Popular University

Popular University

With the participation of Aurora Fernández Polanco, Rabih Mroué, Ziad Chakaroun, Carles Guerra, Peio Aguirre, Yayo Aznar and Marc Roig, among others

It now appears that the world is not the same since in 2011 we started to receive images about the taking over of squares: images taking over squares, to such extend that we do not longer think about how those images influences the Middle East riots and the campings at the Spanish squares, we are ready to understand how these riots have indeed modified the image nature. The images of “the actions” are not only documents of a politically agitated historical moment, instead they are attached to the bodies and they become inevitable part of their battle.

What interest us this time is to think together with images, from a certain distance, the necessary one to hold a position and see how some artistic productions have reflected on the making of images, on their performativity. We are also concern about analyzing how images´s free flow seem to be at risk at present: from Syria to Egypt, or even at the Spanish streets, where censorship threat flies over them.

The opening of this course coincide with the solo exhibition by Rabih Mroué at CA2M Image(s) mon amour, curated by Aurora Fernández Polanco, that will approach us to an art work where the involvement with the images gravitate from what they represent to what the images are capable of doing. This time, we will not talk about the hackneyed representation crisis, instead we will think about images´s transformation capacity.

Performance-Lecture by Rabih Mroué on Friday 25th Octuber at 20:00 H.

PROGRAMMING

WEDNESDAY 23 OCT. 18:30 H.
Aurora Fernández Polanco.
Aurora Fernandéz Polanco, Fine Arts professor at Universidad Complutense of Madrid. She leads the investigation group “Images from art and rewriting of the narratives within the global visual culture”and the magazine Re-visiones (re-visiones.imaginarrar.net). Her writings, conferences and commissions have always been related to politics, memory, visuality and representation. She is curating the show Rabih Mroué. Image(s) mon amour.

FRIDAY 25 OCT. 20:00 H.
The pixelated revolution. Performance-Lecture by Rabih Mroué
Rabih Mroué developed his career as director, playwright, performer, essayist and visual artist, his work always reflects on the use of images for (and against) official narratives: from the Lebanese geopolitical reality to the massive production of images of the Syrian revolution. The Pixelated Revolution is a performative lecture on the use of cell phones and it main role mobilizing people during the revolutionary episodes, due to the nature of the shoot images, their reproduction and their quickly broadcasting.

WEDNESDAY 30 OCT. 18:30 H.
Round table moderated by Yayo Aznar
Yayo Aznar professor at the Fine Art History Department of UNED (National Distance Learning University), director of the collection Arte Hoy de Nerea, and editor of Arte actual. Lecturas para un espectador inquieto, Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid, 2012.

WEDNESDAY 6 NOV. 18:30 H.
El tiempo y la edad del ojo. Performative-Lecture by Ziad Chakaroun
Ziad Chakarounis is a Lebanese actor, performer and Arab-Spanish translator. He has been residing for long periods in Spain. El tiempo y la edad del ojo was inspired by texts and essays by Walid Sadek, artist and Lebanese writer, translated by Ziad Chakaroun, and reinterpretes images from Lebanon war and Civil war.

WEDNESDAY 13 NOV. 18:30 H.
Carles Guerra is chief curator at MACBA, artist, art critic and  Contemporary Art professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra. His work focuses on the usage of images within the education, communication means and contemporary art frameworks, as well as on the Post-Fordism political culture. He has been director of Barcelona Virreina Centro de la Imagen and curator of  exhibitions such as: Después de la noticia. Documentales postmedia (CCCB, 2003), 1979. Un monumento a instantes radicales (Virreina, 2011) or Ahlam Shibli. La casa fantasmal (MACBA, 2013)

WEDNESDAY 20 NOV. 18:30 H.
Peio Aguirre is art critic, independent curator and editor, lives and works in Donostia-San Sebastián. He “irregularly” writes for international magazines such as Afterall, A Prior Magazine, Flash Art, ExitExpress, e-flux journal among others, author of numerous monographic texts on contemporary artists. From 2000 to 2005, he was co-director of D.A.E. Donostiako Arte Ekinbideak. He has curated shows as Casco Issues X-The Great Method (co-edited with Emily Pethick), Casco Office for Art, Design and Theory, Utrecht (2007), Imágenes del otro lado, CAAM, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (2007), Arqueologías del futuro, sala rekalde, Bilbao (2007) and Asier Mendizabal, MACBA, Barcelona (2008). He writes “critic and metacoment” on his blog http://peioaguirre.blogspot.com

Free access to a single lecture, until full seating capacity reached.

 

 

Activity type
Dates
23 OCT — 20 NOV 2013
Topics
Entrance

It now appears that the world is not the same since in 2011 we started to receive images about the taking over of squares: images taking over squares, to such extend that we do not longer think about how those images influences the Middle East riots and the campings at the Spanish squares, we are ready to understand how these riots have indeed modified the image nature.

Subtitle
Universidad Popular
Categoría cabecera
Plazas
IMAGES THAT TAKE OVER THE SQUARES
Is it a cycle?
Disabled

«The conference one should give, is the conference one doesn't know, and one should make every attempt not to know it by the end either. The less we know, the higher we will be able to hold our heads when we sit before the audience.» Isidoro Valcárcel Medina

After five years of intense debate between the public and the conference givers, we are still unable to answer the question that forms the title of this course. We also continue to question how to put a creation as multi-faceted as that created by current-day artists into words. An art that is immaterial, fragile and mutable that can happen in any place and at any time. Perhaps the problem lies in adhering solely to the word, to academic theory and in attempting to translate what cannot be translated based on previous knowledge.  

This is why, in this sixth edition, we have invited artists, theoreticians and educators to take the course participants, and indeed themselves, towards the unexpected. The speakers, whether through an intervention in the space or due to the alteration of the academic logic of their discourse, will reflect on various matters that affect contemporary creation. Thus, we will combine the points of view of the different players involved in the art world to generate a dialogue between their ideas and a construction of meaning that does not solely depend on what is said, but also on what happens. 

These sessions will be complemented with contemporary art texts and a visit to the exhibition
Per/Form. How to do things with[out] words for the course participants.

CA2M develops a line of art education and contemporary thinking activities framed within the tradition of the popular universities. In these courses, some of the fundamental approaches to understanding and interpreting current art are dealt with. These activities are structured into two parts: the first consists of a guest speaker presenting a subject, while in the second a debate is opened on the subject for the participants to express their opinion.

 

PROGRAM

 

WEDNESDAY 19 FEB. 18:30 
INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE
Cris Blanco, Multi-disciplinary artist and Victoria Gil-Delgado, CA2M educator and curator
It would be so easy to have a set of unquestionable rules to help us finally understand contemporary art when we enter a museum feeling lost. Yet on the contrary, modern-day art invites us to question the immovable ideas and our role as passive spectators in front of the works. During this first session, we will lay the foundations for the course and invite participants to break their own rules of play.

 

 

 

 

WEDNESDAY 26 FEB. 18:30
MURDER BETWEEN THE LINES
Sandra Santana, poet and professor of philosophy at the University of Zaragoza
The author has died and the body has disappeared from the crime scene, but their blood still runs fresh on the paper and lines of ink. We will seek the clues left by the murderer in the Parisian studio of Roland Barthes, we will closely examine the moustache of Stéphane Mallarmé, and we will empty the pockets of Isidore Isou, Vito Acconci or Ewa Partum. Readers and spectators, now transformed into detectives, we will have to reconstruct the scene of the crime, find the body, discover the motive, and uncover the weapon that ended the victim's life.

