Lot 44
  • 44

JOAN MIRÓ | Peinture

Estimate
1,800,000 - 2,500,000 USD
bidding is closed

Description

  • Joan Miró
  • Peinture
  • Signed Joan Miró. and dated 12-32. (on the reverse)
  • Oil on board
  • 12 1/2 by 9 3/4 in.
  • 32 by 25 cm
  • Painted in December 1932.

Provenance

Christian Zervos, Paris (acquired from the artist)

Texidor, Barcelona

Galerie Kokaido, Tokyo (acquired in the 1980s)

Daniel Filipacchi, Paris & New York (acquired from the above) 

Acquired from the above in 2012 

Exhibited

(possibly) Paris, Pierre Colle, Miró, Exposition personnelle de peintures et d'objects récents, 1932

(possibly) Paris, Galerie Cahiers d'Art, Joan Miró, 1934

Tokyo, Grande Gallery Odakyu, Retrospective Exhibition of Miró, 1984, no. 8, illustrated in color in the catalogue

New York, Helly Nahmad Gallery, Le Chant de la Grenouille, the Surrealists in Conversation, 2014 

Literature

Cahiers d'art, nos. 1-4, Paris, 1934, illustrated in color opposite p. 18 

Jacques Dupin & Ariane Lelong Mainaud, Joan Miró, Catalogue raisonné. Paintings, vol. II, Paris, 2000, no. 409, illustrated p. 68 (with incorrect support)

Catalogue Note

This extraordinary painting was completed at the end of 1932 and requested by Christian Zervos for publication in the forthcoming edition of Cahiers d'art devoted to Miró's work. The composition is perhaps the most refined picture in that issue and one of only two reproduced in color. In a letter dated January 16, 1933, Miró writes to Zervos, referencing the present work as representative of his most recent compositions: "Dear friend, I have sent you today as printed matter by registered post the two three-coloured paintings you had asked for your next issue of Cahiers d'art...." (reprinted in Joan Miró, 1917-1934 (exhibition catalogue), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, 2004, p. 362). Zervos was so taken with this elegant composition that he kept it in his personal collection.

The precision, refinement and fluidity of the composition call to mind the panel paintings of the Dutch Old Masters, and it dates from the period immediately following Miró's work on a group of paintings known as the Dutch Interiors. In fact, Maurice Raynal noted Miró's continued affinity for the Northern Renaissance in his review of the 1934 exhibition at the Galerie Cahiers d'art, where this work was likely featured: "Miró was able to give his composition a life of their own, full of powerful intensity. His paintings' subjects are like so many purely plastic satires and could be related to Flemish diableries by Bruegel the Elder, or Bosch, or Callot, or to some Spanish thanksgiving plaques [see figs. 1 & 2]. But if, with the Old Masters, satire remained a psychological theme, it is with Miró purely a matter of graphics and colours" (M. Raynal, "Les Arts: Joan Miró" in L'Intransigeant, Paris, May 17, 1934, p. 6).  

Given his personal affiliations at the time, we know that contemporary influences were also at play in Miró's art of the period. Around the time he painted this picture, Miró was hosting the American artist Alexander Calder in Montroig while he was exhibiting his Circus installation at venues throughout Spain. The floating elements in Miró's painting here may very well have been influenced by and in turn influenced Calder's sculptures, as we know that Miró was most impressed by the sculptor's dexterity (see fig. 3).

On the reverse of the panel Miró dates this picture 12-32, and it may very well have been featured in the one-man exhibition he was having that month at the Galerie Pierre Colle. In his review of the show, Tériade made the following flattering remarks about the small panel pictures on view: "[T]he small panels Miró shows us today are very well made with a sure hand and their colour, always novel with him, acquires a useful density, an intense expression. There is a sense that the artist returning, as could be expected, to painting find at its contact a new spark to translated the forms of his rich imagination" (Tériade, "Joan Miró" in L'Intransigeant, Paris, December 19, 1932, p. 7).