Enrolment free

Enrolment free

Architects of Silence is a sound and musical journey that begins with a family building activity and leads to relaxation and listening. It is wordless building, a refuge against noise. Our journey will be accompanied by a soundscape created live, which invites us to relax and listen not only in the literal sense but also to pay attention to our children and perceive them from a new perspective.

This activity is designed for families to enjoy together, no matter the age. It is part of our family programme in which guest artists share their experiences and creative practices with us. Grandmothers, siblings, neighbours… you’re all welcome! We at the CA2M Museum want to offer a space where you can disconnect from your daily routine. Here, there are no adults that know more than children, who only obey; instead, we explore together, creating a corner where we can curl up and leave behind the roles we play at home.

Happy travels!

NOTE: This activity is recommended for people aged 3 and up, so they will have priority as the places are taken. However, if there is anyone under 3 in your group, they are welcome.

Tania Arias Winogradow

Performing artist, dancer, choreographer and mother. She creates devices that provide creative tools around play, movement and dance. Her projects invite us to fine-tune our listening through the sensitive body and to deploy each person’s potential for movement, enabling us to better interact with our environment. She has partnered with and participated in spaces like the Museo Reina Sofía, La Casa Encendida of Madrid and the Inspiration Persona collective. She has been investigating different languages within the live arts for over 25 years.

PROGRAMME

OCTOBER

  • Saturday 19 from 4:30 to 6:30 pm
  • Saturday 26 from 11 am to 1 pm

NOVEMBER

  • Saturday 9 from 4:30 to 6:30 pm
  • Saturday 16 from 11 am to 1 pm
Activity type
Dates
SATURDAYS IN OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER
Target audience
Entrance

Architects of Silence is a sonorous and musical journey that begins with a family building activity, leading us to rest and listening.

Subtitle
WITH TANIA ARIAS WINOGRADOW
Categoría cabecera
familias
ARCHITECTS OF SILENCE. WORKSHOP FOR FAMILIES
More information and contact
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Picture: Tania Arias Winogradow

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
2 HOURS MORNING OR AFTERNOON

This year, in the CA2M Summer Cabin, we spent four unforgettable days playing at being fish. We moved and danced in our own coral reef, the museum, and without realising it we turned into mute butterflies that dreamed when they were moving. We asked such curious questions as: Can a grandmother be a professional dancer? Can we dance in a museum? If we stay still, will we be dancing? These questions stayed with us and are still inspiring us.

This is why we decided to continue this adventure throughout an entire school year with this extracurricular activity. We’re going to keep playing and moving like animals to explore these and many more questions. Imagine everything you can discover and create in one year if fifteen fishes can turn into butterflies in just four days!

We are beginning with investigating our bodies and all the possible ways they can move.  We’ll dance together, with time and space, and we’ll create a place of artistic expression enriched by the group’s generational diversity.

The activity will be led by Alba Sáenz-López Aumente and Mar Sáenz-López Aumente. They are dancers, choreographers, sisters, cultural mediators and founders of the Baiven collective, an organisation that uses dance to foster the horizontal exchange of experiences, perspectives, knowledge and critical thinking. They develop exploratory activities around the performing arts and education. They seek engagement and interaction with communities and regions and try to expand the professional field of art by creating accessible, diverse spaces where anyone fits, no matter their situation, body or mind.

 

Activity type
Dates
OCTOBER - MAY
Entrance

In this workshop for girls and boys from 6 to 12 years old, we will begin by investigating our body and all its possibilities in movement. We will dance in company, with time and space, and we will create a place of artistic expression enriched by the generational diversity of the group.

Subtitle
EXTRACURRICULAR DANCE AND MOVEMENT WORKSHOP
Categoría cabecera
Bailar el barrio
DANCING THE NEIGHBOURHOOD
More information and contact
Media footer

Picture: Sue Ponce.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
TUESDAY 17:30 - 19:00

This course’s educational activity programme is oral. If you are interested in this activity, write to us at educacion.ca2m@madrid.org or call us on 912760227 and we’ll tell you all about it.