 

 

WEDNESDAY 5 MAR. 18:30
FROM FLOOR TO CEILING
Yayo Aznar, professor of the History of Art Department of the UNED
Understanding, as a point of departure,  that art is «sacralized» by going, literally, from the floor to the ceiling, this talk will attempt to think through the political positions of the art proposals of Teresa Margolles (and other artists) to reinforce the possibility of an observation so self-interested that it is no longer capable of surviving without the public and even the private when it becomes a public problem.

 

 

WEDNESDAY 12 MAR. 18:30 
A SMALL CHANGE IN THE STATE OF THINGS
Beatriz Alonso, curator and researcher, and Carlos Granados, CA2M educator and artist
Contemporary art is replete with references to the everyday and more and more artists are poetically emphasizing ordinary situations, offering us new views and possibilities in relation to what surrounds us. In this session, we will not only talk about some of these proposals, we will also participate in a small change in the everydayness of the course, displacing its participants to a strange and unexpected place.

 

 

FRIDAY 14 MAR. 20:00 
LECTURE ON NOTHING BY JOHN CAGE
The experimental musician, John Cage, gave this conference (Lecture on Nothing) in 1949. At present, the work of John Cage is among the most influential in the current creation scene. This lecture reflects on indetermination, chance and the absurd as fundamental elements of art creation.

 

WEDNESDAY 19 MAR. 18:30 
PLACEMENT 2/B/ARTIST/. 
Eva Garrido and Yera Moreno, artists and educators. Together they make up the art group, Colektivof
Female art practice is positioned on the verges of placement/ displacement. Marked by this movement, this (non) place enables a precarious, provisional and necessary position to generate thought and action. It is precisely this constant «state of movement» that becomes a critical positioning from which to reflect on the power strategies that mark contemporary art in relation to gender/ sex.

 

This session is an invitation to cross the threshold and penetrate a space for debate in which we will discuss the relationship between art and feminism, the body as an ambiguous place of action, the (in)visible contributions of feminist thinking and the construction of subjectivity, among other subjects.

WEDNESDAY 26 MAR. 18:30
111-119 GENERALÍSIMO/CASTELLANA
Patricia Esquivias, artist and Pablo Martínez, CA2M Education and Public Activities Manager and associate professor of the History of Art at the Fine Arts Faculty, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
The construction of collective stories, images and ways of life goes hand in hand with the constructions of the city, its stories, the rumors and the gossip that flow through it. In this session, we suggest using a performative dialogue (naturally), to think about the public and the private, the city and its spaces, the bodies and the images. The city of Madrid, its past and its present will be the element that works as the vessel for this class.

 

WEDNESDAY 2 APR. 18:30 
TRUTH OR DARE
Lilli Hartmann, artist and David Armengol, independent curator and educator
Using the Truth or Dare game as a starting point, this session proposes an approach to art practices without having to talk about art. The structure of the game invites an exercise of expectation based on which fundamental concepts in the artist's work will be analyzed: the dialogue between what is true and what is false, the power of action, the real-time experience and the emotional and passionate capacity implied by living and working off art.

 

 

WEDNESDAY 9 APR. 18:30
CULTURE
Los Torreznos, artists and Ferran Barenblit, director of CA2M and curator of the Los Torreznos exhibition, Cuatrocientos setenta y tres millones trescientos cincuenta y tres mil ochocientos noventa segundos.

Los Torreznos will offer a lecture to discuss culture, that territory we move in. But, how to talk about something that surrounds us on all sides?

Activity type
Dates
19 FEB — 9 ABR 2014
Topics
Entrance

After five years of intense debate between the public and the conference givers, we are still unable to answer the question that forms the title of this course.

Subtitle
VI INTRODUCTORY COURSE TO CONTEMPORARY ART
Categoría cabecera
Universidad popular
BUT... IS THIS ART? 2014
Is it a cycle?
Disabled

Everyone dreams of flying, the artist Olga Diego tells us, but if you haven’t yet dreamed of flying, there is still time.

During the last school year Universidad Popular took up the challenge to bewitch us again with art, to rediscover the ability to inspire awe. Starting out from this idea, the museum’s educational department has conceived this year’s programme as a place where the incredible can happen because it makes us believe in it. The sessions will focus on thinking about or experimenting with occult practices related with art that subvert scientific logic and conventional forms of knowledge: art practices that deceive the eye, that work with the inexplicable and turn lead into gold.

The course will use a series of publications which will be available for consulting at the CA2M library. In addition, before each session, we invite participants to join in a group reading of a publication selected for the occasion.

CA2M organises further educational activities in contemporary art and thinking within the tradition of community adult education centres. Its courses address some of the fundamental issues for a proper understanding of art today. They are divided into two parts: the first consists in the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second consists in opening a debate to all participants. This structure can change to accommodate more experimental formats introduced by the individual guest speakers at each session.

SESSIONS

24 OCTOBER
Make Yourself Matter to Someone

Raisa Maudit is preparing a performative conference which will explore the laws of desire in force both in the practice of magic and the occult as well as in art. Through a survey of different occult practices ranging from the nineteenth century until the present moment and the core axes of her artistic and curatorial work, we will address questions on dissident identities, surviving the system, inhabiting darkness, and how to achieve your desires but only perishing a little in the attempt.

Magic is the definitive art. We understand Magic and the Occult as all those processes that are based on symbolism and imagination which, through actions and words, wish to affect their surroundings by engendering changes and transformations in natural laws, in space, in time, in bodies, in psyches and in identities. No form of magic is possible without putting it into practice. In magic, practice starts out from an almost suicidal openness to leap into the unknown and letting it hit you with all it has got. It is based on questioning each and every one of the things that we take for granted. Magic hopes to alter the very weft of reality itself. Magic and Art have points in common such as speculation and the allegorical but at once they have a beef in which Art always loses out. We will take a look at Dion Fortune and psychic self-defence, The Craft, otherkin identities, vampires as the definitive evolution, demonology, Magic Battles, neuro-divergent rebellion, and how to get your hands on a free home.

Raisa Maudit is an artist and curator
http://raisamaudit.com/

31 OCTOBER
Queer Spirituality as Resistance. Yet Another Path in the Conspiracy.

Diego Rambova will lead us on an exercise in fragmentary mapping through a range of contemporary performative practices which are presented as a kind of common ground between new age and queer politics, revealing how, both for the artists who propose them but also in their own right, the confluence is a powerful site of agency, resistance and transcendence. Represented by artists of different ages and from different origins around the world from the seventies onwards, they appear under many different guises. But the truth is that they all respond—as we shall see—to the same “conspiracy”.

Diego Rambova is an artist and researcher.
www.diegorambova.com 

7 NOVEMBER
Performance Lecture for Flying

Is it possible to fly? We all know that you can, but … What happens when you realise that you can fly on your own? This lecture explores the irrational desire to fly and its materialisation in artistic creation, in manifold studies and calculations, prior sketches in flight books, failed attempts and disappointments. And also the involvement of the public. Flight artefacts built from a sculptural gaze and attempts to fly as performance art.

We will take a look at, among others, the projects created by Olga Diego since 2003, when she managed to take to flight on the beach of Carabassí in Alicante, as well as other flights with cameras in the Western Sahara and in Salamanca, or more interactive projects like the one developed by the University of California in 2017.

Olga Diego is an artist
http://olgadiego.blogspot.com/ 

14 NOVEMBER
Just as Up is Down, Down is Up

In this lecture Marian Garrido has devised a walkthrough of the symbolic dimensions of lost forms of knowledge and the narrative constructed through the bonds between art and magic or alchemy. Is there really any difference between an extract from The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge, in which Carlos Castaneda learns to fly guided by the expert hands of a shaman, and the experiences related by Terence McKenna or Douglas Rushkoff in Cyberia in a framework of comparison with online culture; virtual realities, flight simulators, videogames or the visual rendering of almost vaporous omniscience in Gaspar Noé’s Enter the Void and neo-touristic journeys in Google Earth?

