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  1. Le Coq, 1949 by Joan Miro. Le Coq was painted in Varengeville-sur-Mer, a village on the Normandy coast where Miro and his family sought refuge from August 1939 to May 1940, the beginning of the Second World War.

  2. Joan Miró: Interiores holandeses (I). 1928. Óleo sobre lienzo. 91,8 x 73 cm. Museo de Arte Moderno, Nueva York. Durante su estancia en París, Miró tomó un tiempo para visitar Bélgica y Holanda. A partir de allí, trabajó en su mente la idea de una serie inspirada en el arte de aquella región.

  3. 1920 Joan Miró (Spanish, 1893–1983) Miró painted this work at his home in the Spanish village of Montroig shortly after his first visit to Paris. The complex configuration of forms adopts a Cubist collage technique inspired by the work of Pablo Picasso, whom he had met on this trip.

  4. Although this series and Le coq were painted on paper, most likely due to a scarcity of materials, Miró frequently referred to them as 'paintings' and 'canvases', indicative of the significance accorded them. Indeed their brilliant intensity rivals that of many of his works in oil.

  5. Joan Miró i Ferrà ( Barcelona, 20 de abril de 1893- Palma de Mallorca, 25 de diciembre de 1983) fue un pintor, escultor, grabador y ceramista español. En sus obras reflejó su interés por el subconsciente de lo «infantil» y en la cultura y tradiciones de Cataluña.

  6. This memorable artwork was completed by artist Miro in 1940, at a time when he was building his career, just before the turmoil brought about by WWII had truly set in. This painting maybe entirely abstract, but the elements are far easier to decipher than many of his other artworks in the latter part of his career.

  7. 19 de jun. de 2007 · Una obra del pintor surrealista español Joan Miró (1893-1983) se vendió en la casa de subastas Christie's de Londres por 9,78 millones de euros, el precio

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