拍品专文
Although Joan Miró had experimented with Surrealist painting-objects as early as the late 1920s, it was during the 1940s—while living between Palma, Montroig, and Barcelona—that he began to conceive sculpture as a fully independent mode of expression. In his Working Notes of 1941–1942, he wrote of his desire to create “a truly phantasmagoric world of living monsters,” a vision that would come to define his sculptural practice in the decades that followed (quoted in M. Rowell, ed., Joan Miró: Selected Writings and Interviews, Boston, 1986, p. 175).
Conceived in 1981, Personnage belongs to the final and most ambitious phase of Miró’s sculptural production, when bronze became a primary vehicle for his imagination. The present work was inspired by the form of a folded table napkin now in the collection of the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona. Enlarged and cast in bronze, it assumes a powerful, totemic presence: frontal and hieratic. The facial features—reduced to incised lines and punctuated eyes—evoke a mask-like visage, while the looping and teardrop motifs across the surface suggest both anatomical and symbolic elements, oscillating between figuration and abstraction.
The unpatinated bronze, intentionally left to oxidize, endows the surface with a richly variegated, living quality that enhances the sculpture’s quiet authority. In Personnage, Miró distills the human form into a potent and poetic symbol, capturing the imaginative freedom and formal clarity that define his late sculptural vision.
Conceived in 1981, Personnage belongs to the final and most ambitious phase of Miró’s sculptural production, when bronze became a primary vehicle for his imagination. The present work was inspired by the form of a folded table napkin now in the collection of the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona. Enlarged and cast in bronze, it assumes a powerful, totemic presence: frontal and hieratic. The facial features—reduced to incised lines and punctuated eyes—evoke a mask-like visage, while the looping and teardrop motifs across the surface suggest both anatomical and symbolic elements, oscillating between figuration and abstraction.
The unpatinated bronze, intentionally left to oxidize, endows the surface with a richly variegated, living quality that enhances the sculpture’s quiet authority. In Personnage, Miró distills the human form into a potent and poetic symbol, capturing the imaginative freedom and formal clarity that define his late sculptural vision.
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