Marian Garrido is an artist and researcher
www.mariangarrido.com 

21 NOVEMBER
Angels of Anarchy. Modern Shamans, Artists of the Invisible

Servando Rocha reveals to us a secret tradition that unites art and magic through the masked figure, both in popular culture as well as in movements like Dada or Surrealism which were fascinated by the primitive, the mask, the world of spirits and the unknown. The intervention includes a Cabinet of Curiosities of the world of secret societies and masking as a tactic but also as transformative potential.

Servando Rocha is a writer and editor.
www.servandorocha.com 

28 NOVEMBER
From Spell to Spell, from (Magical) Gesture to Gesture

Ana Contreras invites us to a performative lecture which will uncover the ways in which bonds between feminism and witchcraft have been woven over time, from the medieval period to postmodernism. It will take us on a secret journey through its appearances and persecutions from which we will be able to extract lessons about its dangers and its powers. A witches coven that discloses the importance of occult practices and performative tactics, as well as their conscious and unconscious use in contemporary art.

Ana Contreras is a stage director, researcher and lecturer

Anyone interested in art today. No prior knowledge necessary.

More information at actividades.ca2m@madrid.org / 912 760 227

Activity type
Dates
Wednesday 24 OCTUBRE — 28 Novembre 2018
Target audience
Topics
Entrance

During the last school year Universidad Popular took up the challenge to bewitch us again with art, to rediscover the ability to inspire awe.

Subtitle
NTRODUCTION TO ART TODAY COURSE MAKING MAGIC. ART PRACTICES RELATED WITH WITCHCRAFT, ILLUSIONISM AND ALCHEMY
Categoría cabecera
Universidad Popular 2018
POPULAR UNIVERSITY 2018
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
18:30 — 20:30

DIRECTED BY SELINA BLASCO

We are now setting out on another new course with this question, introduced a long time ago with the advent of modernism. Surprisingly, in our hyper-consumerist society, it is still as valid and seemingly unexhausted as ever. We use it as a weapon and as a shield, and also as a refuge. We manipulate it and manhandle it. Sometimes, the question has been asked from an incredulous pose (after all, one has to admit that, for whoever actually asks such a question, the answer is no), but never one of suspicion. We believe in art and especially in the enigma it hides. That is why the answer does not have to be yes, nor do we necessarily wish to convince anybody of anything. The answer is that there is no answer or, perhaps, that we don’t know what it is, that we have no idea.

And so, we are stuck with the question, and in this year’s course we will give it another turn of the screw. Instead of pretending that there is a certain type of art which we accept that is difficult to define as such, what if we were to undermine all the certainties with which we have treated art as we have known it? Presupposing a brand of art that requires explanation means establishing a division between a person who doubts and a person who has the answers. But we are going to take a less categorical approach. We will rethink the practices associated with accepted disciplines (drawing, painting, sculpture, musical sounds or design), with supports, places of exhibitions and audiences that seem natural but, let’s be clear, doing so from the here and now. And with renewed urgency. What intrigues us is what is supposedly self-evident.

This course has no title but it could be something related with the desire to fold the tasks of art. The art of folding: a course in origami.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges, aimed particularly at young and adult students. The courses it offers address some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today, to use it to think. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience. The sessions at CA2M are complemented with individual work by the persons enrolled in the course with texts handed out before the beginning of each session.

14 FEBRUARY
Painting is Mysterious
Selina Blasco

Following Ángel González García’s observation that it is best to paint without having an idea, we ask ourselves: How should we engage with painting? In this session we will try to do so from this idea of not knowing, but situating it elsewhere, in the ignorance of someone who does nothing, who paints nothings. We will ask people who paint, in order to see what it is that we can find out. We already have one answer, and we like it so much that we have chosen it as the title of the session. It bodes well. We are also going to work out some way of building a narration of this exercise in experimentation on the ground, in fieldwork. Painting wants to be engaged with Selina Blasco is a lecturer in History of Art at the School of Fine Art, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

21 FEBRUARY
Contemporary Visual Culture and Drawing. An approach from art practice
Azucena Vieites

Azucena Vieites focuses her practice on graphic processes and techniques of expression, engaging with contemporary visual culture through drawing and silkscreen printing. Multiplicity, fragments and repetition inasmuch as a form of breaking away from the absolute image and linear forms of narration or the ephemeral nature of the artwork are brought to the surface as basic aspects of her production. Taking a few examples from her practice and other works by various artists exploring similar lines of investigation, in this session we will reflect on drawing as a form of representation and insight into our surrounding environs at a specific moment in time.

At the same time, the examples used will be interrelated with some of the issues posed by the German filmmaker Ulrike Ottinger; in each one of her films this artist works with the intention of finding a suitable form that has to do with colours, with time, with dramatic structure and with the way of combining the images.

Azucena Vieites is an artist and teacher at the Schools of Fine Art of Madrid and of Salamanca. Among her most noteworthy solo shows are Woollen Body, Carreras Múgica (Bilbao, 2015) and Tableau Vivant, Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid, 2013).

28 FEBRUARY
An Amateur Carpenter
Carlos Granados

I like to think ideas and to do things. To move from the mind to the hand. And from the hand to the mind. From conceptual artist to carpenter. Have art and carpentry anything to do with each other? Duchamp said that you should only travel with a tooth brush, without any baggage. When I studied art, my referents were those kinds of artists, people who worked with ideas. Now I am working with the plane my grandfather used and it makes me think of his job. Suddenly I see myself accumulating, working with wood, making things. I like projects that take a long time. My friend Ángel always says: “Measure twice. Cut once”. I think that sums up a carpenter’s work very well. A painstaking, patient and slow trade. And a job well done.

Carlos Granados is one of the heads of CA2M’s Department of Education.
 

7 MARCH
Silenced Histories, Forgotten Sounds
José Luis Espejo and Andrea Zarza

How do people position themselves in the public space with sound? This question is a pretext to address narratives focused on the work of blacksmiths, bells and sirens, noise barrages, protest rallies, carnivals and rituals that, if they are not different, at least they are parallel to those that structure the history of music and art. Sound, noise, the murmur of an enraged community and the reverberations of work are quasi-archaeological storylines dissenting with those of official historiography. Charivaria, an exhibition curated by José Luis Espejo and Andrea Zarza at CentroCentro Cibeles between October 2017 and January 2018, showcases a series of works that address these learnings, very often handed down orally or by allegories, which have been minimised by academic disciplines. Artists like Grupal Crew Collective, who take the sounds from parties by collectives without a consecrated identity, or Cuidadoras de Sonidos, Rafael SMP and Vivian Caccuri, who give voice to the inhabitants of neighbourhoods destroyed by the advance of modernism, and Xabier Erkizia, whose work with the culture of ox-carts attunes the hearing to a sound displaced by the hegemony of the urban, are all convinced that their works expand our conception of art. Archives, sounds and writings enable us to recover silenced histories and forgotten sounds in order to rethink genealogies of sound art and music. A display of enigmatic contents surprises the visitors and rarefies the gallery space.

Andrea Zarza is an archivist with a BA in Philosophy. She works as a curator in the British Library sound archive. Her record label, Mana Records, which she runs together with Matthew Kent, is dedicated to publishing works on the intersection between contemporary sound and the archive.

