Details
Artist
Styles
Original lithograph printed in colors on Arches wove paper. Edition of 100 (plus 13 HC impressions; overall edition of 113), numbered in pencil lower left.// 42, Rue Blomet takes its title from the Paris studio address where Miró first forged his revolutionary pictorial language in the 1920s, and the lithograph pays homage to that foundational moment of creative freedom. The densely composed image teems with the artist's lexicon of biomorphic black forms — eyes, stars, and amoebic creatures — interspersed with decisive strokes of blue, red, yellow, and green. A cascade of small black dots and splashes adds rhythmic energy, creating a composition that feels simultaneously ancient and vitally alive. Printed on Arches wove paper in an edition of one hundred, this is a rich, museological impression of one of Miró's most autobiographically resonant late prints.
42, Rue Blomet, 1977
form
Medium
Size
89.9 x 62.5 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Price
- USD
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Details
Artist
Styles
Original lithograph printed in colors on Arches wove paper. Edition of 100 (plus 13 HC impressions; overall edition of 113), numbered in pencil lower left.// 42, Rue Blomet takes its title from the Paris studio address where Miró first forged his revolutionary pictorial language in the 1920s, and the lithograph pays homage to that foundational moment of creative freedom. The densely composed image teems with the artist's lexicon of biomorphic black forms — eyes, stars, and amoebic creatures — interspersed with decisive strokes of blue, red, yellow, and green. A cascade of small black dots and splashes adds rhythmic energy, creating a composition that feels simultaneously ancient and vitally alive. Printed on Arches wove paper in an edition of one hundred, this is a rich, museological impression of one of Miró's most autobiographically resonant late prints.
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Joan Miró
Untitled From Graphikmappe Hochschule St. Gallen, 1964
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 6,800
Joan Miró
Poster For The Exhibition '100 Sculptures', 1978
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 4,740
Joan Miró
Poster Proof Before The Lettering For The Galerie Matarasso, Nice, 1957
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
EUR 5,050
Joan Miró
Untitled (from The Bouquet De Rêves Pour Neila Portfolio), 1967
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 2,950
Joan Miró
Untitled (from The La Bague D’Aurore Portfolio), 1957
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
USD 14,850
Joan Miró
Le Marteau Sans Maître: One Plate, 1976
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
USD 4,880
Joan Miró
Invitation Card For The Opening Of The Fundació Miró Barcelona, 1976
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 4,250
Joan Miró
Untitled 3 From Maravillas Con Variaciones Acrósticas , 1975
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 5,460
Joan Miró
Le Lézard Aux Plumes D'or (book), 1971
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
EUR 28,000 - 35,000
Joan Miró
Serie Mallorca - Negro Y Blanco IX, 1973
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
EUR 8,350
Joan Miró
Serie Mallorca - Negro Y Blanco VII, 1973
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
EUR 8,350
Joan Miró
Serie Mallorca - Negro Y Blanco VI, 1973
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
EUR 8,350
Joan Miró
Serie Mallorca - Negro Y Blanco I, 1973
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
EUR 8,350
Joan Miró
Untitled, From Album 21 Portfolio - M1136, 1978
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 6,250
Joan Miró
Untitled, From Album 21 Portfolio - M1130, 1978
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 6,250
Joan Miró
Demi Mondaine A Sa Fenetre - D742, 1975
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
USD 7,200
Joan Miró
Couple D'Oiseaux II, 1966
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
Currently Not Available
Joan Miró
Bonjour Max Ernst, 1976
Limited Edition Print
Etching And Aquatint
Currently Not Available
What is Surrealism?
Surrealism began in the 1920s as an art and literary movement with the goal of revealing the unconscious mind and unleashing the imagination by exploring unusual and dream-like imagery. Influenced by Sigmund Freud’s theories of psychoanalysis, Surrealist artists and writers sought to bring the unconscious into rational life, blurring the lines between reality and dreams. The movement aimed to challenge conventional perceptions and express the irrational aspects of the human experience.
