“My tendency towards bareness and simplification has been practiced in three fields: modeling, colors, and the figuration of the personages.” Has BeensThreeFieldsColorSimplicityTendenciesModelingSimplification Author:Joan Miro
“Never, never do I set to work on a canvas in the state it comes in from the shop. I provoke accidents - a form, a splotch of color. Any accident is good enough. I let the matiere decide. Then I prepare a ground by, for example, wiping my brushes on the canvas. Letting fall some drops of turpentine on it would do just as well. If I want to make a drawing I crumple the sheet of paper or I wet it; the flowing water traces a line and this line may suggest what is to come next.” IfsWantWellsMayStatesEnoughFormFallNextWaterLinesExampleColorPaperAccidentsDrawingShopsGood EnoughWetCanvasProvokingBrushesSheetsFlowing Water Author:Joan Miro
“I try to apply colors like words that shape poems, like notes that shape music.” TryingArtColorShapesNotesFine ArtsVisual ArtFamous ArtistArtists And Life Author:Joan Miro
“My characters have undergone the same process of simplification as the colors. Now that they have been simplified, they appear more human and alive than if they had been represented in all their details.” IfsHumansHas BeensCharacterArtistProcessAliveColorDetailsSimplification Author:Joan Miro
“Little by little, I've reached the stage of using only a small number of forms and colors. It's not the first time that painting has been done with a very narrow range of colors. The frescoes of the tenth century are painted like this. For me, they are magnificent things.” FirstsLittlesHas BeensDoneFormNumbersCenturyStageColorPaintingFirst TimeRangeMagnificentSmall Numbers Author:Joan Miro