José Luis Espejo is a member of the team at Radio Reina Sofía, Mediateletipos and the Master in Music Industry and Sound Studies at Universidad Carlos III in Madrid. He has developed curated projects in Madrid and in Donostia-San Sebastián 2016.
 

14 MARCH
A Call to Sensuality
Elena Alonso

Defending the value of crafts and the fight to prevent them from disappearing is nothing new. In the early twentieth century, artisan practices were viewed as a revolutionary strategy against industrialisation and capitalism, taking a stance against the unstoppable dehumanisation of work and production. By assigning it qualities such as resistance, skill, authenticity, goodness and self-determination, more than one century ago, the idea was to try to slow down the disappearance of making things by hands due to mass production.

Today, with the digital revolution and late-capitalism, we are witnessing a warped revival of these desires and problems. The conflict leads to a call for sensuality which means that crafts are once again referred to as an exploration of “embodied” relationships, materiality, affect, ecology, localism and sentient intelligence. But there are many questions waiting to be answered... Is there anything contemporary about artisan practices? What is their place within the present system? What is their meaning in terms of resistance? What is the life drive that makes us cling to them?

This session will look at examples of contemporary artists and designers whose working processes are closely related with crafts, focusing on the material quality of objects and the affective nature of their production. An approach to Art and Design to think about the meaning of crafts today, the anachronistic or inevitable nature of these practices, and the art market as the realm in which to keep them alive. All these issues could equally respond to the question: Why do artists keep painting and drawing?

Elena Alonso works mainly with drawing, combining it with other disciplines like architecture, crafts and design, paying special attention to affective relationships with the surrounding environs. She has recently had a solo show at Matadero Madrid, Museo ABC and Espacio Valverde.
 

21 MARCH
Do it to yourself and do it to others
Javier Pérez Iglesias and Marta van Tartwijk

Self-publishing has given a voice to many people who felt that they had something to say outside the usual channels. Which explains why there is such a tradition in the use of fanzines among the queer, anarchist, feminist and other communities.
Artists discovered a long time ago that a book could be an artwork and since then we have arrived at an increasingly varied range of publications.

There is a meeting between self-publishing (or alternative publishing) and artistic intentionality that oversteps the boundaries of the conventional book which is the paradigm of libraries and bookshops.

We act in the libraries of two very institutional institutions, the museum and the academy, but endeavouring to boost their porosity, to explore their cracks and to connect with what happens on the street.

Books are not what they used to be… And the same goes for libraries.
Javier Pérez Iglesias is a biblioactivist, talkperformer, reading curator, bad cataloguer and worse classifier
Marta van Tartwijk is, among other things, a part-time artist, vocational librarian, photocopying self-publisher, bibliographic maze engineer, fanzine disorderer and catalyst for literary afternoons.
 

4 APRIL
Sculpture in the Making
June Crespo

This session is conceived to think about the various aspects proper to sculpture, looking at works that engage with sculpture from different media. I am interested in a kind of sculpture in the making, the negotiation between subject and object that takes place during the process, and  what the first contact with it is like. To approach it, walk around it, move away and keep within its magnetic field. From its surface to its body, outline and image.

How does it affect me? What physical resonance does it have in me? From where does it look at me? What movement and choreographies does it instigate? How does it activate the space?
June Crespo lives in Bilbao, where she graduated with a BA in Fine Arts in 2005. She also works and exhibits in other international contexts, focusing her practice on sculpture.
 

11 APRIL
Here there is no place from where we cannot be seen
Rafael Sánchez-Mateos Paniagua

The Prado Museum: the reserve of knowledgeable scholars, of flocks of tourists disappointed at not being able to take selfies with Velázquez, and children who have to be explained that we are the ignorant subjects of high culture. Lost, overpowered or even a little underwhelmed by the artworks of yesteryear and their saints, kings and virgins which makes it difficult to find a people you would want to identify with. One might imagine that everything has already been said, clarified, catalogued and fallen into decline, after having lavished such privileged attention that today could not be anything but anachronistically and complacently legitimising of the context where they have ended up. Despite the artworks, to the extent in which they continue to be accessible to experience, they are radically contemporary with whom they find themselves. They offer themselves to the senses so that each individual can recognise, reflect and refract a new non-prescribed sense. They might even hope to adopt new lives, driven by the memory and imagination they are still capable of exciting in us. Always open to the unforeseen—-individual or collective—experience that is still possible to have, despite all the sacralising context of the museum institution and its security guards, both inside and outside. The important thing is to try to intensify, revitalise and reorganise the space of attention, aisthesis and perception—so overlooked in its material form and so threatened by the modernisation we have undertaken—with the purpose of renewing the experience of art today which is as strange as it is succulent, from the generosity of those who approach something strange and (re)discover themselves when being observed by the very work they contemplate.

Rafael Sánchez-Mateos Paniagua is an artist, teacher and researcher.

More information on actividades.ca2m@madrid.org / (+34) 912 760 227

Activity type
Dates
WEDNESDAY 14 FEB—11 APR2018
Target audience
Topics
Entrance

We are now setting out on another new course with this question, introduced a long time ago with the advent of modernism. Surprisingly, in our hyper-consumerist society, it is still as valid and seemingly unexhausted as ever. 

Subtitle
10th INTRODUCTION TO ART TODAY COURSE
Categoría cabecera
Universidad Popular 2018
BUT … IS THIS ART? 2018
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
18:30 —20:30
Audiovisuales con descripción
Selina Blasco es profesora de Historia del arte en la facultad de Bellas Artes de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Azucena Vieites es artista y profesora en las facultades de Bellas Artes de Madrid y de Salamanca. Entre sus exposiciones indivi
Carlos Granados es uno de los responsables del Departamento de Educación del CA2M
Elena Alonso desarrolla su trabajo principalmente mediante el dibujo, relacionándolo con otras disciplinas como la arquitectura,
Marta van Tartwijk es entre otras cosas artista a tiempo parcial, bibliotecaria vocacional, autoeditora de fotocopiadora, ingeni
Rafael Sánchez-Mateos Paniagua es artista, profesor e investigador.

 

In recent years the Universidad Popular explored illusionism and magic. With this idea in mind, we are now proposing to follow up our research and take it to the limit, to the fabulous. This year we will work with the idea of the chimera, understood as improbable illusion and also as an impossible being made from different bodies. We have conjured up bodies that multiply, that question the idea of the human and the artist, mixing science and art, like the Quimera Rosa collective; or those that safeguard the chimerical fire, like Fermín Jiménez Landa. We invite anyone interested in thinking about these unexplored ideas and in feeding the monster.

This year we will also be featuring a series of publications which will be available for browsing and consultation in the CA2M library. In addition, just before each session, participants are invited to take part in a shared reading of a book chosen for the occasion.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges. The courses it offers address some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience. But this structure can also change to adapt to more experimental formats depending on the guest at each session.

 

SESSIONS
 

30 OCTOBER
Quimera Rosa | Trans*Plant: a journey through the chimerical looking glass
 

"We are all chimeras, theorized and fabricated hybrids of machine and organism;
in short, we are cyborgs."
Donna Haraway, Cyborg Manifesto
 

The material and products for cultivating new symbiotic beings are prepared in a bio-hacklab. While the preparations are taking place, the chimeras take the public on what they call the OncoMouseTM journey, by means of a live commented AV presentation. OncoMouseTM is the first animal created in a lab and then patented. The first cyborg, the first laboratory chimera.

You are invited to a performative and participative bio-art lecture. This commented journey is based on three years of biomedical research in an artistic-scientific setting, on the ethical issues we came across and our investment in self-experimentation, trans-disciplinary approaches and the trans-feminist gaze in art practices.