You can sign up HERE

This project is part of the series of language workshops by the A.C. Banda Editorial Silvestre. Organised by  BOYA~célula  in collaboration with Seminario Euraca.

Activity type
Dates
FROM OCTOBER 21th TO MARCH 13th
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

School groups of fewer than 30 students.

Descubre más
Categoría cabecera
visita taller
STAND HERE. VISIT-WORKSHOP FOR SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS TO THE CA2M, DIALECT EXHIBIT
More information and contact
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
11:00 – 13:30

Curated by Isabel de Naverán in collaboration with Escuelita.

One year later, the question that underpins these conferences, challenges us, if possible, even more directly For which bodies, for what histories. In the face of the general uncertainty and the absolute lack of historical precedence that we are going through, this question confronts us with the contingency of history in the materiality of our bodies given the very violence that a brutal and savage irruption like this pandemic entails. We are confident that the curatorial threads - which were once amassed with rigour and care, and which are now being taken up again with the understanding of a vital transformation - continue to make sense.

These conferences rethink the preconception that situates bodies as a consequence of the historical circumstances in which they live, as, although history makes bodies, they also make history. The latter is told through images that, unlike bodies, remain fixed and mute, forcing us to reckon with history, rather than just narrate it. The images seem to bring the events to a halt and are often relegated to a one-to-one correspondence with the facts. Here we are presented with the concept of listening to how some of them reveal themselves in order to contradict and contravene their own narratives, while at the same time rebelling, warning us of other stories that emerge in their re-reading and in the dispute against the ordering of time. Seen in this way, some images do not remain mute: they mutate and act at the same time as they are enacted, manoeuvred and sustained. Bodies are also enacted and subjected by other corporealities, those that inhabit their gestures apprehended by the knowledge of a tradition or by a certain way of relating and disposing themselves in their varied worlds. The question of the title imagines a making of bodies and images that, in a state of mutual listening, establishes connections that are out of time, anachronistic, and syncopated, defying the linearity that predisposes a before and an after.

The twenty-sixth edition of the conference continues along the same vein of the previous ones, delving into the relationship between images, gestures and performativity. This edition sets out to think about images through the making of choreography and performance, its practice, and its specific materiality.

It is conceived of as a study programme which, subject to prior registration, brings together a group of people interested in and committed to the issues raised. A meeting in which speakers and attendees share time, conversations and experiences over three interlinked sessions. The first two focus on specific artistic and choreographic processes that explore notions of history, tradition, and transmission from body techniques that allow us to speculate about processes that can be described as a recognition of a gestural archive, an estrangement from one's own tradition, or listening to alternative modes of presence. From within these parameters, we seek to expand the study to a dialogue with partnering agents of art, anthropology and philosophy, in the intersections of knowledge. A third session will take place on Wednesday morning, in a pine forest near the museum, and is organised as an open-air walk with the intention of collectively sharing and offering feedback on the reflections and debates experienced during the previous days.

Speakers: Ana Folguera, Thiago Granato, Pablo Marte, Ameen Mettawa, Julia Morandeira, Rita Natálio, Isabel de Naverán, Eszter Salamon, Manuel Segade, Estrella Serrano.

 

DOWNLOAD THE PROGRAM HERE 

Dates header text
5, 6 and th JULY
Directed to
Registration:
-
Access additional notes

CAPACITY: 25 PEOPLE

Entrance

One year later, the question that underpins these conferences, challenges us, if possible, even more directly For which bodies, for what histories. In the face of the general uncertainty and the absolute lack of historical precedence that we are going through, this question confronts us with the contingency of history in the materiality of our bodies given the very violence that a brutal and savage irruption like this pandemic entails. We are confident that the curatorial threads - which were once amassed with rigour and care, and which are now being taken up again with the understanding of a vital transformation - continue to make sense.

Subttitle
FOR WHICH BODIES, FOR WHAT HISTORIES
Header category
XXVI IMAGE SYMPOSIUM
Main audiovisual
Media footer

Wrap, History and Syncope by Isabel Naverán. Picture: ©Andrea_Rodrigo

Type Thinking / Community
Hide main image
Disabled
Duration
5th JULY 17:00-22:00H | 6th JULY 11:00-21:00H | 7th JULY 11:00-14:00H
Is it a cycle?
Disabled

«After a very long winter, you see a green parrot perched on a blossoming almond tree. You would never have seen this in Madrid not long ago, but now it’s a common sight. We don’t know how we’re going to get back on track, and one thing we’re left with is celebrating a world that’s not going to be exactly the same. There are many things, even more when celebrating is part of the process of leaving behind, and moving forward. That path that is knowing what we follow. A public place, for everyone, green, high up, free, and specific. A place like a picnic.

This programme was shaped around the theme of tradition in an intuitive way, and we say intuitively because it was not actively sought and it was not until everything had been designed that we actually recognised this fact. Tradition understood in an expanded form, placed between the material and immaterial of this moment we are living. And who says when it is and when it is no longer like that? Throughout the sessions we see the most literal translation represented by craftsmanship, by mythology and inherited customs, but we also see that this whole world is reinterpreted, remixed, subverted, and left open to the air of the tensions of today’s world. In this open sky, questions and suggestions appear about what tradition means, to be tradition but also to make and create it. To believe it. Sometimes the folkloric appears, sometimes the ceremonial. Things that we know exist but that we have never seen also appear, which, because they are part of our dreams, also belong to us. At other times, there are interpretations that are so mixed in their languages and influences that they overflow. Yet, at the same time, when overlapped they create an image in which you can recognise yourself in the background. These are very local picnics. In them, there is a continuous reference to what is part of us and what we cannot be detached from. This happens and is interspersed, and suddenly it brings us to common ground where we can be together. And there is, in all this, a moment of self-reference of what the actual tradition of the picnic is and the place that is this terrace. We want to transfer these two things to other places, to other formats and, in short, to be able to live in the different ways we have always appreciated. A terrace can also be a forest.

We have skipped a spring. This is what we thought before everything happened, now we don’t want to wear shoes. We’re telling you this because it’s true. All that remains is for us to invite you to look together with us at what is coming from what has already passed.

Curated by:

Maral Kekejian and bwelke (Juanito Jones, Lorenzo García-Andrade and María Buey)»

 

PROGRAM

  • T 27/05 | OPENING:  Javi Álvarez y Javi Pérez Iglesias; Maider López; Enrico Dau Yang Wey.
  • T 03/06 | DIRECTOS: Ylia; SLVJ; Bazofia.
  • T 10/06 | KATA GURUMA : Aitana Cordero y David Cárdenas
  • T 17/06 | EN EL AIRE: Jonás de Murias; Kike García + Jesús Bravo; Lara Brown; Eliseo Parra
  • T 24/06 | NOCTURNO: Bosque R.E.A.L y Cuqui Jerez
  • T 01/07 | 1th OF JULY: Orquesta; JASSS.

 


NOTA SOBRE EL ACCESO

  • Recuerda que el aforo es limitado, por lo que cuando realices tu inscripción, te enviaremos un email confirmándote que tienes entrada.  Una vez lo recibas, podrás pasar a recoger tu entrada en la recepción del Museo el día de la sesión de Picnic hasta las 21.15h.  Si a esa hora no la has recogido, se pondrá a disposición del público.
  • Si no puedes venir por alguna razón, por favor avísanos cuanto antes para que alguien de la lista de espera pueda ocupar tu plaza.
  • Este evento respeta las medidas seguridad y las restricciones de aforo indicadas por las autoridades sanitarias, por lo que el público estará sentado y con la distancia de seguridad apropiada.
  • Cuando vengas, por favor sigue todas las indicaciones del personal de la organización para que tanto el acceso como el desalojo se haga siguiendo las normas de seguridad.
  • Por tu bien y el de todos, si tienes síntomas compatibles con el Covid-19, no acudas al Centro.

 

cartel picnic 2021

Activity type
Dates
27 may – 1 july
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

Prior registration required. Form available one week before each session. LIMITED CAPACITY: 90 people.

