140 likes | 152 Views
Art Awareness. Joan Miro ( hoh-ahn ’ mee-roh ’). Born in Spain. (1893 – 1983) Miro literally means “he looked”. He wanted to be an artist from a very young age. His father did not agree and made him a clerk at a wholesale company.
E N D
Joan Miro(hoh-ahn’ mee-roh’) • Born in Spain. (1893 – 1983) • Miro literally means “he looked”. • He wanted to be an artist from a very young age. • His father did not agree and made him a clerk at a wholesale company. • At 17, he became very ill and was sent to live in the country • Surrounded by beautiful landscape, Miro regained his joy, his health and his great desire to paint. His father agreed to let him become an artist. • He finished art school in 1919. Afterwards, he met famous artists like Pablo Picasso. Young Joan Miro Caricature of Joan Miro by Ian Davy Brown
Joan Miro(hoh-ahn’ mee-roh’) • Miro kept his studio in the same house he was born in for 63 years. • His works started out being surrealistic, but became more abstract over time. • Before beginning work, he had to receive a shock – a simple thing that could provoke a response. • He used music, literature and nature as his inspirations. • Earth and sky were very important in his works. • He lived a rather normal and long life. He died at the old age of 90 in 1983.
SURREALISM & ABSTRACT • Miro was known for his “surreal” and “abstract” pictures. • Surreal means dreamlike distortion of reality. • Distort – twist something out of shape. • Surrealism: Artwork that is very dreamlike in appearance. • These paintings are often filled with recognizable objects done in strange and mysterious fashion. • Abstract : This kind of artwork has objects that are mostly unrecognizable. • Abstract paintings rely on color and shapes. The Garden
Miro’s Art Technique • Miro liked to use bright colors : mostly black, red, yellow, green and blue against a neutral earth background • He used symbols in his paintings : • A man = pipe, or moustache. • A woman = triangle. • A tree = round blob. • Farm woman = large foot. • One of his teachers blindfolded him and taught him to draw form by using the sense of touch. He would sometimes do it by feeling the contours of the head of a classmate. • Miro says, “I try to apply colors like words that shape poems, like notes that shape music”.
People and Dog in Sun - 1949 • What colors do you see? Are they mainly primary colors (red, yellow, blue) or secondary colors (purple, orange, green). • Where is the contrast? (the background has light colors, not bold like the foreground). • Describe what you see. Turn the painting upside down and sideways. • Which way do you like it best ? • Do you see people? Do they look like kids or adults? • Where is the dog? Where is the sun? • One dot is half red and half black, who can find it? • Did Miro have a good imagination? • What would you title this painting?
COLLAGE - “Portrait of a Man in a Late Nineteenth-Century Frame” - 1950
Miro’s Chicago Miro’s sculpture in Chicago across Daley Center. Sculpture – 1981Concrete; bronze, ceramic tile.
Let’s get Inspired… • Let’s begin to do our art project inspired by Miro’s artwork. • We do this by taking a line for a walk…. • Draw a wide scribble or doodle on the paper provided with a black marker. • Use your imagination to find people or animals in the shapes and lines. Find a point where two lines come together and draw a face. • Turn paper upside down and add another doodle or scribble. • Add another face to create a second person or animal in the drawing. • Add color with crayons or markers – only red, blue, green and yellow. • Does your work look like Miro’s? If time permits, we’ll talk about what we found and share it with the class. • Give a title to your artwork
THANK YOU Have a great day ahead and keep drawing.