_ Quimera Rosa is an art collective exploring the body, technology and identity.
 

6 NOVEMBER
Fermín Jiménez Landa | Save from the Fire
 

- What work of art would you save if there was a fire in the Prado Museum?
- The fire
(Response attributed to Jean Cocteau)
 

In this lecture on fire we will talk about a year of local euphoria, carpentry, security guards, falleras mayores, hearths and homes, bonfires and wildfires, Airbnb and afters, rituals of purification and ashes. A commission the artist received to create a falla for the official programme of Valencia’s annual festival was dispersed in infinite parts interrelating folklore, night-time, conceptual art and quick fixes. Humans lit bonfires to cook food and to keep themselves warm but they soon discovered that it also prolonged the light of day, ignoring the rhythm marked by the turning of the planet, altering circadian cycles and creating a perfect time for fables, tall tales and stories.

_ Fermín Jiménez Landa is an artist.
 

13 NOVEMBER
Moon Ribas | The Seismic Sense
 

In this lecture Moon Ribas will talk about the possibilities of hybridising bodies and technology and how these bodies act within art. Moon Ribas will speak about the creation of a seismic sensor and how it allows her to perceive earthquakes anywhere in the world through vibrations in real time. With the purpose of sharing this experience, Ribas translates her new seismic sense to the stage, transposing earthquakes into sounds in Seismic Percussion or into dance in Waiting For Earthquakes.

_ Moon Ribas is a contemporary artist.
 

20 NOVEMBER
Pablo Esbert y Federico Vladimir | How to Engender Your Own Dragon
 

Pablo and Federico give a lecture-concert on dragons and other collectively created creatures. Using speculative fiction as a tool and their own work as artists, they address questions on trans-individuality, the post-human, automation and non-traditional forms of narrating ourselves.

The dragon is a fictional creature that appears in the imaginary of many different societies throughout the course of history. It is a hybrid being that interlaces nature and culture, a cocktail of earthly and fantasy animals. The dragon lives in a fantastic narration in which diverse subjectivities can coexist and interrelate without the usual prejudices underwriting realist narrations. It is a monster that helps us to be critical and creative, to imagine challenging representations of “us”. It is also a fiction in which, similarly to contemporary practice, different artistic disciplines coexist, like a trans-disciplinary hydra with many heads.

The dragon is a creature made up of various individuals whose monstrosity prevents it from being too balanced, too organic or too polished. A being of beings in continuous transformation which aspires to the impossible: to devour its spectators in order to incorporate them.

_ Federico Vladimir Strate Pezdirc and Pablo Esbert Lilienfeld are artists.
 

27 NOVEMBER
Marc Sempere | From Art to Ritual
 

For several years now the artist Marc Sempere Moya has been examining the limits between the individual and the collective. Here he is proposing a circular performative lecture in which we can explore the possibilities of rituals today in both theory and practice.

We will discover some of his works, his recent theoretical investigations and his performative projects.

We live in a world in which rituals barely exist anymore, and in which everything is pure representation. Is there any possibility of recovering a world that lives in common? Of recovering a "relational identity"? Of living in a chimera?

_ Marc Sempere Sempere is a multifaceted artist who works, researches and popularises relationships between the oral tradition and free culture through music, performance, theatre, film... and paellas!

 

//////
 

Anyone interested in art today.
 

No prior knowledge necessary.
 

More information: actividades.ca2m@madrid.org / 912 760 227

 

 

 

Activity type
Dates
Wednesday 30 October to 27 November
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

AFORO: 70 PERSONAS

Entrance

In recent years the Universidad Popular explored illusionism and magic. With this idea in mind, we are now proposing to follow up our research and take it to the limit, to the fabulous. 

Subtitle
UNIVERSIDAD POPULAR 2019
Universidad Popular 2019
FEED THE CHIMERA
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
18:30 – 20:30

Very few people know that underneath the museum, exactly three floors underground, there is a hatch that opens onto to a flight of steps which leads down to the depths of an underground river that crosses through the whole of Móstoles. The education department is very much aware of this idea of what is taking place beneath our feet, like an underground river. The most meaningful processes, those that transform us the most, are precisely the ones that take place without us realizing it.

Yet again, this year we invite you to join this course to share together and stir emotions, activating resources that ensure that this will be possible, focusing on processes, events and works that go unnoticed, that happen too slowly to be perceived or that take place within the confines of what we take to be normal.

We have invited artists and collectives whose practices are like tributaries of that underground river that runs through issues like anonymity, invisibility, misfits and the experience of a shared body from the self or from ourselves, but also from the power of the word. A river that does not follow the pre-established banks and returns us once again to the question contained in the name of this course.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges, aimed particularly at young and adult students.

The course addresses some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience: viewing listening and dialogue as transformative actions; art as a shared meeting ground and the development of critical attitudes to imposed reality.

Activity type
Dates
From 16th February to 23th March
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

No prior knowledge is necessary.

Entrance

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges, aimed particularly at young and adult students.

 

Subtitle
13th Introduction to Art Today Course
Categoría cabecera
Esto es arte
But … Is this art?
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
Wednesdays from 18:30 to 20:30

Directed by: Marta van Tartwijk and Javier Pérez Iglesias

We thought we could start in the following way: referencing a lecture that, in turn, referenced Georg Simmel. The person who referenced him said something about how we get to know ourselves by seeing how others look at us and that, without others, it is impossible to have a subjective experience. We were, however, unable to attend this lecture; we watched it at home on YouTube, sometime after the event. Despite not having shared that physical time and space, we also felt, as we watched, equally observed by Simmel’s eyes, present within the eyes of the lecturer. This made us wonder which eyes we have within our own eyes, and if, perhaps, looking at ourselves is in fact like two mirrors facing each other.

Looking is a way of making things present. We believe that this is the strange place that can be unlocked by archives and libraries. A temporary confusion that is manifested in the grasping, reviving, appropriating, incorporating, combining, sectioning, swallowing, reworking processes. We want to see, but we also want to find that which observes us and invites us in.

Via this programme, we want to explore the power of texts or some methods of creating them: bibliographies, footnotes, quotes, comments, margin notes… A common text is created through them, an entity that transcends time in search of bodies to give it meaning and make it grow. This way of writing, featuring quotes and comments, makes us read as though we were writing, as if we were playing at cutting and pasting once again.

Activity type
Dates
Miércoles del 27 de octubre al 15 de diciembre
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

AFORO: 70 PERSONAS

Entrance

CA2M develops an important line of training activities in contemporary art and thought framed within the tradition of popular universities, especially aimed at young and adult audiences.

In these courses, some of the fundamental approaches to understanding and interpreting contemporary art will be addressed clearly and directly.

Subtitle
UNIVERSIDAD POPULAR 2021
Categoría cabecera
Universidad popular
Crear como quien hace bibliotecas
More information and contact
Media footer

De laudibus Crucis. Beato Rabano Mauro Beato (siglo IX). Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
18:00 – 20:30

Enrolment free:

_ Mover el fuego (23 de octubre)
Las cosas te dirán quién eres si las escuchas (6 de noviembre)
_ Volver al fondo (20 noviembre)

We have been left exposed, without a sense of time or the certainty of touch. Our realities have been turned on their heads, upsetting our sense of direction. We want to take advantage of this fluctuation to explore the art of uncertainty, the unknown and the unpredictable, but also what is already being inscribed in the landscape for some time now.

