912760221

912760221

Through gallery encounters with different artists, this programme suggests an encounter that plays with uncertainty, surprise and thrills. Three times a month, the CA2M Museum invites local artists, curators or researchers to share their interests with the public to connect their practices, careers or inquiries with the exhibitions underway.

They thus become the guides on exhibition tours during which they share their creative processes by engaging them in dialogue with the exhibitions they are seeing to generate shared conversations. This programme aims to be a dialogue experience between the guest artists and the visitors, an encounter that aims to take the pulse of creation through words and listening, associating Madrid’s creators with the artistic practices of the exhibitions underway in an attempt to turn the museum into an epicentre of contemporary artistic reflection.

This series seeks to expand not only the museum’s boundaries but also the way in which an exhibition takes shape in the imaginary of the guided tour, attempting to build a community around art and make the CA2M Museum meeting point for artists, audiences and creation. The goal is to experience, share and forge a new relationship with contemporary creation to generate an intimate space where the line between the creator and spectator is blurred, paving the way for a fluid dialogue that amplifies the voices of local and global art.

Prior registration required by phoning 91 276 02 21, emailing ca2m@madrid.org or going to the museum’s reception. Maximum capacity 20 people.

Activity type
Dates
Saturdays 12:00 (until April) Thursdays 19:00 (from May)
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

AFORO: 20 PERSONAS

Entrance

Through gallery encounters with different artists, this programme suggests an encounter that plays with uncertainty, surprise and thrills. Three times a month, the CA2M Museum invites local artists, curators or researchers to share their interests with the public to connect their practices, careers or inquiries with the exhibitions underway.

Subtitle
SERIES OF GALLERY ENCOUNTERS WITH ARTISTS
Categoría cabecera
visitas artistas
SEE YOU AT THE EXHIBITIONS!
More information and contact
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Credit: Sue Ponce.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
1 HORA

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
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Foto Sue Ponce

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

In this workshop we’ll approach the Tarot as a creative, symbolic and deeply personal tool. We’ll begin by exploring archetypes, memory and autobiography, and then we’ll use drawing to make a unique card that represents you: your card.

Each participant will create their own Tarot card, developing its symbols, meanings and narratives. It’s not a question of learning a closed system, but of opening up a space where the intuitive and the personal guide the process.

During the workshop we’ll look at examples of influential Tarots like Dorothy Iannone’s (Ta)Rot Pack, using Aitor Saraiba's Tarot of Light as our compass to understand the Tarot as a living language that can be reinterpreted through individual experience.

Drawing skills are not required. The approach is free, accessible and focused on the process rather than the result.

This workshop is also a first step for anyone who wants to embark on the journey of creating their own complete Tarot deck, beginning with a card that will operate as the starting point and seed of a personal symbolic universe.

Aitor Saraiba is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice revolves around drawing as the primary tool of exploration. Using this medium, he expands his language to encompass different formats, from ceramics to textile art, building a personal universe defined by a constant dialogue between the manual and the symbolic

His work is inspired by a quest to connect with the invisible, to shape what doesn’t always have a name. In this process, drawing becomes an intimate, spiritual channel. As a result of his research, in 2021 he created the Tarot de Luz, a work that has sold more than 30,000 copies worldwide and has been translated into several languages, making it one of his most influential pieces.

Saraiba’s work is deliberately situated at the margins of the artistic establishment. His interest lies in the artisanal, ancestral and intuitive, with parallels in outsider art, pop art and mystical tools. From that place, he has forged an honest, personal language that champions emotion, imperfection and spiritual connection as forms of knowledge.

 

Activity type
Dates
12 May
Target audience
Registration
-
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 20 PEOPLE.

Entrance

In this workshop we’ll approach the Tarot as a creative, symbolic and deeply personal tool. We’ll begin by exploring archetypes, memory and autobiography, and then we’ll use drawing to make a unique card that represents you: your card.

Actividades asociadas
Subtitle
WORKSHOP FOR ADULTS
Categoría cabecera
Tarot
IMAGES THAT SPEAK OF YOU: CREATING YOUR OWN TAROT CARD WITH AITOR SARAIBA
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Aitor Saraiba’s Tarot of Light

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
From 18:00 to 21:00

In April and May the curators of the Ester Partegàs and Dorothy Iannone exhibitions, Bea Espejo and Tania Pardo, will take you on a tour of the shows, pointing out the hallmarks of the artistic practices of these two creators.

