A guide to Joan Miró’s prints
Specialist Murray Macaulay turns the spotlight on the Catalan artist’s prolific, ‘playfully improvisational’ printmaking, from literary visions to works of pure abstraction — illustrated with lots offered at Christie’s

Joan Miró (1893-1983), Makemono, 1950-55. Lithograph in colours on natural chanton silk, signed in red oil paint, numbered 44/50, published by Maeght, Paris, with wooden batons and rolled as a scroll (as issued), in the original wooden box, with a carved and coloured lid, lock and key, and a painted and lacquered design on the inner lid. Image & sheet: 415 x 9850 mm (approx.). Box: 580 x 920 x 145 mm. Estimate: £10,000-15,000. Offered in Prints and Multiples until 25 September 2025 at Christie’s Online
‘A kaleidoscopic game of infinite possibilities’ — this was how French writer Michel Leiris described the art created by his friend Joan Miró. If the Catalan artist is remembered principally as a painter, it’s worth pointing out that his artistic curiosity wasn’t satisfied by oil on canvas alone. Over a seven-decade career, he also worked in sculpture, ceramics, tapestry and, most prolifically, prints.
Like his compatriot Pablo Picasso, Miró had an unwavering commitment to printmaking. And similarly to Picasso, he created more than 2,000 works in the medium. It’s often said that Miró’s fondness for calligraphic lines — such a distinctive feature of his paintings — lent itself naturally to graphic work.
‘In terms of both the quality and quantity of his output, Joan Miró was one of the most important printmakers of the 20th century,’ says Murray Macaulay, head of Prints and Multiples at Christie’s in London.
‘Miro’s approach to making prints was playfully improvisational,’ explains the specialist. ‘He would cut up proofs and rearrange the elements, collating the pieces together in new patterns, adding daubs of colour in crayon, or glyph-like marks in India ink, and writing extensive instructions to his printer. It was a process of finding the image through experiment — embracing accident, but also controlled and methodical.’
Miró’s literary prints
The son of a watchmaker, Miró was born in Barcelona in 1893. He moved to Paris in the early 1920s and soon joined the Surrealist movement led by André Breton. He also befriended a host of avant-garde writers, such as Antonin Artaud, Paul Eluard, Max Jacob and Tristan Tzara.
The first prints Miró ever made were illustrations for Tzara’s 1930 book of poems, L’Arbre des Voyageurs. Literary sources would prove to be a constant inspiration for him, with notable examples including Alfred Jarry’s play Ubu Roi, Stephen Spender’s poem Fraternity and Saint Francis of Assisi’s medieval text Canticle of the Sun.
Joan Miró (1893-1983), L’Arbre des voyageurs: Plate III, 1930. Lithograph on wove paper, signed and dedicated pour Henriette, en toute amitié in pencil, numbered 4/10, a proof with wide margins, before the book edition with this lithograph of 100 published by Editions de la Montagne, Paris. Image: 235 x 155 mm. Sheet: 358 x 274 mm. Estimate: £1,800-2,500. Offered in Prints and Multiples until 25 September 2025 at Christie’s Online
Miró produced an edition of the last of these — Càntic del Sol (as per its title in Catalan) — with the leading Barcelona publisher Editorial Gustavo Gili in 1975. Comprising a portfolio of 33 prints, it marked a peak of Miró’s printmaking.
Saint Francis had written his text during a period of blindness in the mid-13th century. It expressed his ecstatic vision of man and nature as one — something Miró strove to emulate through his idiosyncratic visual vocabulary of ciphers, symbols and squiggles.
‘In no way should any of the artist’s prints be considered “mere illustrations” for a given text or book,’ says Macaulay. ‘They were parallel creations: fine works of art in their own right.’
Techniques and collaborations
‘Miró’s prints can broadly be broken down into three categories,’ Macaulay says, ‘which, essentially, are the three main techniques he used: intaglio [ie, drypoint and etching], lithograph and carborundum’.
In each case, he developed a close working relationship with masters of respected printing ateliers. The first of these was Roger Lacourière, a master in intaglio (who also produced Picasso’s prints series La Suite Vollard). One of Miró’s successes with Lacourière was the 1933 drypoint Daphnis et Chloé, in which a goatherd playing a reed-pipe charms two female bathers from the sea. Miró’s lines are as soft and lyrical as the tune being played.

