Fundació Vila Casas Museum of Contemporary Sculpture opens "Miró, Gaudí, Gomis: The Magical Meaning of Art"

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, April 18, 2024


Fundació Vila Casas Museum of Contemporary Sculpture opens "Miró, Gaudí, Gomis: The Magical Meaning of Art"
Joaquim Gomis. la Pedrera, 1946. Fons Joaquim Gomis, Arxiu Nacional de Catalunya.



PALAFRUGELL.- The exhibition Miró, Gaudí, Gomis: The Magical Meaning of Art, co-organised with Fundació Joan Miró based on its collection, and curated by Teresa Montaner and Ester Ramos, highlights the creative affinities between Joan Miró and Antoni Gaudí, as well as the artist’s admiration for the architect through the photographs by Joaquim Gomis, first president of the Miró institution and a major promoter of Gaudí’s work.

The exhibition presents a selection of sculptures, ceramics and drawings by Joan Miró that enter into conversation with the photographs that Gomis took of Gaudí’s architecture, as well as an important series of etchings that, with the titles Sèrie Gaudí, Enrajolats and Gran rodona, Miró made in 1979 as a tribute to the architect.

This is a project that connects two of the most universally recognised personalities that Catalan culture has ever offered, and does so hand in hand with photographer Joaquim Gomis, who through his images knew how to capture Gaudí’s pioneering nature, and proposed a new interpretive reading of Miró’s work that relates him to nature and traditional art while highlighting the great coincidences that exist between the artist and the architect. The photobooks Gomis published in the 1950s in collaboration with Joan Prats, art promoter and key figure in the development of the Fundació Joan Miró, collected these images and displayed them following a specific rhythmic sequence.

Following his death, Antoni Gaudí’s work practically fell into oblivion, and eventually managed to emerge from obscurity three decades later thanks to the continuous dissemination work carried out by a series of people linked to the worlds of art, architecture and culture in general. Among these people, Joan Miró and Joaquim Gomis contributed to this in a very prominent way. Miró, who had always recognised having close affinities with Gaudí, found in the architect’s work a source of inspiration, and vindicated his role as a forerunner through his own creations. On his part, Gomis became one of the main promoters of Gaudí’s work by means of his photographs. His ability to show the magnificent ensemble of Antoni Gaudí’s architecture through capturing specific details helped to uncover the architect’s genuinely modern character and approach.

As the curators of the exhibition, Teresa Montaner and Ester Ramos, point out: “From an early age, Miró showed an interest in nature, similar to that of Gaudí, and like the architect, achieved a synthesis of his art through the observation of natural elements. When he went beyond the field of painting in the 1940s and 1950s, he became interested in the sculptural sense of Gaudí’s work and technical methods, as well as his desire to associate art and life. Towards the end of his career, Miró paid tribute to him through several series of etchings.”

What Miró was interested in about Gaudí was not only the rhythm and structure of his architecture, but also the will to question different materials and methods of expression. Both artists understood nature as the source of their creations. Gaudí was inspired by it to create both structural elements and ornamentation. Following Gaudí’s example, Miró created moulds using objects in his everyday surroundings as well as natural elements, and incorporated them into his sculptures. When bringing them together and casting them in bronze, they transformed into fantastic beings, as can be seen in the selection of sculptures presented in the exhibition. He was also attracted to trencadís, a traditional technique based on reusing pieces of broken ceramic, which he incorporated into his sculptural and public work, and which he evokes in the series of 21 etchings that make up Sèrie Gaudí as well as in the 7 etchings of Enrajolats, through which he paid tribute to the architect in 1979.

Gaudí and Miró’s photoscopes

Upon his return from exile following the end of the Spanish Civil War, Joaquim Gomis became one of the greatest propagators of Gaudí’s work. With the photographs he took of Gaudí and Miró’s creations, an important photographic archive was created that contributed to promoting the work of both artists. The initiative, carried out by Gomis and Joan Prats, prompted the appearance of a series of publications, named photoscopes, which collected said material under different titles. Prats was in charge of the selection and the rhythmic sequence he felt Gomis’ images had to follow.

