Casa Batlló opens "Gaudí-Miró-Gomis: Deconstructed," a collaborative exhibition running through January 2027 that pairs Joan Miró's sculptures with Aleix Gomis's photography inside Antoni Gaudí's iconic modernist building in Barcelona. Curators Joana Seguro and Ester Ramos have orchestrated the show with Fundació Joan Miró, threading together three pillars of Catalan creative history.
The exhibition deploys Tomorrow Bureau's digital archaeology techniques to reframe archival materials from these three artists. Rather than presenting their work chronologically or separately, the curators deconstruct conventional exhibition logic. Miró's abstract sculptural forms sit alongside Gomis's photographic documentation of Catalan landscape and culture, creating dialogue across mediums and decades.
Sound design shapes the immersive experience through regional soundscape composition, embedding the show within Barcelona's specific cultural geography. This multisensory approach transforms Casa Batlló from mere architectural backdrop into active participant. Gaudí's organic curves and mosaic surfaces, already deeply theatrical, now frame contemporary curatorial intervention.
The project reflects broader museum trends toward remixing historical collections. Rather than reverential display, "Deconstructed" interrogates how these three figures shaped Catalan modernism and contemporary visual culture. Miró's sculptural vocabulary, Gomis's archival impulse, and Gaudí's structural innovation converge not as historical footnote but as living conversation.
For fashion and design audiences, this exhibition signals how museums now treat heritage properties as malleable texts. Casa Batlló itself has evolved from residential masterpiece to cultural institution. Hosting "Gaudí-Miró-Gomis: Deconstructed" positions it as site where art historical narrative
