- Miró Wall
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Artist Joan Miró and Gardy Artigas Year 1979 Type Mural Dimensions 1000 cm × 5500 cm (390 in × 2,200 in) Location Wilhalm Hack Museum, Ludwigshafen, (Germany The Miró Wall is a ceramic tiled wall designed by Catalan artist Joan Miró for the Wilhelm Hack Museum in Ludwigshafen, Germany. The wall, which comprises 7,200 tiles, is 55 metres (180 ft) wide and 10 metres (33 ft) high.
Contents
Design
The elements in the mural are colorful and fanciful creatures. The 55 by 10 metres (180 × 33 ft) mural was produced by Joan Gardy Artigas.[1] He created the 7,200 tiles based on a design by Miro involving surreal figures and animals. Artigas had to work from an image which Miro had created at one-tenth the scale of the finished wall. Using that model, he marked out each section on an individual 20 by 36 centimetres (7.9 × 14 in) tile. The artwork was completed in 1979 and includes the signatures of both artists at the bottom, left-hand corner. Miro's signature is undated; Artigas' signature is dated 1979.
Artigas was a second generation surrealist. His father had been a ceramicist for both Picasso and Miro. When Artigas' father wanted to retire, Miro brought the younger Artigas back from exile in France, where he had been avoiding the Spanish Francoist regime. Artigas junior worked with Miro for twenty years creating other similar sized murals for UNESCO, IBM and the Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos in Madrid.[2]
The mural was opened at the same time as the new museum was built. It was in the town's market place and had been constructed to hold the art collection of the Cologne businessman, Wilhelm Hack, whose collection had been given to Ludwigshafen.[3] Hack saw the new museum as he died in 1985.
Construction
The tiles were fired in Gallifa, a village near Barcelona. They had to be transported 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) to the museum. Because of the terrain, they were placed four to a box so they could be carried down the mountain by mule. After that, the tiles were transported by lorry and train to complete the journey from Catalonia (Spain) to south western Germany.[4] The wall has become discoloured from pollution and has not been cleaned because of the high cost.
References
- ^ "The Miró Wall". Wilhelm Hack Museum. http://www.wilhelmhack.museum/home/collection/the-miro-wall.html. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
- ^ "Joan Gardy Artigas, Spanish (1938 - )". rogallery.com. http://rogallery.com/Artigas_Joan_Gardy/artigas-biography.html. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
- ^ "History". Wilhelm Hack Museum. http://www.wilhelmhack.museum/index.php?id=152. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
- ^ "The wall by Joan Miró". InterTrans Gmbh. https://www.intertrans-gmbh.de/index.php?pg=22. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
Sources
- Marlis Jonas (Photos), Richard W. Gassen (text): city art space. Public Art in Ludwigshafen am Rhein. Kehrer Verlag, Heidelberg 2007, ISBN 978-3-936636-17-8 .
Works Barcelona Series · Man and Woman in Front of a Pile of Excrement · Miró Wall · Naked woman climbing a staircase · Personnage Oiseaux · Portrait of Vincent Nubiola · Paintings on masonite · Bleu II · Metamorphosis · Hands flying off toward the constellations · The navigator's hope · May 1968 (Miró) · The Farm · Head of a Catalan Peasant · Still Life with Old Shoe · Constellations · The hope of a condemned Man · Miró otroSculpture The Caress of a Bird · Miró's Chicago · His Majesty the King · Her Majesty the Queen · His Highness the PrinceColleagues Joan Prats · Josep Lluís SertMuseums See also Mont-roig del Camp · Ladder of Escape exhibitionCategories:- Murals
- Ludwigshafen
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