Gaudí-Miró-Gomis
Deconstructed

8 JULY 2026 - JANUARY 2027, CASA BATLLÓ, BARCELONA

Co-organized with the Fundació Joan Miró and developed by the studio Tomorrow Bureau, Gaudí–Miró–Gomis: Deconstructed explores three key 20th-century Catalan figures, bringing the original works of the three creators into dialogue with unprecedented digital installations.

The exhibition brings together original works by Joan Miró—sculptures and graphic works—alongside photographs by Joaquim Gomis, whose perspective was key to the dissemination and modern reinterpretation of Gaudí’s work.

A contemporary layer of audiovisual, sonic, and digital pieces is integrated into this historical collection, reinterpreting the works through animation, 3D scanning, and generative artificial intelligence to create an immersive environment that expands their perception.

Tomorrow Bureau’s interventions allow works to be examined from new perspectives. Through these processes, forms are analyzed, reconstructed, and transformed, revealing material and structural dimensions that remain invisible to the naked eye.

EXHIBITION COMISSION

EXHIBITION COMISSION

Gaudí-Miró-Gomis
Deconstructed

[ FULL STORY HERE ]
EXHIBITION COMISSION
Fragment of the engraving from the "Gaudí" series. Gaudí XIII, Joan Miró, 1979. Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona.
8 JULY 2026 - JANUARY 2027, BARCELONA

8 JULY 2026 - JANUARY 2027, BARCELONA

Casa Batlló
Contemporary

[ FULL STORY HERE ]
8 JULY 2026 - JANUARY 2027, BARCELONA

—What joy it is to come to understand, in a landscape, a little blade of grass —why look down on it?— a blade of grass as graceful as a tree or a mountain. Aside from the so-called primitives and the Japanese, almost everyone neglects something so divine. Everyone looks for and paints only the great masses of trees or mountains, without hearing the music of blades of grasses and small flowers, and without paying attention to the little stones in a ravine, so gracefully.

JOAN MIRÓ TO JOSEP FRANCESC RÀFOLS, 1918

Joaquim Gomis, Joan Miró, Mme. Matisse and Joan Prats on the terrace of Casa Batlló, Odette Gomis, 1946. Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona and Fons Joaquim Gomis, deposited in the National Archive of Catalonia. © Hereus by Joaquim Gomis, 2026.

Gaudí, Miró and Gomis
Modernity, Art, and Life

Antoni Gaudí’s work was a constant source of admiration for Joan Miró and Joaquim Gomis. Each, within their own discipline, captured the architect’s creative essence and championed his modernity.

From an early age, Miró showed an interest in nature similar to that of Gaudí and, just like the architect, he achieved a synthesis of his artistic language through the observation of natural elements.

When Miró sought to move beyond the realm of painting during the 1940s and 1950s, he became interested in the sculptural quality of Gaudí's work and his technical procedures, as well as his desire to integrate art and life.

For his part, during the 1940s, Gomis began to photograph Gaudí’s work and Miró’s creative environments. His ability to capture the architect’s work through detailed photographs, which he alternated with wide shots, was instrumental in highlighting Gaudí’s modernity and, at the same time, revealing the parallels between him and Miró. Miró himself would state: “I believe that in my way of working there are great affinities with Gaudí.” — Joan Miró, notes, c. 1942-1943.

[ @FUNDACIOMIRO ]

Tomorrow Bureau
Intersection of design, research, and narrative

Tomorrow Bureau is a London-based creative studio working across moving image, spatial design, and digital methodologies. Founded in 2019, the studio operates at the intersection of design, research, and narrative, developing projects that engage with contemporary cultural and technological shifts while examining how these forces shape new visual and perceptive possibilities. Their practice combines creative direction with an experimental, process-driven approach, balancing curiosity and play with clear intent.

Working with a diverse and ever-evolving suite of digital tools, Tomorrow Bureau creates high-resolution visual works that uncover new narratives and relationships within their themes. Their approach treats image-making as a form of research, utilizing advanced digital processes to translate complex ideas into rich, unexpected visual experiences.

In addition to its ongoing research initiatives, the studio has collaborated with world-leading brands such as Chanel, Dior, Nike, Prada, and Apple. Its work is progressively expanding into spatial and exhibition contexts, engaging with cultural institutions and research projects that explore more immersive and multisensory formats.

EXHIBITION TICKETS

+Gaudí-Miró-Gomis Deconstructed