And we will do so on bus trips, spending some time together, stepping outside the boundaries of the museum, mobilising our imagination in other places, thinking about other ways of being together, allowing ourselves to be moved anew, keeping in step in both conversation and listening. We propose pushing the boundaries of the Region of Madrid to see the museum from a distance by visiting places that generate surroundings which allow us to imagine in an unfettered way.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges. The courses it offers address some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience. But this structure can also change to adapt to more experimental formats depending on the guest at each session. For this session we are organizing three bus trips together with artists, researchers and curators to places linked to their artistic practices..

 

23 OCTOBER. Mover el fuego. Trip with José Luis Giménez + Cuqui Jerez + Maral Kekejian

We invited José Luis, Cuqui and Maral to tell us about their experience as the creative team behind the fireworks for Veranos de la Villa, Madrid’s summer festival, between 2016 and 2019. To this end, we travelled to Villarejo de Salvanés, the town where the Vulcano fireworks factory is located. At the helm of this family-run business is José Luis Giménez, the master pyrotechnic over these years. The performing artist Cuqui Jerez will explain her experience in creating the more choreographic side of the firework displays and the cultural manager and programmer Maral Kekejian will tell us about the genesis of the idea and the role of the fireworks in the festival.  

The goal of the joint teamwork was to create a contemplative spectacle that would set up a dialogue between time and space, form and material, from the idea of celebrating the city, its sky, its parks ... and the art of being together. We will visit the Vulcano fireworks factory in Villarejo de Salvanés so that José Luis, Maral and Cuqui can tell us about the shows they made together, combining choreography with the sky of Madrid. 

José Luis Giménez is a pyrotechnic at Pirotecnia Vulcano. Cuqui Jerez is a performing artist. Maral Kekejian is a programmer.

 

6 NOVEMBER. Things will tell you who you are if your listen. Trip with Raquel G. Ibáñez

We recount our dreams out of an obscure need: to make them more real by living with someone else the singularity that belongs to them and that would seem to address them one person alone. Maurice Blanchot.

In 2017 the journal Peerj published a report on the research carried out by the physicist Gabriel Mindlin, analysing the neuronal activity of the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) during the day and night and how it is related with its song. Among other things, the study determined that, while asleep, these birds make very different melodies to the ones they make repetitively—as sound patterns—when they are awake. 

In the many interviews Midlin gave about his study of the zebra finch, he underscored a certain radicalness in the fact that these birds were conditioned by a mechanism during sleep that incites them to do things that they do not do during the day: as if the little birds were liberated at nightfall from the inherited and learnt singing of their waking hours. As if there were two different birds. As if the arrival of night-time opened up a wider range of intonations. 

It is impossible to transcribe these sounds by means of a keyboard. Biiibiiip / bipiiiiiiririiiipipi - bi. It’s absolutely futile. They exist even though language fails miserably in the attempt. On 6 November it is very unlikely that we will see the zebra finch awake, although we will try to inhabit those hard-to-explain places like birdsong. This excursion to Robledo de Chavela is an excuse to share the artistic concerns and obsessions of Raquel G. Ibáñez who, throughout the course of the day, will focus on exploring dreamlike experiences and a quest for the impossible. To this end, the duration of this activity will stretch beyond the threshold of twilight.

Raquel G. Ibañez is an artist and curator. 

 

20 NOVEMBER. Back to El Fondo. Trip with Sofía Montenegro

We were planning a sound trip to Casa de Campo. Looking at the lake, we were talking about floating and how to talk and be heard from the shore, until my uncle got off the boat we were looking at. This encounter closed the last scene in what would be El Fondo con Delfín. The beginning, a trip in a cable car and in between, various intertwined events. One of them, the still unresolved puzzle of how the body of a dolphin suddenly appeared a few years ago in the centre of the park.

Now, another meeting has been called to start afresh and enter once again into the landscape. We will let ourselves be carried along by sounds, conversations and autumn discoveries.

Sofía Montenegro (Madrid, 1988) lives in Barcelona. As an artist, she works with image, sound, text and performative practices.

 

* Places are limited. The coach will leave at 4:30 pm from the roundabout between Avenida de la Constitución and Paseo de Goya (Móstoles). We will first gather at the entrance to the museum at 4:00 pm. The return will be at 9:00 pm to the same location. During the trip participants are invited to take part in the group reading of a publication chosen for the occasion.

 

INTEMPERIE ***
 

Anyone interested in art today. No prior knowledge necessary.

Activity type
Dates
23 October, 6 and 20 NOVEMBER
Target audience
Topics
Entrance

We have been left exposed, without a sense of time or the certainty of touch. Our realities have been turned on their heads, upsetting our sense of direction. We want to take advantage of this fluctuation to explore the art of uncertainty, the unknown and the unpredictable, but also what is already being inscribed in the landscape for some time now. We propose pushing the boundaries of the Region of Madrid to see the museum from a distance by visiting places that generate surroundings which allow us to imagine in an unfettered way.

Subtitle
Universidad Popular
Categoría cabecera
The Hirayama Fireworks
Exercises in disorientation. Three trips to extraordinary places
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
Three sessions
Soundcloud with description
Volver al fondo. Sofía Montenegro.

Directed by Selina Blasco

 
As we all know, ‘what is and what is not’ is a question of as, how and when. It might be that art is, exists, without us people. It is more than likely. But if we feel that it is something that accompanies us, that it is there by our side, it is because it calls out and says something to us. As it does so in its own way, we—ever attentive to the signals it emits—listen and feel free to respond in many different ways. Sometimes we try to so with its own tools and sometimes we look for ones that we think prevent us from going too far, that beat about the bush or even over the tree tops. We almost always reply to art and, to this end, we fall back on words, whether written or spoken. We start speaking from below, from within and from without—those places in which, some time ago now, Donna Haraway recommended that we should place our situated gaze. We use our body and mind to translate what art says to us and, while we are dealing with it, things arise about ourselves about which we had never stopped to think. Knowing it and knowing ourselves. We judge and we even try not only to come up with a criterion which furthermore, and this is even more complicated, must also be intelligible and be able to be shared in order to strike up conversations with others that have more than two speakers.

Let’s face it, communication is not simple. We don’t understand well or we don’t understand altogether. And it is a problem, but problems are precisely what means that questions like “But … Is this art?” leave open a lot more questions. And so we continue, looking forward to more and more questions that will keep coming up. And just as a kind of spark, we will recover one which we read in a conversation guided by Carlos Rod and Ángela Segovia: Do we only speak about that for which we have a vocabulary? There you have it.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges. The courses it offers address some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience. But this structure can also change to adapt to more experimental formats depending on the guest at each session.

 

SESSIONS
 

19 FEBRUARY
Selina Blasco | Described images
 

Ancient rhetoricians argued that conceiving different figures of discourse was a moderate exercise that served as training to overcome greater difficulties. Among them, description was defined as a kind of narration able to translate the visible. Its literary attributes were clarity and vividness, and the style of writing had to adapt to the nature of the theme. This description, which also demanded for the thing to be described to be treated as an inanimate object devoid of will, was not conceived for works of art. When the description is specialized in this type of artefact (especially paintings), evoking something that is believed to be full of life demands going beyond the sense of sight; it is necessary to complete what one sees.

The history of this kind of discourse is very long, but above all else we are interested in its potential to be elaborated in the present. What do we say about art when we describe it? What contents have to do with visual, material and narrative aspects and what is the “part” that corresponds to the sentient? How do we give a name to the cry, the pain or the pleasure, separately or all together? And what do we do with movement? Even though we know that there is no such thing as a transparent text, would it be possible to recover one that might be close to the piece and to the immediacy of the impression? Something that could provide a response to the erotic of art that Susan Sontag called for (no less than in 1964) to replace hermeneutics, interpretation?