MINOR ARCHITECTURE BY ESTER PARTEGÀS, curated by BEA ESPEJO

The world in our pocket

Having the world in our pocket is like inhabiting a minor architecture. It alludes to something small that leads to many things, highlights the value of what is within our reach, and celebrates the sensation of confidence we feel when we achieve a lot with very little. It also operates as metaphor for the condensation of the world: something immense, complex and infinite that can be concentrated in the palm of our hand. This thrill of understanding the world and seeing the inexhaustible in the everyday provide the premise for reflecting on Ester Partegàs’s work. 

  • Tuesday 14 April, 6.30 pm
  • Saturday 23 May, 12 pm

OVER AND OVER AGAIN BY DOROTHY IANNONE, curated by TANIA PARDO

Let’s talk about Dorothy...

The sixties, the Tarot, Dieter Roth, Sarah Pucci, Fluxus friends, Berlin, Düsseldorf and hundreds of recipes. Autobiography, love and the domestic realm were tools of exploration in Dorothy Iannone’s art. The intimacy and power of her works can also be interpreted as a space of women’s liberation, where the personal becomes political. In this tour, books, paintings, sculptures and sound boxes, saturated with text and colour, provide a gateway into Iannone’s universe and the central themes of her work: eroticism, sexuality and friendship.

  • Saturday 18 April, 12 pm
  • Saturday 23 May, 1 pm
  • Saturday 13 June, 12 noon

Activity free of charge. Please register in advance by calling 91 276 02 21 or writing to ca2m@madrid.org 

Activity type
Dates
APRIL–MAY–JUNE
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 20 PEOPLE

Entrance

In April and May the curators of the Ester Partegàs and Dorothy Iannone exhibitions, Bea Espejo and Tania Pardo, will take you on a tour of the shows, pointing out the hallmarks of the artistic practices of these two creators.

Categoría cabecera
visitas comisarias
GUIDED TOURS OF THE EXHIBITIONS
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Picture: Sue Ponce.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
1 HOUR

These tours of the Ester Partegàs, Dorothy Iannone and Antonio Ballester Moreno exhibitions don’t seek categorical answers but open up a space where the experiences of visitors, and of groups that now form part of the museum, are put into play and create networks. We want to reflect together on it what means to tour an exhibition using conversation, listening and the difference of gazes.

How does what we see change when we focus on the fragment, the framing or the time we dedicate to a work?
What do we really use when we look at a work?

“What the eye doesn't reveal” proposes a tour where framing, fragment and time are mobilised to provide a deeper insight into Sky and Earth by Antonio Ballester Moreno, Minor Architecture by Ester Partegàs, and Over and Over Again by Dorothy Iannone. Three proposals which, each from a very different place, invite us to think about what falls outside the spotlight, about what is repeated and transformed, and about the intimate, the body and the everyday as territories of meaning.

A space to pause at the details and accept the partial gaze, allowing the works (and other people as well) to interrogate us, disturb us or connect us from unexpected places. A tour where the fragment is not something incomplete but a possibility; where the framing is not a limit but a revelation; and where time is measured not as duration but as intensity of the experience.

The tours will be accompanied by Francisca Soto Martínez (Santiago de Chile, 1989), artist, restorer and educator based in Spain. A member of the El Hueco collective, her work is situated at the intersection between collective memory, community building and cultural mediation, exploring the frictions between art, restoration and education.

Activity for the general public every Sunday at 12.30 pm

  • Maximum capacity: 12 people
  • Advance registration: 91 276 02 21 or ca2m@madrid.org
  • You can also sign up directly at the Museum reception.

Group tours on Wednesday mornings

If you belong to a collective, association, educational establishment or informal group, contact us to arrange a tour by calling 91 276 02 27 or writing to educacion.ca2m@madrid.org

Activity type
Dates
EVERY SUNDAY AT 12:30
Target audience
Acceso notas adicionales

CAPACITY: 12 PEOPLE

Entrance

These tours of the Ester Partegàs, Dorothy Iannone and Antonio Ballester Moreno exhibitions don’t seek categorical answers but open up a space where the experiences of visitors, and of groups that now form part of the museum, are put into play and create networks. We want to reflect together on it what means to tour an exhibition using conversation, listening and the difference of gazes.