Entrance

As a Picnic Society, the CA2M invites several curators each year to design a program for the terrace of the Center. Every Thursday from the end of May to the beginning of July our terrace will become a space in which we will develop a program of activities in which the physical and the sound are mixed with the educational and participatory.

Actividades asociadas
Press materials
Subtitle
This is as far as we've come
Categoría cabecera
Picnic Session 2021
PICNIC SESSIONS 2021
More information and contact
Audiovisual principal
Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
6 sessions
Biografías

Triggering impulses, working in an experiential way, promoting critical attitudes through action, involving the body in learning processes ... These educational practices, in tune with the centre’s educational philosophy, are based on the construction of knowledge through experience. Thus, the exhibition’s performative routes focus on the spectator's experience and turn their gaze towards current art. In this way, we create meeting spaces in which to experiment and construct critical discourse regarding contemporary work. 

At this time, we wish to invite you to visit two of CA2M’s exhibitions with us.
On Saturdays at 6:30 PM we propose visiting TRÉMULA, artist Javi Cruz’s exhibition, together. And on Sundays at 12:30 PM, VEROÍR EL FRACASO ILUMINADO (EXPERIENCE THE ILLUMINATED FAILURE) by the artist Cecilia Vicuña. There will be a maximum of 6 people.

To sign up, write to educacion.ca2m@madrid.org or call 91 276 02 21. You can also come directly to the museum and, if there are not too many of us, join the tour by leaving your details at reception. We take all of these measures in order to take care of ourselves and to take care of you, though we are aware that these measures may change according to the situation. We look forward to meeting up with you again.

Activity type
Dates
Saturdays and Sundays
Target audience
Registration
-
Entrance

Triggering impulses, working in an experiential way, promoting critical attitudes through action, involving the body in learning processes ... These educational practices, in tune with the centre’s educational philosophy, are based on the construction of knowledge through experience.

Categoría cabecera
recorridos performativos
Performative routes 2021
More information and contact
Media footer

Foto Sue Ponce

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
Every weekend until the closing of the exhibitions
Biografías

The Ha-ha is a deceptive mechanism that plays a role in the construction of the landscape. It generates an illusion of breadth and camouflages its real purpose: to control the movements of certain individuals or species. The name ‘ha-ha’ was used for the first time in the 1709 Dezallier d’Argenville book The Theory and Practice of Gardening, in which he explained that the name came from the exclamation of surprise from spectators when they recognised the optical illusion.

When I was asked to lead this tour, the first thing that came to mind was the title: Ha-ha Wall. It was almost an immediate association, perhaps induced by the huge contrast between this term and the immense work that presides over this show: 1,502 people facing the wall. It’s a laughable wall that is not remotely funny. It is a starting point, given that my and Santiago’s work have little in common at first glance. I have used the word ‘ha-ha’, which is a joke in itself, as a way of breaking the ice and beginning an unlikely dialogue between two generations, between two very different ways of approaching artistic production. Contrast again. And the contrast between light and shadow is what allows us to see… although not always. Shadows conceal or reveal, and looking directly at light can blind us. I want to approach this tour positioned from the paradoxes of looking, from the devices of visibility and concealment used to present facts, from the constant suspicion that in everything we are given to see, something remains hidden.

The CA2M Museum’s Education and Public Activities Department has a line of work aimed at developing thematic tours in which artists and creators are invited to discuss the exhibitions with spectators through the lens of their own practices. In this way, we avoid the presumed objectivity of the narratives that the exhibitions offer to instead break with hegemonic discourses. It is a space of inquiry which encourages each person to make their own interpretation of the image and the story in order to use them to generate new imaginaries.

Dates:

  • Saturday 14 December 12 pm
  • Sunday 15 December 6 pm

Ángela Cuadra inquires into images that discuss concealment techniques used throughout recent history in a broad phenomenological study of invisibility. Based on different sources with pre-existing historical and semantic meanings, she aims to find new layers of meaning in artistic expression. Grounded on collage and approached with intuition, her works are developed in multiple media, ranging installations to video, drawing and expanded painting.