The photoscopes had their origin in the slide projectors known as magic lanterns, in which the concepts of movement and continuity were always present. La Sagrada Familia de Antonio Gaudí (1952) was the first of a group of photoscopes about the architect, in this case published on the occasion of the centenary of his birth. Atmósfera Miró (1959), dedicated to the artist’s creative surroundings, was born from a selection of images taken at the house he had in Mont-roig, based on which Gomis and Prats offered a new interpretation of Miró’s work, connected to the land and to traditional art.

Gaudí as seen by Miró

Miró and Gaudí met in the mid-1910s at drawing classes in Cercle Artístic de Sant Lluc. At that time Gaudí already had important projects; Miró, on the other hand, was just beginning his career. Miró’s admiration for the architect dates back to his early youth, perhaps due to sensing certain affinities between them or by sharing ties to Camp de Tarragona, where they had both lived.

Miró’s first exhibition at the Galeries Dalmau in Barcelona, where he presented a selection of work inspired by the French artistic currents of the end of the century, did not generate a positive result. But thanks to his relationship with the area of Mont-roig, his painting then took a turn and began to approach nature in a more intimate way. His reading of books by Goethe, Pascal, Whitman, Dante, and Saint Francis of Assisi also led him to take this step. Miró’s time spent in the countryside studying the behaviour of nature was essential for the definition of the artistic synthesis of his work, in the same way that Gaudí, through discovering the structural and geometric rules that governed natural forms, was able to transform his architecture.




“It wasn’t until 1936 that Miró spoke publicly about Gaudí for the first time, and it was in the first interview that Cahiers d’Art published with the Catalan painter while he was in exile in Paris as a result of the Spanish Civil War. In that interview, Miró insisted once again on the need for artists to be rooted in their own land, not in a political sense, but in a natural and cultural sense, as a form of artistic self-affirmation, and as a means to recover the magical and sacred attributes of art”, the curators point out.

In this exhibition we have tried to illustrate Miró’s links to the Catalan landscape by means of a drawing made by the artist in 1938, the year in which, feeling distressed for being exiled in Paris while the Francoist army was about to enter the city of Barcelona, he depicted himself metamorphosing into the mountain of Montserrat. The massif’s rocks stand on either side of his head, representing his shoulders.

Gaudí, for his part, almost literally moved the orography of this mountain, crowning the portal of Hope of the Sagrada Família with a massive stone.

Sculpture

Faithful defenders of Gaudí’s work contributed to his work being revalued between the 1940s and 1950s. This increased his influence on Miró, who began working in bronze by first observing the sculptural character of Gaudí’s work, as well as the materials and technical procedures he employed.

Miró’s first bronze sculptures were made using the casting technique at the Gimeno foundry. They represent images of a mythological universe based on Mediterranean tradition, very similar in appearance to the skylights, chimneys and ventilation towers on the roof of La Pedrera, where Gaudí tested his sculptural capacities using unconventional materials and techniques, combining stone and marble with trencadís, a technique based on reusing ceramic pieces, granting the sculptures great beauty and resistance.

Miró was also inspired by the moulding system that Gaudí used on the Nativity façade of the Sagrada Família, consisting of directly moulding in plaster the elements that are to be reproduced. The objects that make up Miró’s sculptures came mainly from nature or from the traditional art universe. Once cast in bronze by means of lost-wax process, he brought them together to give life to new beings, reminiscent of the idols of ancient civilizations. Most of Miró’s bronze sculpture work from the 1960s and 1970s, of which one can see a selection in this exhibition, was made following this procedure.

He also applied that same spirit to his sculpture work in ceramic, with which he created pieces of a primitive appearance. Once fired, he used to put them up against the telluric forces that once gave them life: “I have had the experience of placing them in the middle of nature: they blend in and become a single element together with the landscape.” In some of those ceramic pieces, such as Estela de doble cara (1956), he even allowed nature to leave its mark. Marks that, like those applied by the artist, give the work its magical character.

Miró understood art as a form of expression connected to everyday life. Thus he aspired to work in public spaces. Ceramics and sculpture allowed him to materialise this idea, while prehistoric art, Romanesque art and Gaudí were his references. When, together with ceramist Josep Llorens Artigas, he made the murals for the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris (1956–1957) as well as the ceramics and sculptures for the Labyrinth at the Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul-de-Vence (1963), Park Güell served as inspiration. In the same way that Gaudí knew how to adapt to the terrain on which the park was built, Miró made his work integrate with the architecture and the landscape.

