ZURICH.- Galerie Gmurzynska commences the fall season with a comprehensive showcase by one of the unequaled frontrunners of the historical avant-garde: Joan Miró.
The focus of this unique survey is the multifaceted body of work Miró created in Paris in the circle of surrealist mastermind André Breton as well as in Barcelona; in the artists beloved native Catalan countryside; and on the island of Majorca, spanning several periods from the mid-1920s all the way to the late yet continuously explorative works in a staggering breadth of media from the 1970s.
The exhibition comprises early, radically abstract-surrealist museum-works such as the 1925 Circus Horse or the beautifully-hued 1927 Peinture paintings that form one of the foremost series of Mirós oneiric oeuvre, exemplars of which today are held in major collections in Europe and the US.
The exhibition further includes rarely seen mixed-media works the artist created using unconventional materials and techniques, ingeniously fashioned into the stimulating and thought-provoking Collage-Drawings of the 1930s. These betray Mirós pioneering blend of personal imagination and mass-culture imagery, of which related works were previously the subject of a special showcase at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
A further highlight is a suite of large drawings picturing fantastic biomorphic interpretations on the female figure and on the theme of lovers, intriguing elaborations that evolved from a sketchbook Miró composed while holidaying with his young bride Pilar Joncosa on Majorca in 1930.
Rounding out the selection, a distinct group of Mirós commanding anthropomorphic bronze sculptures from the 1960s to 1970s are on view. This includes the intricately textured Femme from 1968, an exclusive edition Miró specially conceived for the Fundacio Joan Miró in Barcelona and for the preeminent collectors and patrons Aimé and Marguerite Maeghts eponymous Fondation in Saint-Paul de Vence.
This survey presents a wonderful occasion to view these distinct bodies of work from the formative working periods of Miró in a carefully curated showcase, while giving insight into the artistic concerns and methodologies employed by this Modern Master at a time of significant political and social transformations defining the pre-, inter- and postwar years in Western Europe.