Miró at Mourlot Studios in Paris, checking the printing of lithograph plate 7 for his ‘Album 13’, published by Maeght Editeur. 1948. Photo: © Herbert List / Magnum Photos
Another major printer he worked with was Stanley William Hayter, initially in Paris and then in New York (where the latter moved at the start of the Second World War). Hayter was renowned for his experiments with intaglio and pioneered a method of simultaneous colour printmaking known as ‘viscosity printing’. This involved the then-unusual practice of several colours being applied on a single plate.
Miró made many of his finest lithographs with a printer called Fernand Mourlot — in a working relationship that lasted from 1947 until the 1970s and included works such as the aforementioned Suites pour Ubu Roi. The prints made in Mourlot’s atelier were, for the most part, vibrantly colourful. However, the series considered to be Miró’s masterpiece in lithography — his Barcelona Series — was executed in black and white.
Comprising 50 images, made between 1939 and 1944, it was the artist’s response to the Spanish Civil War. It features an array of grotesque characters with sharp-pointed tongues, arms like hooks and noses like elephant trunks — all making plain the contempt he had for the conflict that had ravaged his homeland.
Joan Miró (1893-1983), L’oiseau de nuit, 1962. Aquatint in colours on BKF rives wove paper, signed in pencil, numbered 38/50 (there were also some hors commerce impressions), published by Maeght Editeur, paris. Image & sheet: 552 x 762 mm. Estimate: £5,000-7,000. Offered in Prints and Multiples until 25 September 2025 at Christie’s Online
Miró began his carborundum prints in the late 1960s, and these, says Macaulay, represent ‘the culmination and final development of his graphic work’.
They involved a type of engraving in which an abrasive ground known as carborundum (or silicon carbide, to give it its scientific name) was mixed with a binding agent and applied to a printing plate. The final prints — such as Equinoxe — tend to have a rich, velvety, granulated surface that creates what Macaulay describes as ‘a remarkable visual equivalence to the rich surface texture of his paintings’.
As the critic Jacques Dupin wrote in his monograph on the artist, ‘carborundum gave Miró… engravings-cum-paintings that might be hung on the wall, not stashed away in a folder… These are monumental, not merely dimension-wise, but also by their brilliance and depth, and the volcanic splashes animating them.’
Miró’s move towards pure abstraction
From 1940 until his death in 1983, Miró lived between Barcelona and Mallorca (the Spanish island where his wife, Pilar, was from). He still travelled extensively, however, and made frequent visits to printing studios as far away as Hayter’s in New York.
Joan Miró (1893-1983), Le Béluga, 1975. Aquatint in colours with carborundum on wove paper, watermark MAEGHT, signed in pencil, numbered 26/50, published by Maeght, Paris. Plate: 747 x 1153 mm. Sheet: 1215 x 1597 mm. Estimate: £35,000-45,000. Offered in Prints and Multiples until 25 September 2025 at Christie’s Online
By that time, he’d left Surrealism behind. As he grew older, his art — broadly speaking — became more abstract, and Miró was cited as an influence by most of the Abstract Expressionists.
The market for Miró prints
When it comes to his paintings, the highest prices tend to be fetched for Surrealist works from the 1920s. Macaulay argues, however, that the market for Miró’s prints follows different rules.
‘His colourful late prints are the most widely appreciated, for their impressive scale and wonderfully coruscated surface created by the carborundum,’ he says. ‘Everyone will have their own favourite, though. I myself love the small, quirky etchings he made with Hayter in the 1940s, which are full of wit and visual delight.’
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And what about the would-be collector who’s new to Miró’s graphic work? Can Macaulay suggest the best prints to look out for? ‘I’d recommend Miro’s lithographs,’ says the specialist. ‘They’re relatively inexpensive and — in the case of those made with Mourlot and, later, Aimé Maeght — beautifully printed by two of the great workshops of the 20th century.’
Prints and Multiples (live for bidding until 25 September) and Contemporary Edition: London (until 30 September) are on view at Christie’s in London until 25 and 30 September respectively
Related artists: Joan Miró