Selina Blasco is a lecturer at the School of Fine Arts at Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
 

26 FEBRUARY
Gloria G. Durán | On Elegance, High Heels and Bling-Bling
 

We are going to make the most of the exhibition Absurd Humour: A Constellation of Folly in Spain, curated by Mery Cuesta, to try to tell things in a different way. A way in which the role of women, forming a constellation of true future cuplé stars, becomes critical for a proper understanding of what is happening today, right now, in Spain. We have rarely been told that in the so-called Silver Age at the beginning of the twentieth century we had our own foulmouthed and lewd trap artists who were stars in a glowing firmament that filled the thousands of theatres, fleapits and cafés chantants that sprung up in every town and city in Spain. We were never told that it would be intellectuals that encouraged many of them to make their debut. Just as today Ernesto Castro Flores champions Bad Gyal, in his day Azorín championed La Chelito. The moment of splendour in which high and low culture met, when a cuplé artist like Amalia de Isaura sings ¡¡Ultraismo Puro!! or Rodrigo Cuevas renders La Vaselina in the main auditorium at the University of Oviedo, speak of those memorable times in suspension that can give rise to another form of telling what we have always been told with a superficial brushstroke. We will explore the potential of talking about art with a gaze from below, from underneath, through and in crossfit. Be ready for surprises.

Gloria G. Durán is a Doctor in Fine Arts from UPV in Valencia, an expert in dandyism and countergender, salons and salonniêres, vanguard, cuplé, sicalipsis innuendo and net-artivism from a gender perspective. She multi-jobs in the service of art teaching at UCM, USAL and Escuela Sur.
 

4 MARCH
Iniciativa Sexual Femenina | Each Body in its Own Cry and God in Everyone’s
 

St Teresa, the squatter mystic, must have had her good reasons to think that the body was a prison. As good as the reasons of the declassed Madame Bovary to start to desire her husband only when she was burning with desire for a lover. And how could we not understand Gottfried Benn, the Nazi forensic pathologist who wrote poems to the spectacle of human putrefaction; or Angélica Liddell, evangelist number five, singing to necrophilia. We don’t know for sure what the body actually is, but we do know that the body is a problem: a tool, a source, the cheapest instrument with which to make (or consecrate ourselves to) art. The dancer shares with the corpse a wonderful linguistic coincidence: the two are spoken of as “bodies”. Is everything that moves a body? Is all that glitters gold?

Iniciativa Sexual Femenina (Élise Moreau, Cristina Morales and Elisa Keisanen) is a contemporary dance collective with a feminist, libertarian and anti-academic outlook. Their first piece, Catalina (2019) explores sexual pleasure, repression and its consequences both on stage and in real life. The second, Pato – merengue para espéculos vaginales, also from 2019, is their way of celebrating the centenary of the Mujeres libres anarcho-feminist journal.
 

11 MARCH
Joaquín Jesús Sánchez | I Understand Things when I Write Them: A Personal Approximation to Art Criticism
 

What does an art critic do? This very question has intrigued various generations. Do they measure artworks with strange implements? Do they cruelly interrogate artists until getting to the bottom of their true intentions? Do they rub crystal balls in the intimacy of their offices? In this session we will try to demonstrate that, as is usually the case, reality is a lot more straightforward. We endeavour to explain how the entelechy called “criteria” is formed, what is the modus operandi of someone who practices this trade, and we will confess how the hell a critic actually writes. As the work of a critic is basically a work of writing, we will focus on the complications involved in summarising, commenting on and evaluating an exhibition. To this end, we will take a look at some interesting, and even praiseworthy, examples. Afterwards, you will have an insight into the most carefully-guarded and shameful secrets of art criticism: for instance, that it is almost always written by people in pyjamas with dishevelled hair.

Joaquín Jesús Sánchez is an art critic, writer and exhibition curator. He writes regularly for ArtForum and Babelia, as well as other cultural publications. His exciting adventures can be followed on unmaletinmarron.com
 

18 MARCH
Víctor Iriarte | Cinema of Memory
 

The situation is the following: someone, somebody close, asks us, maybe by phone, maybe during a stroll together, maybe during a car ride, about a film. This is the starting point for Cinema of Memory: the exercise that we sometimes undertake when we are asked a question about a movie we have seen and which, after the question, we start to talk about in words. This translation-transmutation of words to images is the origin of this theoretical endeavour on the relationship between cinema and orality and indeed with other artistic disciplines. I am interested in the gesture involved in the re-enactment, in the place in which the speaker and the listener situate themselves. During this session we will try to explore this gesture, which speaks to something very primitive and essential: the creation of images through the word. And now the question: In what way does cinema, as a popular art form and exercise in shared viewing, cut through us and become part of our personal biography? We will therefore try to trace how the cinema we have inside us every time we see and have to talk about a film becomes present in our lives and in other disciplines of contemporary art. This is where we will speak of the work of artists like Manuel Puig, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Stine Marie Jacobsen, Fiona Banner, Itziar Okariz, Cindy Sherman, Miranda July, Amaia Urra, Geoff Dyer, Beatriz Santiago, Marguerite Duras, Alexander Kluge, Édouard Levé, Alex Reynolds, Project Leve (Esperanza Collado), and so on.

Víctor Iriarte works watching films. His career combines programming with his own personal creation. In 2012 he premiered his first feature-length film, Invisible, at the FID festival in Marseilles. As an artist he has presented his works in various museums and art centres and the Incorpore publishers has just released his book Geometría.
 

25 MARCH
Coco Moya | On How Secrets Desire Us
 

To keep a secret, you have to tell it. Having a secret is to become part of a chain of custody; to have a secret is really more a case of the secret having you to transmit itself through you. This becoming a medium, putting yourself at its service, is what having a secret could mean. A secret is a currency: it circulates, without any inherent value in itself other than what it has in common between us, an intimacy, a belonging, a commitment. What is the potential of the secret for resistance? Is what is most visible the least vulnerable? From the strategies of art, the formless formats of the secret are operations to create meaning against all odds. Building meaning despite not existing in law. The efficacy of a code that overflows its ornamented camouflage. Why are artists so fond of secret societies? Do they like the ambiguity between existence and the invisible? To bring up a specific case, we could talk about Sociedad Secreta de la Ciudad de las Damas, a conclave of women whose most recognised achievement is to have kept in anonymity hundreds of women artists who did not wish to enter the annals of Art History.

Coco Moya is a musician and artist. He experiments with secrets, geomancy and altered perception, forms of knowledge and relations that exceed means of communication to convert us in a medium of communication.
 

1 APRIL
Contadas obras III
 

Contadas obras (Spoken artworks) is an initiative that came about from a bus trip and other coincidences, organized by Javier Pérez Iglesias, Raquel G. Ibáñez, Selina Blasco and Christian Fernández Mirón. On two prior occasions, a group of people got together to listen to others talk about a work of art that had made a special impression on them, for whatever reason. Each person speaks with their own voice and narrative recourses, because there are no images. The piece will be revealed with words, without being seen, through the story and only for those who are present to listen to it. Nor will there be any kind of register other than what the people who are present are able to recall when they leave the hall. And so we will have to keep all our senses alert, to allow ourselves to be carried along by the intensity aroused by a keen awareness of the ephemeral nature of the experience and activating the memory. Works will be spoken by Andrea Galaxina, Andrea Rodrigo, Carlos Copertone and Yuji Kawasima. This is its third iteration.