Subtitle
TOURS OF THE EXHIBITIONS
Categoría cabecera
visitas domingos
WHAT THE EYE DOESN'T REVEAL
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Picture: Sue Ponce.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
12:30- 14:00

We invite you to join us for a guided tour entitled “Going round and round is what leaves a mark”, where we take a closer look at the exhibition Ria, by Jorge Satorre. In this activity, as we tour the exhibition we’ll reflect on the traces, repetitions and narratives derived from our own lives.

Can the simple act of strolling time and time again around an exhibition reveal connections between the themes of the works and our subjectivity? In “Going round and round is what leaves a mark”, we explore that possibility. As we stroll through Jorge Satorre’s artistic universe, we’ll try to discover the reflections, meanings and stories present in the works.

The tours will be led by Francisca Soto Martínez (Santiago de Chile,1989). Francisca is a Chilean artist, restorer and educator based in Spain. She is a member of El Hueco, a collective through which she develops projects on the themes of collective memory and community building. Exploring the frictions between art, restoration and education, she aims to create a positive impact on communities and non-hegemonic cultural heritage. Please register in advance by calling 91 276 02 21, sending email to ca2m@madrid.org or in person at the museum reception.

Maximum capacity: 12 people.

 

Activity type
Dates
SUNDAYS 12:30 P.M.
Target audience
Topics
Acceso notas adicionales

Maximum capacity: 12 people.

Entrance

We invite you to join us for a guided tour entitled “Going round and round is what leaves a mark”, where we take a closer look at the exhibition Ria, by Jorge Satorre. In this activity, as we tour the exhibition we’ll reflect on the traces, repetitions and narratives derived from our own lives.

Subtitle
TOUR OF RIA, AN EXHIBITION BY JORGE SATORRE
Categoría cabecera
visitas Jorge
GOING ROUND AND ROUND IS WHAT LEAVES A MARK
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Fotografía: Sue Ponce.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
1 HOUR

The book 1502 Persons Facing the Wall is the outcome of the research and work undertaken around the Santiago Sierra exhibition being held at the CA2M museum until 2 February 2025. This publication brings together images of Sierra’s characteristic ‘inverse’ portraits and finds resonance in the profound, insightful texts by Alexis Callado, Rosa Martínez, Georg Imdahl, Juan Albarrán, José Luis Corazón, Pilar Villela and Gonzalo Abaha. The book immerses us in a striking picture of the artist and the questions he asks about power and its effects. The publication not only documents the exhibition but also becomes a tool of reflection on the networks shaping our realities.

The activity will feature Carlos TMori (designer), Juan Albarrán (author of one of the texts), Sandra Guimaraes (director of the Helga de Alvear Museum), Alexis Callado (exhibition curator) and Tania Pardo (director of the CA2M Museum).

The ‘Variation 90’ sound activity, directed by Ugo Martínez Lázaro, will be held after the launch. In this piece, the artist aims to manifest and allegorically question forms of social domination and alienation by evoking purification rituals that combine creativity and community resistance. Four experimental musicians take part acoustically in the space for forty minutes to explore the conceptual tensions in Sierra’s work. This collective event will feature Ugo Martínez, Arianna Cana Mackenzie, Doris Steinbichler and Narcoléptica.

Carlos TMori is a graphic designer of publications, visual artist, contemporary art curator and associate professor in the Bachelor’s in Fine Arts at the University of Salamanca. He has a PhD in Fine Arts and two bachelor’s degrees in Fine Arts and Audiovisual Communication. As a graphic designer, he has worked for companies like una más una and La Fábrica and for cultural institutions like the Ministry of Culture, the Foreign Ministry, the DA2 Art Centre, the Conde Duque Contemporary Culture Centre and the MUSAC and Es Baluard museums.

