Joan Miró (1893–1983), the Catalan artist who boldly reimagined the natural world, comes to the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum. The exhibition of paintings, sculptures, and ceramics offers a comprehensive look at Miró’s evolution from his early figurative works to his late experiments with collage and fire. It includes the renowned mid-career “Constellations” series of 1940–41, which envisions a dreamlike cosmos made of abstract floating forms. “It took a month at least to produce each water color,” Miró wrote in 1948, “as I would take it up day after day to paint in other tiny spots, stars, washes, infinitesimal dots of color in order finally to achieve a full and complex equilibrium.” —Carolina de Armas
The Arts Intel Report
Joan Miró

Joan Miró, Figures at Night Guided by the Phosphorescent Tracks of Snails, 1940.
When
Until June 6
Where
Japan, 〒110-0007 Tokyo, Taito City, Uenokoen, 8−36 東京都美術館
Etc
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Nearby
1
Art
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo