Fundació Joan Miró Explained

Fundació Joan Miró
Established:1975
Location:Montjuïc in Barcelona
Director:Marko Daniel

The Fundació Joan Miró (in Catalan; Valencian pronounced as /fundəsiˈo ʒuˈam miˈɾo/; "Joan Miró Foundation, Centre of Studies of Contemporary Art") is a museum of modern art honoring Joan Miró located on the hill called Montjuïc in Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain).

History

The idea for the foundation was made in 1968 by Joan Miró. Miró formed the foundation with his friend Joan Prats.[1] Miró wanted to create a new building that would encourage particularly younger artists to experiment with contemporary art. The building was designed by Josep Lluís Sert to ensure that this work could also be made available to the public and exhibited. He designed the building with courtyards and terraces and to create a natural path for visitors to move through the building.

Building began on the mountain of Montjuïc and the foundation opened on 10 June 1975. Not only was the architect a close friend of Miró but so was the first president Joaquim Gomis and Miró was amongst the first board. It was claimed that the new foundation represented a new way of viewing the concept of a museum and how the people of Barcelona could relate to their cultural heritage.[2] Expansion in 1986 to the building added an auditorium and a library which holds some of the 10,000 items in the Foundation and Miró's collection.

Works by Joan Miró

Many of the works in the building were donated by the artist himself.[3] Highlights include:

Collection

In line with Miró's original idea the Foundation has a space named "" which is dedicated to promoting the work of young experimental artists. Many curators have been in charge of that program, including Frederic Montornes, Monica Regàs, and Ferran Barenblit, who was later Director of MACBA. Although there is also work by Peter Greenaway, Chillida, René Magritte, Rothko, Tàpies and Saura.

The collection includes Alexander Calder's 4 Wings and Mercury Fountain. The Mercury Fountain uses the liquid metal mercury to create a fountain. As mercury is poisonous, the fountain is kept behind glass to protect the visitors.[3]

The museum uses QRpedia to allow visitors to read Wikipedia articles about objects in the collection, translated into their preferred language.[4]

Joan Miró Prize

Since 2007, the Fundació Joan Miró – initially with support from Fundació Caixa Girona, later Stavros Niarchos Foundation – have been jointly bestowing the Joan Miró Prize with a total volume of 70,000 euros to a contemporary artist every other year. Previous recipients have included:

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Bryant, Sue. Barcelona p.78. 2008. 128. 978-1-84773-104-3.
  2. Sert. P.8
  3. http://www.barcelona.de/en/barcelona-museum-foundation-miro.html Fundació Joan Miró
  4. Web site: QRpedia Codes at Fundació Joan Miró. Hinojo. Alex. 2011-05-11. The GLAM-Wiki Experience. 25 August 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120321203627/http://theglamwikiexperience.blogspot.com/2011/05/qrpedia-codes-at-fundacio-joan-miro.html. 21 March 2012.
  5. https://www.artforum.com/news/olafur-eliasson-wins-joan-miro-prize-15243 Olafur Eliasson Wins Joan Miró Prize
  6. https://www.artforum.com/news/joan-miro-prize-awarded-to-pipilotti-rist-22401 Joan Miró Prize Awarded to Pipilotti Rist
  7. https://www.artforum.com/news/mona-hatoum-wins-2011-joan-miro-prize-27526 Mona Hatoum Wins 2011 Joan Miró Prize
  8. https://www.artforum.com/news/kader-attia-awarded-2017-joan-miro-prize-for-post-colonial-work-71631 Kader Attia Awarded 2017 Joan Miró Prize for Post-Colonial Work
  9. Alex Greenberger (23 May 2019), Nalini Malani Wins $77,800 Joan Miró Prize ARTnews.
  10. Artreview.com (01 June 2023), Tuan Andrew Nguyen wins €50,000 Joan Miró Prize prizeartreview.