Archipelago 2019 Concert Series September 2019 For the third year running, the programme Archipelago encourages an understanding of the complexity of the contemporary world through listening, exploring what is understood by experimental music and the relation it bears to popular culture by way of different narratives and geographies. The present edition explores the concept of tradition: a term predominantly associated with conservatism and regression in the face of change, but with a meaning that implies the transfer of knowledge from one person to another and from one generation to the next. Activities Live Arts
Restoration of "Un mundo [A World]", by Ángeles Santos The work Un mundo (A World) by Valladolid artist Ángeles Santos was created in 1929 and made a huge impression on the intellectual circles at the time. The Collection Restoration
Ignacio Gómez de Liaño Gómez de Liaño is key to understanding the experimental poetry scene in Spain. The Collection
play pause stop 00:00 00:00 Download Conference of Carolina Santamarina, Magda Lipska and Sezin Romi The Institution and the Construction of Archives’ Value 26 november, 2019 Conference at the "Session 2. Political Economy of Archives" in the seminar of "Archives of the Commons III. Non-appropriable Archives?". Seminars and conferences
play pause stop Download Language as a deposit of memory and history An interview with Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
Miguel Ángel Campano D’après Esta exposición ofrece un recorrido retrospectivo de la pintura de Miguel Ángel Campano. Exhibitions
Jörg Immendorff The Task of the Painter This retrospective exhibition devoted to the work of Jörg Immendorff (Bleckede, Germany, 1945 –Düsseldorf, Germany, 2007) surveys a career spanning more than four decades, setting forth the key stages and transformations in the artist’s work: from the sociopolitical and political upheaval works he conceived between the 1960s and early 1980s, to the encoded paintings in the latter stages of his output. Exhibitions
Mario Merz Time Is Mute This retrospective on the work of Mario Merz (Milan, Italy, 1925 – Milan, Italy, 2003) surveys the provenance of a body of work suspended in a kind of pre-historic time, at odds with the discourse of modern-era history. This anachronistic perspective, apparent in the choice of materials and iconography, stems from the ideological and committed stance of an artist and his relation to the political and intellectual climate in Italy in the 1960s and 1970s, in addition to his rejection of pervasive capitalism and the American way of life after the Second World War.The search for mythology distinguished Merz’s work from his kindred contemporaries, for his archaism bore no relation to a melancholic yearning for the past, but instead was related to a razor-sharp critique of industrial and consumerist modernity. Exhibitions
Corbeaux (Crows) Interview to Bouchra Ouizguen As part of the performing arts series staged in collaboration with the Community of Madrid’s Teatros del Canal, the Museo Reina Sofía presents, over two sessions, Corbeaux (Crows), by choreographer Bouchra Ouizguen.Corbeaux is a kind of “living sculpture” with no contrivance, comprising raw elements, gestures, silences and, at times, the cries of a group of women dressed in black, their bodies creating figures and forms in the space they share with spectators. As the piece evolves, pre-conceived notions of time and space vanish, making way for a hard-to-classify lived experience intended to be both intimate and universal. Activities Live Arts
The Perturbable School The Perturbable School is an extended programme of studies, residence and cultural productions that runs in parallel to the exhibition Luis Camnitzer. Hospice of Failed Utopias (Museo Reina Sofía, 17 October 2018 - 4 March 2019). Education
Etel Adnan Interview by Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez with Etel Adnan about her collaboration with Delphine Seyrig 2018 Video, colour, sound, (extract 17’ 12’’) Archive Centre Audiovisuel Simone De Beauvoir Exhibitions
Ulrike Ottinger Interview by Giovanna Zapperi with Ulrike Ottinger about her collaboration with Delphine Seyrig February 2017 Video, colour, sound, 94’, (extracts 23’ 33’’) Archive Centre Audiovisuel Simone De Beauvoir Exhibitions
Defiant Muses Delphine Seyrig and the Feminist Video Collectives in France in the 1970s and 1980s Delphine Seyrig (1932-1990) is best known for the roles she played in French auteur cinema, most notably in Alain Resnais’ Last Year at Marienbad, directed by Alain Resnais. However, during the 1970s, she became indeed an activist working collaboratively within the framework of the feminist movement. Around 1975, together with activist video maker Carole Roussopoulos and translator Ioana Wieder, she produced a series of videos under the collective name “Les Insoumuses” (Defiant Muses). This exhibition explores the intersection between the histories of cinema, video and feminism in France.Focusing on the emergence of video collectives in the 1970s, the exhibition proposes to reconsider the history of the feminist movement in France through a set of media practices and looks at a network of creative alliances that emerged in a time of political turmoil. Exhibitions