Joan Miro "No Sign 7" Abstract Painting Original Lithograph Print with Frame
Joan Miro "No Sign 7" Abstract Painting Original Lithograph Print with Frame
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$555.00 USD
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$555.00 USD
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The abstract painting "No Sign 7" created by Joan Miro as a lithograph print is an original lithograph created by Joan Miro himself during his lifetime. It was created for a collection of prints called a catalogue raisonné. It is a lithograph print that was originally attached to a collection of prints, called a book type. A print signed by Joan Miro can cost hundreds of thousands of yen, and some works can cost over a million yen, but if it is an original lithograph without a signature, you can still purchase it easily. This abstract lithograph print "No Sign 7" is an abstract painting that looks like several witty masks. This abstract lithograph, painted in five colors including green, blue, red, yellow, and black, will make you feel happy just by looking at it. I think it is an abstract lithograph that will have a great impact when displayed in a room. It is an abstract lithograph that only Joan Miro could paint. Why not purchase Joan Miro's abstract lithograph print "No Sign 7" as a piece of interior decor for your room or as a gift? Joan Miro Profile 1893 Born in Barcelona, Spain. Lived in nearby Montroyd farm inherited from his parents. 1912 Entered Francisco Galli Art School. 1924 Became acquainted with poets such as Breton, Aragon, and Éluard, became a member of the Surrealists, and participated in the Surrealist movement. 1937 Created a mural for the Spanish Pavilion at the Paris World's Fair. 1941 Retrospective of his oil paintings held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. 1954 Received the International Grand Prix for Prints at the Venice Biennale. 1959 Retrospective of his oil paintings held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Los Angeles Art Museum. Received the Guggenheim Foundation International Grand Prize for his murals at UNESCO headquarters. 1962: A retrospective of his oil paintings is held at the Museum of Fine Arts of the City of Paris. 1966: A retrospective of his oil paintings is held at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo and the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto. 1976: He opens the Joan Miro Foundation Institute of Contemporary Art in Barcelona, Spain. 1983: He dies in Palma, Mallorca. Using the technique of automatism, he has passed through a fantastical style of painting, and also works on objects and collages. As seen in his series of works "Constellations" produced during World War II, he made full use of hieroglyphic images such as "stars," "women," and "birds" to create paintings that are full of childlike innocence. It is often pointed out that Joan Miro's oil paintings and lithograph prints are deeply and intimately connected to the region and the scenery of Catalonia. During his second visit to Japan, he collaborated with Shuzo Takiguchi on a collection of poems and paintings.