on show from 10 October 2015 to 31
January 2016.
With over 80 works by Joan Miró, this is the first major exhibition of his
work in the Netherlands in 59 years - the previous one was in the Stedelijk
Museum in 1956.
“This will be one of the most exciting Miró exhibitions in a long time!”
Joan Punyet Miró, Joan Miró’s grandson and Director of Successió Miró
Joan Punyet Miró, Joan Miró’s grandson and Director of Successió Miró
Miró & CoBrA: The Joy of
Experiment
Miró & CoBrA. The Joy of Experiment is the first exhibition to
explore the relationship between Joan Miró (1893-1983) and CoBrA (1948-1951). A
chance encounter in 1946 between Asger Jorn, a Dane, and Dutch artist Constant
Nieuwenhuys laid the foundations for CoBrA, an international group of post-war
artists. The two met at an exhibition of work by Miró in the Galerie Pierre
Loeb, in Paris, and established Miró as a recurrent element in the movement’s
history.
What links Joan Miró and the Cobra
artists is their playful, experimental approach to art. Experimentation with
materials, shapes and processes was a source of knowledge and innovation for
both the Spanish master and the Cobra artists of the post-war generation. By
bringing the work of Miró and CoBrA together, this exhibition gives insight
into a shared sense of playfulness and poetic attitude which are at the heart
of the work of both.
Katja Weitering, artistic director:
“Miró & CoBrA is the long-awaited exhibition of one of the best-loved
and exceptional 20th-century artists. This show is emphatically not a classic
retrospective. By establishing a link with the Cobra movement and the museum’s
own collection, Miró & CoBrA sheds new light on the Spanish master.”
In his late period, Miró’s artistic
development saw a liberation from form, gesture and material which showed a
striking correspondence with the work and artistic perceptions of various CoBrA
members. This work is less familiar to general audiences – and on show now in
the Netherlands for the very first time. This exhibition illuminates a wide
range of experimental techniques which include, besides painting, works on
paper, ceramics, sculpture, assemblages, visual poetry and artists’ journals.
This summer Miró’s sculptures will
be exhibited in the gardens of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. There has been no
extensive Miró retrospective in the Netherlands for nearly 60 years, since the
Stedelijk Museum’s exhibition in 1956. Now, in 2015, the Cobra Museum has
succeeded in collating a substantial Miró exhibition which includes works from the
Netherlands and abroad, thanks in part to assistance from many international
partners. For example, New York’s Guggenheim Museum has generously provided Paysage (1927),
while the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art has sent the major work Figures
and Bird (1934-1936) and the Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid has provided
five works from the period from 1945-1950.
The exhibition includes more than
80 works by Joan Miró and 60 works by various Cobra artists including Karel
Appel, Asger Jorn, Constant and Pierre Alechinsky. A central part of the
exhibition is the reconstruction of Miró’s Mallorca studio, consisting of more
than 40 original objects and shown for the first time on such a large scale.
This part of the exhibition has been made possible thanks to a collaboration
with the Fundació Pilar i Joan Miró a Mallorca.
http://www.cobra-museum.nl/en/upcoming.html
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