The main artwork is the painting 'Carnaval d'Arlequin' by Joan Miró. It is a surrealist composition filled with a chaotic and imaginative array of floating, abstract shapes, lines, and whimsical, semi-humanoid figures. A prominent, winding black line cuts across the center, anchoring the disparate elements that seem to hover or dance within the space. A large, dark green circular form sits on the right side, balanced by a ladder-like structure on the far left.
The setting appears to be an interior space, suggested by a tilted table-like plane in the lower right and a window-like portal at the top right, which displays a dark blue rectangle containing a sharp black triangle and a red wavy flame. The composition is highly dense and non-linear, with various motifs including eyes, musical notes, geometric solids, and playful creatures scattered across the scene. The spatial layout is shallow, emphasizing the whimsical, dream-like quality of the characters.
The colour palette is earthy, dominated by a warm, mottled beige or tan background. Against this backdrop, the artist uses primary colours—bright reds, blues, and yellows—alongside strong blacks and whites to create sharp contrast and focus. The style is quintessentially modernist and surrealist, characterized by fluid, organic forms and calligraphic line work that evoke a sense of playfulness and mystery, typical of early 20th-century avant-garde art.