The Reaper (Miró painting)

The Reaper ("El segador"), also known as Catalan peasant in revolt ("El campesino catalán en rebeldía") was a large mural created by Joan Miró in Paris in 1937 for the Spanish Republic’s pavilion at the Paris International Exhibition that year. It was one of his largest works, 5.5 metres (18 ft) high, but was destroyed or lost in 1938. Only a few black and white photographs survive.

Background

Miró moved with his family to Paris in 1936 to escape the Spanish Civil War. Until 1937 Miró had maintained a mostly apolitical stance, but he had Republican sympathies, and the mural was intended as a protest against the violence wracking his home country. He had created a stamp and poster, Aidez l'Espagne, earlier in 1937, which depicted a Catalan peasant wearing a traditional red hat (barretina) shaking his fist.

Replica (built in Barcelona in 1992) of the pavilion of the Spanish Republic at the Paris International Exhibition in 1937.
Replica (outside the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid) of "The Spanish people have a path that leads to a star"

The Spanish pavilion was built next to the German pavilion, to a modern design by Spanish architects Josep Lluís Sert (a student of Le Corbusier) and Luis Lacasa Navarro. It was a two story box of steel and glass, in red and brown, floating over a ground floor. Many paintings and sculpture by Spanish artists were displayed inside. A concrete sculpture by Alberto Sánchez Pérez, El pueblo español tiene un camino que conduce a una estrella ("The Spanish people have a path which leads to a star") was displayed outside; Mercury Fountain by Alexander Calder and Pablo Picasso's Guernica were on display on the ground floor.

Painting

Miró painted his mural in June 1937, directly onto six 6 feet (1.8 m) square celotex insulation panels forming part of the structure of the pavilion, at the end of a double-height open space for a stairway, visible from two floors. The work depicts a Catalan peasant wearing a barretina hat —symbol of Catalan identity— and holding up a sickle, sometimes misinterpreted by some as an explicitly Communist symbol but intended by Miró simply as the peasant's traditional agricultural implement and improvised weapon. The peasant's other hand makes the Republican clenched fist salute and his face was contorted into a cry of despair. The peasant had been used as a symbol of Catalan nationalism since the 17th century, and was a theme in Miró's work since the 1920s. Sert said in 1968 that Miró's work was inspired by a Catalan song, "Els Segadors" (The Reapers), which eventually became Catalonia's national anthem.[1]

The exhibition closed in November 1937, and the mural was dismantled along with the rest of the pavilion in early 1938. Miró donated the mural to the Spanish government and the six panels were packed to be transported to the Ministry of Fine Arts in Valencia. The mural was subsequently lost or destroyed, although other works by Miró on celotex from 1937 survive; Miró did not seem particularly concerned about the loss of his work, perhaps because it was overshadowed in the pavilion by Picasso's Guernica.

The mural survives only in a few surviving black and white photographs. It was mainly black (chin, cheek, eye, ear, teeth, left arm, body, teeth), white (face, nose, neck) and shades of red (cap, nose, cheek, neck, right arm), with green, blue and yellow in the background, including a blue star, and some exposed buff of the celotex ground.


I painted on a scaffolding directly in the very space of the building. I first made a few light sketches to know vaguely what I needed to do, but… the execution of this work was direct and brutal.

References

  1. 1 2 Meritxell, Beatriu. "A hymn of freedom". Tate etc, issue 22 (summer 2011). Retrieved 3 April 2014.
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