She has held exhibitions at the Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, Today Museum (Beijing), Centro del Carmen (Valencia), Sant Andreu Contemporani (Barcelona), Fundación Cultural de Providencia (Providencia, Chile) and Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea (CGAC) (Santiago de Compostela), among others. Since 2013, she has been working on the project space Salón, which she directs with her husband, Dai K S. She is also one of the founders of the first international fair of nonprofit spaces in Madrid, Supersimétrica.

Activity type
Dates
DECEMBER
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 20 PEOPLE

Entrance

The artist Ángela Cuadra invites us on a guided tour of the exhibition 1502 people facing the wall, where she will approach the artist's work from the paradoxes of the gaze, the devices of visibility and concealment with which the facts are presented to us.

Subtitle
Visits to the exhibition 1502 people facing the wall with artist Ángela Cuadra
Categoría cabecera
visitas posicionadas
HA-HA WALL. POSITIONAL VISITS
More information and contact
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Picture: Sue Ponce. © Santiago Sierra. VEGAP, Madrid, 2024.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
1 HOUR

Our migrants’ suitcases are filled with twenty-three kilos of life per crossing. Overweight again? What do you carry when you go? When you come back? Yerba mate to while away the time? Coca leaf to blow on God? How much does a house weigh? Did you squirrel away enough money to bring your dog? Was the skin of the soursop still bristly when you unpacked it? What does your baggage smell like? In these four sessions, we’ll be pulp and seed, green and travel, tenderness and bark to recount the southerly-to-southerly winds that blow over the invented territory of the diaspora. Four encounters to open the soursop (not the melon) and use storytelling to explore the interstices of all our creatures/children.

We invite you to journey through this writing laboratory made up of four interconnected sessions led by Sudakasa: Lucrecia Masson, Gabriela Wiener, Chinî and Hildy Quintanilla Ocampo (Q´inti- Colibrí).

The workshop dates are:

  • Friday 29 November 6:30–8:30 pm
  • Saturday 30 November 12–2 pm
  • Friday 13 December 6:30–8:30 pm
  • Saturday 14 December 12–2 pm

Participants must attend three of the four sessions to earn an attendance certificate.

Sudakasa is a community writing and creation space based on migrant experiences; it is a refuge-home and artistic residence that has come to cover our lack of a ‘people’, because our people are across the sea. We have re-appropriated this parcel of olive and almond trees and grapevines from insult and turned it into body, identity and memory of the diasporas so together we can weave other stories of resistance that confront the violences against those from down under.

Lucrecia Masson Córdoba. With impurity as a principle, she is a writer, artist and researcher whose main topics of inquiry are bodies, animalities and other-than-humans. From an anti-colonial stance, she works in different artistic registers, primarily experimenting with writing. What interests her in theory is imagination, and she willingly believes that we cannot think without the body. She published Epistemología rumiante (2017) and Escrituras rumiantes. Cuerpo, exceso, animalidad (2022) and has participated in numerous anthologies. She is a member of the Colectivo Ayllu, with whom she has published Devuélvannos el oro (2018) and participated in events like the Sydney Biennial (2020 and the 35th São Paulo Biennial (2023).

Gabriela Wiener. She is a Peruvian writer and journalist living in Madrid. She has published the books Sexografías, Llamada perdida, Nueve Lunas, Huaco retrato and Dicen de mí and the poetry collections Ejercicios para el endurecimiento del espíritu and Una pequeña fiesta llamada eternidad. Her first stories were published in the narrative journalism magazine Etiqueta Negra. She was a columnist for The New York Times in Spanish and the editor-in-chief of Marie Claire España and has contributed to many international media. She publishes a weekly column for publico.es. She won the National Journalism Award in Peru with a report on a case of gender violence. She is the creator of different performances that she has staged with her family. She wrote and starred in the play Qué locura enamorarme yo de ti. She is a member of@Sudakasa, a collective migrant art and writing project. Undiscovered, the English translation of her novel Huaco retrato, was a finalist for the 2024 International Booker Prize and PEN America. @gabrielawiener