Andrea Galaxina is an art historian, fanzine fanatic and founder of the Bombas para Desayunar micro-publishers, from where she produces and conceives fanzines.
Andrea Rodrigo’s practice embraces contemporary choreography, dance and curatorship, working with curated programmes–like Saliva together with Ainhoa Hernández at CentroCentro, Madrid (2018)– and laboratories in the practice, writing and accompaniment of choreographers and artists like Valentina Desideri, Corazón del Sol and Claudia Pagès.
Carlos Copertone is a doctor from the University of Extremadura, specialized in city planning and zoning. He has edited books on art and architecture for Caniche Editorial and has also carried out curatorial work.
Yuji Kawasima is a doctor in Art History from Universidad Complutense de Madrid. He develops his work in the field of research, curatorship and teaching, with a special interest in gender and queer studies in Latin-American cultural contexts.

Activity type
Dates
Wednesday 19 February - 1 April
Directed by
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

PLAZAS COMPLETAS. Para apuntarte a la lista de espera escribe a actividades.ca2m@madrid.org. No es necesario ningún conocimiento previo.

Entrance

As we all know, ‘what is and what is not’ is a question of as, how and when. It might be that art is, exists, without us people. It is more than likely.

Descubre más
Subtitle
12TH INTRODUCTION TO ART TODAY COURSE ADULT EDUCATION
Categoría cabecera
Contadas obras 2017_Dibujo Eva Zaragoza
BUT... IS THIS ART?
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
8 sessions

This course, tirelessly twirling and entranced, we will continue revolving around doubts and the astonishment induced by the inexplicable: what is art and what is not art. We will take advantage of the fact that we are a little dizzy and we will explore the desire to leave our bodies and our minds and wander. That is, with a lot of emotion and a lot of feeling. We wish to set out on different paths, to examine with awe what we believe we know well and we will go to where we thought (though can we be sure?) we had never been to before. We will let art take us by the hand and we will let ourselves be carried along. To places as close as our own skin, which will be dyed and renewed; as far away as we could possibly imagine, because it is still waiting to be, and besides, does not wish to define itself.

We will make a different kind of contact with what is around us in order to take distance with customs and habits. We feel like losing control. And stretching time and space: an infinite and eternal present and reinvented places it is difficult to return to. And if different when we do return, let it be because we will have known each other in a different way through other things and other people. And now that we no longer look at the world in the same way as when we started, we will understand it better. We will experience life by letting ourselves be carried along by whatever happens and art as something that transforms.

CA2M organises educational activities on contemporary art and thinking that can be framed within the tradition of community colleges, aimed particularly at young and adult students. The courses it offers address some of the key issues for a proper understanding and interpretation of art today, to use it to think. These activities can be divided into two parts: the first consists of the presentation of a theme by a guest speaker and the second part involves a debate open to the audience. But this structure can also change to adapt to more experimental formats depending on the guest at each session.

Directed by Selina Blasco

Aimed at anyone interested in the art of today. No prior knowledge required

23 January

Tatuarot. Whisky and religion

Julio Linares

Whenever it gets a tattoo, the day becomes Sunday. Without a prior conscious decision, tattoo sessions end up as a kind of ritual. A strangely intimate bond is formed through the penetration of ink and metal. The skin is broken, impregnated and changed for ever. And it is this forever-ness that gives everything a certain mystic quality.

It is beautiful to be the vehicle through which the materialisation of the desire of another is channelled. It requires such total concentration that the present takes on absolute splendour.

And with the magic and power of the present, the miracle of transmutation takes place.

Julio Linares. Saga of antiquarians, then a pirate, scientific servant, master of feng shui and painter.

30 January

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Elandorphium

- Please follow the instructions if you would be so kind: choose your username. Now choose your sex. Now choose your form. Now choose your colour. Now choose your texture. Now choose your voice.

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Elandorphium, xx/xx/xxxx (date unknown) is a body that studies the limits between organic mass and the digital dimension. What is matter and what is artifice?

6 February

art during

Selina Blasco

In art, one is here and there. Are there states of total concentration and isolation when creating? How does one create when one is doing something else? Creating, building, in fantasy, in intoxication, in illness, in care, in waiting, in ecstasy and in tears. We will explore practices that, more than between, are in. Some arise explicitly, but we can look back at others which, in principle, seem to be something else and seem different from another perspective.

We will look for an art of being in two things at once, subversively and pleasurably.

Selina Blasco lectures at the School of Fine Arts at Universidad Complutense.

13 February

A kind of poor stone

Amalia and Luisa

Clay is granite decomposed and disintegrated by erosion.

A friend once said that if I was a stone, I would be a poor brittle kind of stone like sandstone or serpentine, or maybe schist. Or maybe not even rock but clay, or not even clay but earth. I am only earth. I give way. I try to fit in. I am still here and I am still earth, but I am full of footprints and deep holes and traces and alterations.

We want to talk about the world, which is made of earth. To think about material and its processes in order to talk about things. And to talk about ceramics. We have understood some things better after we have touched earth.

About a year or so ago we got together every week in Luisa’s studio in Leganés. We always started by speaking of ourselves, and then we spoke about earth; what it can do.

Amalia currently works at CA2M. Luisa is a self-taught ceramist, active in Adult Learning since the beginning.

20 February

Latino-Futurism

Julián Mayorga

Many immigrants living in Spain ask themselves about the absence of Latin America in dominant futurist imaginaries, and about the value of their community’s cultural practices in art categories. A possible response, from art, could be to focus on exploring tactics of re-invention, resistance/re-existence and re-identification from music and its mise en scène.

We get together to question whether it is possible for these local practices to converse with forms we understand as universal/global, whether it is possible to kick the habit of the modern narrative and to re-inject the enigmatic into our forms of doing and saying; whether we can imbue with importance a new mythology that represents a local landscape and experience.

Julián Mayorga is a Colombian musician and artist based in Madrid; his music spans from sound experimentation to traditional Latin-American music and pop.

27 February

VenidaDevenida

The production of space through dissident practices. The construction of non-normative spaces begins with acts of resistance against dominant structures that create networks of dissidence in the city and which, in many cases, can be mapped.

The queer appropriation of space is one of the clearest examples to demonstrate how the hierarchies of spatial distinction can be distorted, altering preconceived binary ideas that have to do with perceptions of the public and the private, the legal and the illegal, and so on.

The production of space is not just the remit of city planners, architects and builders, but is also the result of social action and cultural construction. Through the study of different dissident practices localised throughout history and their corresponding cartographies, we will demonstrate how users can pervert and generate personal spaces by means of tactics of re-appropriation.

VenidaDevenida are architects and artists.

6 March

Drifts of the self in our environment: walking to explore (ourselves)

Tonia Raquejo

Through a series of practical awareness-raising exercises we will analyse the implications of the experience in the territory, paying attention to how we feel what it is we feel and how we organise the perceptions and kinesic behaviours they generate. Taking this as our starting point, we will analyse how we communicate with our surrounding environs and what kind of mental maps we create, both individually and collectively.

Tonia Raquejo teaches classes in Theories of Contemporary Art in undergraduate degree courses and Theory of Art and Neuro-linguistic Programming in the Master in Art Education in social and cultural institutions at the School of Fine Arts at UCM.

More information at actividades.ca2m@madrid.org  or at 912 760 227

Activity type
Dates
Wednesday 23 January - 6 March
Directed by
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

(18:00: lecturas en la biblioteca)

Entrance

 

This course, tirelessly twirling and entranced, we will continue revolving around doubts and the astonishment induced by the inexplicable: what is art and what is not art.

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Subtitle
11TH INTRODUCTION TO ART TODAY COURSE ADULT EDUCATION
Categoría cabecera
Espacio mutante. Foto: Maria Eugenia Serrano Diez
BUT... IS THIS ART? 2019
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Espacio mutante. Fotografía: María Eugenia Serrano Díez

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
7 sessions