I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold by Charles Demuth in th…
I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold by Charles Demuth in th…
Fleur de Lis by Robert Reid in the Metropolitan Mu…
Fleur de Lis by Robert Reid in the Metropolitan Mu…
Detail of Fleur de Lis by Robert Reid in the Metro…
Detail of Fleur de Lis by Robert Reid in the Metro…
Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in the Metrop…
Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in the Metrop…
Detail of Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in…
Detail of Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in…
Detail of Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in…
Detail of Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in…
Detail of Shooting the Rapids by Winslow Homer in…
Incense Burner of Amir Saif al-Din Muhammad in the…
Incense Burner of Amir Saif al-Din Muhammad in the…
Incense Burner of Amir Saif al-Din Muhammad in the…
Incense Burner of Amir Saif al-Din Muhammad in the…
Incense Burner of Amir Saif al-Din Muhammad in the…
Calligraphic Galleon with the Names of the 7 Sleep…
Calligraphic Galleon with the Names of the 7 Sleep…
Detail of the Calligraphic Galleon with the Names…
Detail of the Calligraphic Galleon with the Names…
Detail of the Calligraphic Galleon with the Names…
The Potato by Miro in the Metropolitan Museum of A…
East River from the Shelton Hotel by Georgia O'Kee…
Lucien Gilbert by Derain in the Metropolitan Museu…
Lucien Gilbert by Derain in the Metropolitan Museu…
The Puritan by Saint-Gaudens in the Metropolitan M…
The Puritan by Saint-Gaudens in the Metropolitan M…
Infanta by Carries in the Metropolitan Museum of A…
Infanta by Carries in the Metropolitan Museum of A…
Detail of Maharaja Sardar Singh of Bikaner in the…
Detail of Maharaja Sardar Singh of Bikaner in the…
Detail of Maharaja Sardar Singh of Bikaner in the…
Maharaja Sardar Singh of Bikaner in the Metropolit…
Detail of Maharaja Sardar Singh of Bikaner in the…
Detail of Rama Releases the Demon Spies in the Met…
Detail of Rama Releases the Demon Spies in the Met…
Rama Releases the Demon Spies in the Metropolitan…
Rama Releases the Demon Spies in the Metropolitan…
The Monkey Leader Angada Steals Ravana's Crown in…
The Monkey Leader Angada Steals Ravana's Crown in…
The Monkey Leader Angada Steals Ravana's Crown in…
Detail of The Death of Demon Sankhucuda in the Met…
Detail of The Death of Demon Sankhucuda in the Met…
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
280 visits
The Potato by Miro in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, January 2019
Potato
1928
Object Details
Title: Potato
Artist: Joan Miró (Spanish, Barcelona 1893–1983 Palma de Mallorca)
Date: 1928
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 39 3/4 x 32 1/8 in. (101 x 81.6 cm)
Classification: Paintings
Credit Line: Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection, 1998
Accession Number: 1999.363.50
Born in the Spanish province of Catalonia, Joan Miró was deeply influenced by his country's native landscape and artistic heritage. Although he was associated with French Surrealism and its practitioners and lived in Paris during the early part of his career, he returned to settle in Spain after World War II. This deliberate remove from the center of the art world is symptomatic of Miró's independence, a temperament that would mark his art as well as his life. Drawing on the possiblilities of free invention encouraged by Surrealism, Miró developed a style that drew from highly personalized and psychological references. Often beginning with a recognizable starting point, Miró transformed his subjects through whimsical color and free play with form.
"The Potato" is emblematic of Miró's poetic riffs on reality. It takes as its subject a gigantic female figure who stretches her arms wide. She is set against a blue sky and above a patch of earth—perhaps a potato field. The billowing white shape of the figure is attached to a red post in the center of the composition like a scarecrow on a pole. Miró surrounded his merry "potato-earth-woman" with fanciful decorative objects, some of which are "earthy" and some not. The figure has one brown-and-black breast that "squirts" a long, black, winding thread, as elfin creatures flutter in the sky around her. At the left, a red and yellow "butterfly-woman" takes flight from her brown banana-like nose as other creatures climb a ladder—one of Miró's favorite motifs. Beyond the earthiness of the subject, the painting's title appears to be derived from the representation of an actual, recognizable potato: lodged in the woman's forehead is a small, brown, oval object with three tendrils growing out of its upper edge.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/490004
1928
Object Details
Title: Potato
Artist: Joan Miró (Spanish, Barcelona 1893–1983 Palma de Mallorca)
Date: 1928
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 39 3/4 x 32 1/8 in. (101 x 81.6 cm)
Classification: Paintings
Credit Line: Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection, 1998
Accession Number: 1999.363.50
Born in the Spanish province of Catalonia, Joan Miró was deeply influenced by his country's native landscape and artistic heritage. Although he was associated with French Surrealism and its practitioners and lived in Paris during the early part of his career, he returned to settle in Spain after World War II. This deliberate remove from the center of the art world is symptomatic of Miró's independence, a temperament that would mark his art as well as his life. Drawing on the possiblilities of free invention encouraged by Surrealism, Miró developed a style that drew from highly personalized and psychological references. Often beginning with a recognizable starting point, Miró transformed his subjects through whimsical color and free play with form.
"The Potato" is emblematic of Miró's poetic riffs on reality. It takes as its subject a gigantic female figure who stretches her arms wide. She is set against a blue sky and above a patch of earth—perhaps a potato field. The billowing white shape of the figure is attached to a red post in the center of the composition like a scarecrow on a pole. Miró surrounded his merry "potato-earth-woman" with fanciful decorative objects, some of which are "earthy" and some not. The figure has one brown-and-black breast that "squirts" a long, black, winding thread, as elfin creatures flutter in the sky around her. At the left, a red and yellow "butterfly-woman" takes flight from her brown banana-like nose as other creatures climb a ladder—one of Miró's favorite motifs. Beyond the earthiness of the subject, the painting's title appears to be derived from the representation of an actual, recognizable potato: lodged in the woman's forehead is a small, brown, oval object with three tendrils growing out of its upper edge.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/490004
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.