Joan Miró’s sculptures extend his playful, surrealist language into tangible form. He used unconventional materials, assembling found objects, bronze castings and painted surfaces into dynamic compositions that blur the line between the familiar and the fantastical. These works reflect his fascination with the organic world, often incorporating whimsical figures and biomorphic shapes. Infused with spontaneity, his sculptures retain the childlike wonder and bold simplicity seen in his paintings and drawings. Through an inventive, poetic approach to form and material, Miró’s three-dimensional works bring his dreamlike visual language into a new, tactile realm.