The 3×2 puzzle on offer is the latest offering from Puzzle Arte.
We would like to pay homage to Joan Mirò, who was born in April, by giving you the Kopf Mirò puzzle.
The offer includes the purchase of a minimum of 2 puzzles, we’ll give you the third one for free!
Kopf Mirò puzzle as a gift
Puzzle Arte wants to surprise you once again, giving you a springtime gift featuring a puzzle by an artist born in April. Joan Mirò , born in Barcelona on April 20, 1893, is a spectacular work by the Spanish painter, visually striking thanks to the predominant color red and his imposing eye.
Despite his artistic influences, including his friendship with Pablo Picasso , the painter remained undeterred because, from a young age, he had a clear idea of maintaining his originality. In fact, Mirò always loved colors, especially blue.
For this reason his painting is very colorful, very creative, and full of details.
The Spanish artist and sculptor loved to paint his nightmares and dreams, inhabited by moons, eyes, unreachable planets, as well as fantastical animals and birds. He enjoyed combining the strangest shapes and creating magical landscapes.
His way of painting was very particular, clearly very different from the ordinary and above reality.
Through shapes and colors, Mirò takes us into an imaginary world, where everything seems suspended.
Recurring themes in his paintings are stars, the sun, the moon, animals, and trees. But what he loved painting most were eyes.
Precisely the eye also represented in his painting Kopf.
He loved painting animals’ eyes, because through their expressions he knew if they were happy or sad, hungry or cold, or tired. So the artist tried to paint their eyes in every possible way. Big eyes, closed eyes, eyes of many colors, and animals he invented.
3×2 puzzle on offer
With our offer for the month of April we’re giving you the chance to take home 3 puzzles, paying only for 2.
We’ll give you the third puzzle for free.
We have chosen the 1000-piece Kopf Mirò puzzle from the Italian brand Impronte Editions.
In Mirò’s painting, we find a large, seemingly sad green eye looking down. It is the undisputed protagonist against a black and red background.
It is certainly a face and a head, just like the name of the painting “Kopf” which in German means head.
We don’t know whether he painted one of his many imaginary animals or a human face. But the presence of a nose, a wide-open mouth, and three hairs on the head are very evident.
The puzzle falls into the category of very difficult puzzles, despite being a 1,000-piece puzzle. The black background and the prevalence of only a few colors throughout the painting make it more difficult to find the right piece. Furthermore, the puzzle pieces have a standard grid, making the task even more challenging because all the pieces look similar.
The final result will be a real success, and the bold colors of the puzzle will fit perfectly with a modern and design furnishing style.
Mirò’s surrealism
Mirò’s reality is painted through inventive freedom, transformed into something different, into a system of signs.
Recognizable among all the works of surrealism is its trademark, where the imaginary takes the overwind.
Mirò signed the movement’s manifesto and the group’s members were delighted with this new, valuable recruit; the first was the poet André Breton, influenced by Sigmund Freud ‘s book “The Interpretation of Dreams”.
Everyone respected Miró for the style in which he depicted the realm of the unconscious experience. In fact, the poet André Breton himself later officially declared that Miró was “the most surrealist of all.”
