Organised by the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, from the Portuguese State collection in storage at the Serralves Foundation, Joan Miró and the Language of Signs collection opened to the public at Palazzo delle Arti Napoli (PAN) on September 26th in Naples, Italy. This exhibition results from the museum’s wish to fulfil the mission to disclose Coleção Miró through an extensive and diversified programme of exhibitions of international touring and co-production. Curated by Robert Lubar Messeri, the exhibition will be on until February 23rd, 2020, and according to the museum, all the 80 masterpieces from the Catalan surrealist painter Joan Miró’s State collection, dated between 1924 and 1981 and selected for the exhibition in Naples, allow us to get to know more about the artist’s path who has a career of more than six decades. «In a practice that intertwined painting, drawing, sculpture, pottery, tapestry and engraving, Miró explored symbolic language, aligning his project with the cubist interest in the structure of representation and with the surrealistic experiences of writing and poetry», said a spokesperson for the museum.