Chinî. She was born in Ka'aguasu, Paraguay, in 1987 during the Alfredo Stroessner dictatorship. She is a poet and marica 108, studied biology and researches frogs and toads from Piribebuy. She migrated to Madrid in 2019, following her mother and sister. She has been a Guaraní Jopará speaker since childhood and adores tereré and mbeju. Professionally, she is currently an arborist and keeps watch over the El Pardo forests in Tres Cantos. She is working on her poetry collection Corpus infecciosa/ 30 comprimidos/ suspensión oral, which examines the wound of HIV-AIDS, migratory sorrow and the traumas of a healthy-ill body. She thinks that the virus has come to her body to rummage through her past and heals it with plant-based remedies. She has been dreaming in Guaraní from the Paraguayan city of Ka'aguasu surrounded by soy harvests and the absence of her mother.

Hildy Quintanilla Ocampo (Q´inti- Colibrí). She is a stage creator, poet, willakuq (storyteller), researcher of Andean theatricalities and oralities and a Qoyllirit’i pilgrim as part of the Quispicanchi nation. In Madrid, she is developing the self-managed Arguedas, Oraliteca Migrante project, which brings Andean and Latin America orality and literature and teaches the Quechua language via Escuelachallay, my little Quechua school in Madrid, as practices that aim to strengthen migrant identities and intercultural dialogue in Spain.

Activity type
Dates
NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 20 PEOPLE

Entrance

We propose a four-session writing workshop in dialogue with the exhibition Buscando guanábana ando yo by the artist Sol Calero. A workshop that looks for connections between migration, kilos of suitcases and the fruits and plants that travel with us.

Categoría cabecera
taller escritura
MY MOTHER SLIPPED A SOURSOP INTO MY SUITCASE. WRITING WORKSHOP FROM THE SOUTH
More information and contact
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Picture: Sudakasa.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
2 HOURS PER SESSION: TOTAL 8

Immerse yourself in this sensory experience that creates a map of memories in dialogue with the Sol Calero exhibition. Memory guides us via the relationship between fruit, their scents, their textures and their flavours, as a fragile, expansive territory where the footprints of our memories reverberate, catalysed by sensory stimuli that summon the latent and its resonances. In this workshop, smell and taste become the thresholds that transport us to encapsulated instants, bringing emotions and experiences suspended time into the present.

We will recreate a group picnic that is offered as an immersion in the personal and collective imaginary, a living tissue in which memory is rewritten based on the direct relationship with the fruit. It is an experience that connects with the artist Sol Calero’s Pica-Pica installation, where we will transform memories into wishes, requests and offerings so we can together imagine possible futures.

Guided workshop for audiences age 6 and over.

Xisela García Moure has been putting agricultural and sustainability techniques into practice in the city for over ten years. A member of the Break the Circle Transition Institute and a resident of Móstoles, she is familiar with our city’s possibilities and interests. An expert in organic agriculture and permaculture, she has worked on different farms and urban agriculture projects, and this year she is aiming to put her knowledge into practice by committing herself to a greener Móstoles that is more aware of the town’s needs.

Dates:

  • Wednesday 27 November 6:30–8:30 pm
  • Wednesday 4 December 6:30–8:30 pm
  • Wednesday 11 December 6:30–8:30 pm
Activity type
Dates
NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 20 PEOPLE

Entrance

This workshop for families in the form of a sensory experience through fruit invites us to unfold a map of memories in dialogue with Sol Calero's exhibition. I am looking for guanábana.

Subtitle
WORKSHOP FOR FAMILIES
Categoría cabecera
talle familias Sol
FRUITY RESONANCES: SCENTS, TEXTURES AND FLAVOURS OF MEMORY
More information and contact
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Picture: Roberto Ruiz.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
2 HOURS

Led by: Pastora Filigrana

With the participation of: Pedro G. Romero, Teatro del Barrio, Silvia Agüero, Tania Pardo, Sandra Carmona, Alba Hernández, Noelia Cortés, Cristina Trinidad Reyerta, Isaki Lacuesta, Paloma Zapata, Pablo Vega, Daniel Baker, Malgarzota Mirga-Tas and Inés Plasencia.

