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Wednesday, March 11, 2026 |
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| Three previously unseen works by Joan Miró discovered in Nice ahead of Antibes auction |
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Joan Miró (18931983), Le Soleil, Mallorca. H: 39 cm L: 45,2 cm. Estimate: 30 00050 000 .
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PARIS.- Three previously unknown works on paper by the Spanish master Joan Miró have come to light in Nice and will soon appear on the market for the first time. The drawings, which had been quietly preserved for decades in the studio of artist and industrial designer Edmond Vernassa, will be offered at auction in Antibes on April 19, 2026, after being presented to the public in Paris during Drawing Week.
The rediscovery adds a fascinating chapter to Mirós long relationship with the French Riviera and with the influential art dealers Aimé Maeght and Marguerite Maeght, two of the most important champions of modern art in postwar Europe.
A discovery in a forgotten studio archive
The works surfaced unexpectedly while specialists were examining the former studio of Edmond Vernassa, a Nice-based plastic artist and industrial innovator known for running the Plexiglas workshop Plexi-Azur on the Port of Nice.
Auctioneer Guillaume Mermoz recalled the moment the drawings were rediscovered after being stored away for decades.
While visiting Vernassas former apartment, he noticed a carefully preserved framed drawing signed by Miró. The find sparked curiosity among the heirs, who remembered an old cardboard tube that had been kept in the studio but never opened in many years. Inside were two enormous rolled drawings.
Unfurling them became a memorable moment.
According to Mermoz, the identity of the artist was unmistakable the moment the lines appeared. The sweeping marks and constellation-like forms were immediately recognizable as Mirós unmistakable visual language.
Monumental designs created for the Maeghts
The centerpiece of the group consists of two monumental panoramic drawings created in 1971. Each measures nearly nine feet long, an unusually large scale for works on paper.
Both drawings were conceived as designs for a balcony railing in the Paris apartment of Aimé and Marguerite Maeght, located on Avenue Élisée Reclus in the citys 7th arrondissement. The couple reportedly commissioned Miró to create the design and then asked Vernassa to fabricate the final structure in Plexiglas.
The compositionsexecuted in India ink, colored paper collage, graphite, and touches of white paintwere pinned to the walls of Vernassas studio as working models while he prepared the Plexiglas realization. Small pinholes still visible along the edges suggest how the drawings once hung during the fabrication process.
Each of the panoramic works carries an estimate of 200,000 to 400,000.
A Mallorca sun that traveled across Europe
The third work in the group is much smaller but equally intriguing. The double-sided drawing, dated 1972, was created for a promotional campaign encouraging tourism to the island of Mallorca.
Titled Le Soleil, Mallorca, the work features Mirós radiant sun motif surrounded by circular forms and stars. The image became widely known when it was reproduced on approximately 100,000 posters distributed throughout Europe in the 1970s.
Miró later modified the design, simplifying it with white gouache and cutting the paper into an oval format before giving it to Vernassa. The drawing will be offered at auction with an estimate of 30,000 to 50,000.
A Riviera circle of artists and patrons
The discovery highlights the creative network that flourished on the French Riviera during the mid-20th century. Vernassa moved within a circle that included Miró and the Maeghts as well as other prominent figures such as Marc Chagall and Alexander Calder.
At the center of that network was the Maeght familys influential cultural project, the Fondation Maeght, which opened in 1964 and became one of the leading venues for modern art in Europe.
Miró himself contributed several major works to the foundation, including the celebrated Miró Labyrinth.
Works that reveal Mirós creative process
Beyond their rarity, the drawings offer insight into Mirós working methods. Although often viewed as finished artworks, many of his works on paper functioned as conceptual blueprints for larger architectural or sculptural projects.
Miró once summarized his artistic philosophy in simple terms: the pursuit of freedom meant the pursuit of simplicity. Sometimes, he said, a single line and a single color were enough to make a painting.
These newly rediscovered drawings capture that philosophy in action. From bold sweeping lines to playful constellations of shapes, they reveal the artist testing ideas on paper before translating them into larger forms.
Their upcoming appearance on the market is likely to attract strong interest from collectors, not only because the works have never before been offered publicly, but also because they illuminate the creative exchanges that shaped the Rivieras vibrant postwar art scene.
Before heading to the auction block in Antibes, the drawings will be shown in Paris during Drawing Week from March 25 to 30, offering the public a rare opportunity to see the rediscovered Miró works together for the first time.
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