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Joan Miro — (after) Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII
Joan Miro — (after) Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII
Joan Miro — (after) Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII
Joan Miro

(after) Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII

# Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII This lithographic work exemplifies Miro's mastery of abstraction and his playful interrogation of figuration. The composition presents a delicate interplay between biomorphic forms and gestural mark-making, where a female figure emerges through fragmented shapes and carefully calibrated voids. The artist's characteristic vocabulary of dots, lines, and organic masses creates a sense of movement and ambiguity, inviting the viewer to oscillate between recognizing human and avian presences and surrendering to pure abstraction. The print's restrained color palette and confident linework demonstrate the technical precision underlying Miro's seemingly spontaneous visual language. This work belongs to the series executed in the 1970s, a period when Miro returned to the subject of woman and birds with renewed energy and refined technique. The artist's interest in exploring the dialogue between human and natural forms, particularly through the symbolic pairing of feminine figure and birds as agents of freedom and transformation, reaches a sophisticated maturity in these later works. The lithographic medium allowed Miro to achieve subtle tonal variations while maintaining the immediacy and gestural quality for which his practice is celebrated. For collectors, this piece represents a significant example of the artist's graphic output, capturing both the intellectual rigor and poetic sensibility that define his artistic legacy.

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About this work

Joan Miro, (after) Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII

# Femme et oiseaux (Woman and Birds), Plate VIII This lithographic work exemplifies Miro's mastery of abstraction and his playful interrogation of figuration. The composition presents a delicate interplay between biomorphic forms and gestural mark-making, where a female figure emerges through fragmented shapes and carefully calibrated voids. The artist's characteristic vocabulary of dots, lines, and organic masses creates a sense of movement and ambiguity, inviting the viewer to oscillate between recognizing human and avian presences and surrendering to pure abstraction. The print's restrained color palette and confident linework demonstrate the technical precision underlying Miro's seemingly spontaneous visual language. This work belongs to the series executed in the 1970s, a period when Miro returned to the subject of woman and birds with renewed energy and refined technique. The artist's interest in exploring the dialogue between human and natural forms, particularly through the symbolic pairing of feminine figure and birds as agents of freedom and transformation, reaches a sophisticated maturity in these later works. The lithographic medium allowed Miro to achieve subtle tonal variations while maintaining the immediacy and gestural quality for which his practice is celebrated. For collectors, this piece represents a significant example of the artist's graphic output, capturing both the intellectual rigor and poetic sensibility that define his artistic legacy.

Seen at
Georgetown Frame Shoppe, Washington, D.C., United States

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