JOAQUIM MIR TRINXET (Barcelona, 1873 - 1940).
"Raval Square, Coll de Nargò, 1934.
Oil on canvas.
Signed and dated in the lower right corner.
Work published in:
- "Cien años de pintura en España y Portugal -Tomo VI- pág. 104 y 105 (double page).
- Mir en Andorra", Francisco Miralles, cat. nº56 page 11 (complete page).
Work referenced in the Marçal Barrachina Archive.
Provenance: Private collection, Andorra.
Size: 66 x 82 cm; 92 x 108 cm (frame).
Joaquim Mir presents us with a masterful rural landscape starring a group of humble houses located in the foreground. In spite of the impressionist character, Mir takes pleasure in the details, representing the inhabitants of the village of Art Urgell in Lleida, animals that roam the cobbled streets and even tiles that decorate the stuccoed walls. Mir performs a magnificent plastic exercise, recreating himself in the textures and in the vibration of the masses of color, reflected by a long, loose, dense and enormously expressive brushstroke, the absolute protagonist of the work.
Joaquim Mir studied at the School of Fine Arts of San Jordi in Barcelona and in the workshop of the painter Luis Graner. He soon felt uncomfortable with the official teaching, anchored in a conception of realist painting, so in 1893 he founded with other colleagues the "Colla del Safrà", to investigate together in the pictorial initiatives of the end of the century. In 1896 they even participated as a group in the III Exhibition of Fine Arts and Artistic Industries, to which Mir presented two works: "La huerta del rector" and "El vendedor de naranjas". Also, since 1897 he frequented the artistic environment of "Els Quatre Gats", which helped him to mature in the compositional study of landscapes with figures in different planes of depth. During these years he took part in the Fine Arts Exhibitions of Barcelona, in their editions of 1894, 1896 and 1898. Winner of a second medal at the Madrid Exhibition of 1899, that same year he moved to the capital in order to compete for a scholarship in Rome. When he was unsuccessful, he went with Santiago Rusiñol to Mallorca, on a trip that would be a definitive turning point in his career. Mir was dazzled by the Mallorcan landscape, which was an inexhaustible source of inspiration for him. From then on, the artist deployed a whole combination of impossible colors, the result of his personal interpretation of the majestic nature of the island. The brushstrokes became longer and became stains that almost made objects and spatial references disappear. In 1901 he exhibited the fruit of this first Mallorcan stage individually at the Sala Parés in Barcelona, and again obtained a second medal at the National Exhibition. In 1907 he obtained the first medal at the International Exhibition of Fine Arts in Barcelona. Since then, installed in Camp de Tarragona, he will not move from the landscape genre, but now the surrounding villages will be the protagonists of his painting. In 1917, when he was awarded the National Prize of Fine Arts, he received the definitive national recognition. In 1929 he won the first medal at the International Exhibition in Barcelona. The following year he won the medal of honor at the National Exhibition in Madrid, an award he had been pursuing since 1922. Although he was mainly a native painter, he had solo and group exhibitions in Washington, Paris, Pittsburg, New York, Philadelphia, Amsterdam, Buenos Aires and Venice. Mir is today considered the most outstanding representative of Spanish post-impressionist landscape painting. His work is preserved in the National Art Museum of Catalonia, the Prado Museum, the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum and the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid, among many others.