the time his mother died and he fired his first ceramics in collaboration with Artigas.

Falling in a period of intense creative mingling of whimsy with the grotesque, these prints characterize an important juncture in Miró's career. They also enlarge the boundaries of lithographic technique as they simultaneously show Miró, now "stripped" of his brilliant colors, to be an equal master of black-and-white.

Out of Stock Printer friendly version

Customers who bought Miró Lithographs, also bought...

Learn to Watercolor

Learn to Watercolor

By Sarah Van Der Linden

Sketching Nature

Sketching Nature

By Dianne Sutherland

Dynamic Seascapes

Dynamic Seascapes

By Judith Yates

This site uses cookies, if you continue without changing your settings, we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies. Click here to learn how to change your cookie settings.

Continue