The Image Study Workshops are devoted to collectively reflecting on the theory, practice and semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures. They are organised as debate forums, seminar and lectures accompanied by different artistic proposals.

These workshops aim to reflect on the image given throughout art history of the Roma, from the stereotypical image of the Romani woman and its appearance in visual culture to the Romani man represented as the heir of the Lorca’s reconstruction.

With this activity, we pause to think about the social importance of Romani visual culture and the analysis of these interpretations that bring us closer to the reality of the Roma in the twenty-first century. Different knowing and expert voices on the topic suggest a defolklorisation that is capable of breaking taboos and bringing us closer to a new way into the meanings inherent in Romani culture. This new understanding of Romani visuality offers a new picture of the social relations surrounding this people like nomadism, singing, marginality and folklore, all of which are so closely associated with this community.

PROGRAMME

THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER

  • 5–5:15 pm Workshop Presentation. Tania Pardo, director of the CA2M Museum, and Estrella Serrano, head of the Education and Public Activities Department at the CA2M Museum.
  • 5:15–6 pm Opening lecture: Counter-Images of the Roma. Pastora Filigrana.
  • 6–7:15 pm Lecture: Defolklorising Flamenco, that is, the Roma. Pedro G. Romero. Colloquium with the audience.
  • 7:15–7:45 pm Break.
  • 7:45–8:45 pm Dramatised monologue: I’m Not Your Romani Woman, Silvia Agüero and Teatro del Barrio.

During the course of the workshops, you can track the process of Cristina Trinidad Reyerta making her artistic installation in the Museum’s foyer.

FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER

  • 11 am–12:15 pm Lecture: Living Romani: Between Artistic Bohemia and La Libertá. Tania Pardo. Colloquium with the audience.
  • 12:15–12:30 pm Break.
  • 12:30–2 pm Round table: Images of the Roma from Romani Women Creators. Sandra Carmona (illustrator and editor). Alba Hernández (Romanja Feminist Library). Noelia Cortés (writer). Moderator: Pastora Filigrana. Colloquium with the audience.
  • 2:30–4 pm Break for lunch.
  • 4–5:15 pm Round table: De-folklorising the Roma in the Cinema. Isaki Lacuesta (film director), Paloma Zapata (film director) and Pablo Vega (film director).
  • 5:15–7:45 pm Screening: La Leyenda del Tiempo [The Legend of Time]. (Film by Isaki Lacuesta), Malegro Verte [Glad to See You] (Short film by Nüll García), Proud Roma (Short film by Pablo Vega).
  • 7:45–8:30 pm - Colloquium with the audience.

SATURDAY 23 NOVEMBER

  • 11 am–12 pm Lecture: Changing Visions: Gypsy Visuality and the Romani Aesthetic. Daniel Baker.
  • 12–1 pm Lecture Dr Anna Mirga-Kruszelnicka, deputy director of the European Roma Art and Culture Institute (ERIAC).
  • 1:30–2 pm Conversation with Daniel Baker and Dr Anna Mirga-Kruszelnicka. Moderator: Inés Plasencia.
  • 2–2:30 pm Closure of the workshop and presentation of the artistic installation Breaking the Folklore by Cristina Trinidad Reyerta in the Museum’s foyer.
Activity type
Dates
21, 22 AND 23 NOVEMBER
Target audience
Registration
-
Acceso notas adicionales

REGISTRATION

Entrance

This conference will try to reflect on the image that has been given to the gypsy throughout the history of art, from the typified image of the woman and her appearance in visual culture to the gypsy represented as a legacy of Lorca's reconstruction.

Categoría cabecera
JEI 2024
29th IMAGE STUDY WORKSHOPS. DE-FOLKLORISING THE ROMA.
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Image: illustration by Cristina Trinidad Reyerta. Detail. Courtesy of the artist.

Is it a cycle?
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