The need to work with weather-resistant materials also led Miró and Artigas to focus on Gaudí’s trencadís technique, which also gave the work wonderful colour. Later, in the mid-1970s and also under the influence of Gaudí, he made the Mosaic del Pla de l’Os (1976), on La Rambla in Barcelona, a piece whose intention was to welcome the people who arrived to the city by sea. In the curators own words: “Among the preparatory material for the piece there is a drawing with annotations that refer to inlays of broken glass, metal and other abandoned materials, as if it were a trencadís. However, it is again, above all, in the final destination of the project where the coincidence with Gaudí is most evident. Like the pavement of the main plaza in Park Güell, this piece had also been conceived to be stepped on, that is, to be incorporated into people’s everyday lives.”

Tribute to Gaudí

Miró expressed his admiration for Gaudí throughout his life, and attributed to him the character of primitive man or of the Old Masters. An influence he explicitly revealed during the 1940s and 1950s, coinciding with the moment of revitalisation of Gaudí’s work.

As a result of everything that Gaudí meant to Miró, at the end of his career he paid tribute to him with several series of etchings. In each of these series he put his craft to the test, and with the help of master engraver Joan Barbará he explored the multiple possibilities the technique had to offer. The most extensive series is the one titled Gaudí (1979), in which Miró depicts a series of fantastic characters structured around the black graphic elements and coloured squares, with a marked insistence on using curved and wavy lines.

That same year, and with the help of the same master engraver, Joan Barbará, he created, among others, the Enrajolats series, in which he again made reference to the Gaudian technique, as well as Gran rodona I and II. Both versions of this latter etching evoke the impact that the shape of the main plaza had on him when he discovered it in Park Güell while he was preparing the murals for the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris; a shape that he later also transferred to the pavement of the Mosaic del Pla de l’Os.










Today's News

July 26, 2021

Exhibition at Tate Liverpool features some of Lucian Freud's most iconic paintings

Pope.L's first solo show in London in more than a decade on view at Modern Art

At Paisley Park, Prince's 'aura of mystique' lives on

Amateur fossil hunters make rare find in U.K. using Google Earth

London Art Week Summer 2021 exhibitions draw delighted UK clients and visitors in person once again

Fundació Vila Casas Museum of Contemporary Sculpture opens "Miró, Gaudí, Gomis: The Magical Meaning of Art"

Exhibition of new works by the artist Genesis Tramaine on view at Almine Rech Aspen

Rescuing China's muzzled past, one footnote at a time

Blum & Poe exhibits a suite of twenty abstract paintings by artist Kenjirō Okazaki

The Salzburg Festival opens in search of elusive peace

Harn Museum examines Black life in new "Shadow to Substance" exhibition

Major works of modern and contemporary art recently added to Honolulu Museum of Art's collection

Exhibition focusing on historic effort that saved thousands of young lives on view at American Swedish Institute

A vogue legend, still enlarging circles of pleasure

Gost Books to publish 'Campesino Cuba' with photographs by Richard Sharum

G Editions announces the publication of The White Album of the Hamptons" by Christophe von Hohenberg

Jack Shainman Gallery exhibits eight new weavings by Diedrick Brackens

Biennale Gherdëina announces Lucia Pietroiusti and Filipa Ramos as curators of 8th edition of the festival

France's 'king of lighthouses' wins UNESCO heritage listing

With first posthumous album, Prince pierces the American condition

Festival-goers revel in return of live music at London's Kaleidoscope

Turkey says UNESCO criticism of Hagia Sophia conversion 'biased'

Gayle Garner Roski exhibition celebrates life in the wake of her battle with ALS

H&H Classics offers stalled 1958 AC ACECA Bristol project

Inspiring Ceramic Artwork: Abstract Vases and Unique Sculptures as the Best Additions to Your Interior

10 Tips for Becoming a Distributor of Official Pentax lenses- An Ultimate Guide

What Are Your Accommodation Options For the Munich Beer Festival?

How to Become an Owner Operator Truck Driver




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful