The Phillips Collection Presents Miró and the United States
Exploring the vibrant and reciprocal exchanges between Joan Miró and the burgeoning American art scene in a pivotal moment of 20th-century art.
WASHINGTON, DC—The Phillips Collection is pleased to present Miró and the United States, a major traveling exhibition organized in collaboration with the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona. This groundbreaking exhibition recounts a little-known yet decisive period of transatlantic exchange between Joan Miró and American artists, revealing how the United States informed his artistic development and influenced post-war art on both sides of the Atlantic. For Miró, the United States represented more than just geography—it offered expansive horizons, new audiences, and the possibility of creative freedom. Assembling significant loans and notable first-time showings, the exhibition stages rare juxtapositions that foreground the generative impact of these cross-cultural encounters, revealing how Miró and his American contemporaries mutually influenced one another and advanced new artistic directions. First shown at the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona, the exhibition opens in Washington, DC, on March 21, 2026, and runs through July 5, 2026.
While Miró’s relationship with France and his native Spain is well-documented, Miró and the United States centers the US as a key point of contact in the artist’s career. An established international figure by the 1940s, Miró engaged in the US with new ideas, large-scale projects, public commissions, and an influential network of American artists, institutions, and collectors. His partnership with his longtime dealer Pierre Matisse, his seven visits to the United States between 1947 and 1968, and two retrospectives at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1941 and 1959) all proved instrumental. Coming from a Spain devastated by the Franco dictatorship, the United States represented for Miró not only a creative frontier but also a landscape of hope, democracy, innovation, and endless possibilities.
“Presenting this exhibition in Washington, DC, underscores art’s role in fostering cross-cultural exchange and affirms the Phillips as a space where global conversations in modern art unfold,” says Jonathan P. Binstock, Vradenburg Director & CEO of The Phillips Collection. “At a moment when the geopolitics of culture are being reexamined, Miró’s transatlantic journey feels acutely relevant. His movement between Spain and the United States—from repression to optimism, from constraint to openness—speaks powerfully to the role of art as both a personal and political act. The Phillips Collection invites visitors to reflect on this history and to imagine broader horizons.”
The exhibition brings together approximately 75 works—paintings, sculptures, works on paper, films, and archival material—from American and European collections, including significant loans from the Fundació Joan Miró. Major works by more than 30 American artists whose paths intersected with Miró’s, among them Alexander Calder, Louise Bourgeois, Lee Krasner, Jackson Pollock, Helen Frankenthaler, Norman Lewis, and Adolph Gottlieb, represent two generations of Abstract Expressionists. Together, the artworks chart a dynamic period of artistic dialogue and experimentation.
Miró’s interactions with American artists spurred some of his most inventive work, from sculptural explorations informed by Calder and Bourgeois to gestural, energetic painting in conversation with Pollock and Abstract Expressionism. Creative exchanges with architect Josep Lluís Sert expanded Miró’s ambitions for murals, public art, and monumentality. Through repeated visits to the United States, Miró met artists in their studios, collaborated on prints and architectural projects, and closely followed exhibitions at galleries and museums, connections that transformed his practice and reverberated across post-war American art.
Highlights of Miró’s work include Le Renversement (1924) and Personnage lançant une pierre à un oiseau (1926), which helped launch his reputation in the US early in his career; the monumental Mural Painting, 20 March 1961 (1961), on loan for the first time from Harvard Art Museum; and 22 pochoirs on paper from his Constellations series of 1959.
“Miró and the United States reframes Miró’s legacy by tracing the exchanges his work ignited with a rising generation of American artists—encounters that accelerated modern art on both sides of the Atlantic,” says Elsa Smithgall, Chief Curator at The Phillips Collection and curator of the museum’s presentation in collaboration with Marko Daniel, Matthew Gale, and Dolors Rodríguez Roig from the Fundació Joan Miró. “The exhibition is a glowing testament to the vitality of transnational exchange as a driver for experimentation in contemporary art. We invite audiences to rediscover a pioneering Catalan artist whose art of human feeling continues to resonate today.”
By tracing the fertile exchange between Miró and American artists, Miró and the United States deepens understanding of the artist’s legacy and the transatlantic networks that defined the post-war era.
Featured Artists
Louise Bourgeois
Alexander Calder
Elaine de Kooning
Willem de Kooning
Perle Fine
Sam Francis
Herbert Ferber
Helen Frankenthaler
Arshile Gorky
Adolph Gottlieb
Grace Hartigan
Franz Kline
Lee Krasner
Norman Lewis
Len Lye
Alice Trumbull Mason
Peter Miller
Joan Mitchell
Joan Miró
Robert Motherwell
Louise Nevelson
Barnett Newman
Isamu Noguchi
Alfonso Ossorio
Jackson Pollock
Jeanne Reynal
Mark Rothko
Rufino Tamayo
Sonja Sekula
Theodoros Stamos
Janet Sobel
Michael Corinne West
EXHIBITION SUPPORT
This exhibition is organized for The Phillips Collection by Elsa Smithgall, in collaboration with Marko Daniel, Matthew Gale, and Dolors Rodríguez Roig, at the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona.
The Phillips Collection gratefully acknowledges Northern Trust as the Presenting Sponsor of Miró and the United States in Washington, DC.

Special thanks to the Estate of Toni A. Ritzenberg for lead support of this exhibition.
Essential support is provided by Dina and George Perry as well as the Ednah Root Foundation.

This exhibition is also made possible by The Kristina and William Catto Foundation, John and Gina Despres, Robert and Debra Drumheller, The Marion F. Goldin Charitable Fund, Paul W. Killian and Carole Goodson, Susan Lee and Stephen Saltzburg, and Reid Walker.
Additional support is provided by Dr. Heather McPherson.
With thanks to the international tour sponsors of Miró and the United States
Supported by

With the collaboration of

EXHIBITION CATALOGUE
The show is accompanied by a 296-page publication containing 260 illustrations, as well as new contributions from renowned scholars on the subject of Miró’s artistic evolution.
IMAGE GALLERY:
High-resolution press images are available upon request. Please contact Lauryn Cantrell, lcantrell@phillipscollection.org.
IMAGE: Joan Miró, Le Soleil rouge (The Red Sun), 1948, Oil on canvas, 36 1/4 × 28 3/4 in. (92 × 73 cm), The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Acquired 1951 © Successió Miró / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris 2025
ABOUT THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION
The Phillips Collection, America’s first museum of modern art, was founded in 1921. The museum houses one of the world’s most celebrated Impressionist and American modern art collections and continues to grow its collection with important contemporary voices. Its distinctive building combines extensive new galleries with the former home of its founder, Duncan Phillips. The Phillips’s impact spreads nationally and internationally through its diverse and experimental special exhibitions and events, including its award-winning education programs for educators, students, and adults; renowned Phillips Music series; and dynamic art and wellness and Phillips after 5 events. The Phillips Collection’s extensive community partnerships include Phillips@THEARC, the museum’s satellite campus in Southeast DC. The Phillips Collection is a private, non-government museum, supported primarily by donations.