Joan Miro 1906 |
1910 :Enrols in the school of art run by Francesc Galí.
1918 : First one-man show at the Galeries Dalmau, Barcelona.
1920 : Travels to Paris for the first time, visits Picasso in his studio.
1921 : First solo exhibition in Paris at the Galerie La Licorne.
1923 : He meets avant-garde poets, painters and writers as well as Ernest Hemingway, who purchases The farm.
1925 : Solo exhibition at the Galerie Pierre, Paris.
1928 : Produces the first object-collages titled Spanish dancer. Visits Belgium and Holland. Paints the Dutch interiors in Mont-roig (80 mi S-W of Barcelona).
1929 : Works on the series known as "Imaginary portraits". Marries Pilar Juncosa in Palma, Majorca. They settle in Paris.
1930 : In Mont-roig he produces his first three-dimensional pieces. First one-man show in the United States, at the Valentine Gallery, New York.
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Joan Miro Paris, 1925 Photograph : Man Ray |
1932 : Works on a new series of objects. Designs the curtain, sets, costumes and objects for the ballet Jeux d'enfants performed by the Ballets Russes de Monte-Carlo. First one-man show at the Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York.
1936 : Outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, he decides to stay in Paris. Attends life classes at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière, where he produces a large number of drawings.
1938 : Produces a large mural painting, The reaper (Catalan peasant in revolt), for the Spanish Republican Government's pavilion, at the World's Fair in Paris.
1940 : Miró decides to return to Spain, in Palma, Majorca, with his wife and daughter.
1941 : First large retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
1942 : Continues working exclusively on paper. Returns to Barcelona
1944 Produces his first ceramics, Publication of the set of 50 lithographs known as the Barcelona series, Returns to painting on canvas, which he had virtually abandoned since 1939.
1946 Produces his first bronze sculptures.
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1947 First trip to the United States, where he produces a mural painting for the Gourmet Room at the Terrace Plaza Hotel in Cincinnati:
Joan Miro, Mont-roig, 1952 |
1950 Starts work on the mural painting for the dining hall at Harkness Commons, Harvard University, commissioned by Walter Gropius, which he completes the following year.
1958 Inauguration of the two murals for UNESCO in Paris, for which he receives the Guggenheim International Award.
1960 Works with Josep Llorens Artigas on the ceramic mural for Harkness Commons, Harvard University, to replace the mural painting.
The Moon, a mural for the UNESCO Paris |
1966 Produces his first monumental sculptures in bronze, Sun bird and Moon bird. Retrospective exhibition at the National Museum of Art, Tokyo. Visits Japan for the first time,
1967 Installation of a ceramic mural, produced in collaboration with Josep Llorens Artigas, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. Awarded the Carnegie International Grand Prize for painting.
1970 Ceramic mural and mural painting for the Laughter Pavilion sponsored by Japanese gas companies at the Osaka World's Fair. In conjunction with Artigas, he produces a monumental ceramic mural for Barcelona Airport.
1976 Installation of the ceramic paving in the Pla de l'Os in the Rambla, Barcelona.
1977 Produces a large tapestry in conjunction with Josep Royo for the National Gallery, Washington D.C.
Alicia, Salomon Guggenheim Museum New York |
Back to : the Miró Foundation
Sources :
http://www.fundaciomiro-bcn.org/?idioma=2
http://catalogue.successiomiro.com/catalogues/ceramics/mur-de-la-lune-1957-424.html