Juan Albarrán is a professor in the Department of Art History and Theory at the Autonomous University of Madrid. His lines of research revolve around contemporary artistic practices and discourses, especially the relationships between art and politics in Spain since the transition to democracy, theories of photography and performance, and representations of torture in contemporary visual culture. He has published the books Disputas sobre lo contemporáneo. Arte español entre el antifranquismo y la postmodernidad (2019) and Performance y arte contemporáneo. Discursos, prácticas, problemas (2019) on these issues, and he has edited the collectively-written volumes Arte y transición (2012 and 2018), Llámalo Performance: historia, disciplina y recepción (with Iñaki Estella, 2015) and Ensayo/Error. Tentativas interartísticas en el Estado español (with Rosa Benéitez, 2018).

Alexis Callado has a degree in Art History from the University of Havana. His curatorial practice includes solo exhibitions with Carlos Pazos (La Casa Encendida, Madrid; Centro de Desarrollo de las Artes Visuales, Havana), as well as group exhibitions (Ante nuestros ojos, Loop Festival, Barcelona; Culto Digestivo, Conarte, Monterey) and collaborative projects like Lab Latino, Eighteenth Arte Paiz Biennial, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. He is an active promoter of exchanges between the Spanish and Latin American art scenes. He helped to choose, coordinate and produce publishing projects in graphic art, photography and sculptural objects for the company Arte y Naturaleza of Madrid. He has organised artistic projects in Sweden, Spain, France, Guatemala, Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Cuba. He partners with publications, museums, associations and centres specialised in contemporary art. He is a member of the Transatlantic Network and is a co-founder of The Curatorial Bureau.

Tania Pardo is the director of the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo of the Community of Madrid. She was the Fine Arts advisor of the Community of Madrid until July 2019. Before that, she was in charge of the Exhibition Department at Madrid’s La Casa Encendida. She has also served as a curator at MUSAC, Contemporary Art Museum of Castilla y León, and as the head of programming in the Laboratorio 987 space. She has been the director of projects at the Fundación Santander 2016 (2009–2010) and associate professor of Art History at the Complutense University of Madrid. She has recently curated the Cristina Garrido show The Origin of Forms at the CA2M Museum, and Bird Machine Dream by Teresa Solar Abboud at the same museum along with Claudia Segura in a co-production with MACBA and the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo in Turin.

Sandra Guimarães (Oporto) is the director of the Helga de Alvear Museum in Cáceres. Her career in the visual arts spans around twenty years and includes posts like the Artistic Director of the Bombas Gens Centre d’Art (Valencia) between 2020 and 2023. Guimarães was the curator of the Serralves Museum (Oporto, Portugal) between 1998 and 2010 and the founding director of programmes at the Remai Modern (Saskatoon, Canada) between 2015 and 2019. At Serralves, she organised exhibitions of contemporary artists like Alvess, Artur Barrio, Thomas Hirschhorn, Cristina Iglesias, Barry Le Va and Dan Graham, among others, and co-curated the exhibition The 80’s. At the Remai Modern, she co-curated the programme prior to the museum’s opening, as well as its inaugural exhibition, Field Guide. Her training includes a master’s in Art History and Archaeology (specialisation in Modern and Contemporary Art) and a master’s in Cultural Management, both from the Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium).

Ugo Martínez Lázaro merges art and the social sciences with an experimental approach to sound and music. He combines documentary research, texts, music and on-the-ground experiences in projects involving comics, installations and sound art. He co-directs Pirotecnia, a trans-disciplinary improvisation ensemble, which issued an LP with the Madrid Town Hall in 2022, a limited edition of 300 hand-painted records, including a comic he designed, which is available in Madrid and Mexico.

Arianna Cana Mackenzie is a Cuban musician and producer living in Spain. She plays multiple instruments, like the clarinet, the saxophone and the flute. She started studying clarinet at the age of ten in Camagüey and continued at the National Music School and Art College of Havana, where she has also taught. She has worked with the Camagüey Symphony and the ICRT. She conducted the Limpopo Youth Orchestra in South Africa, where she explored Afro-Cuban folklore in Europe, Africa and the Caribbean.

Narcoléptica is the alias of Beatriz Vaca (Seville, 1985), who holds a bachelor’s in Fine Arts and is a self-taught musician. She has been creating experimental electro-acoustic music influenced by psychodelia, ambient music, noise and post-rock since 2006. She processes electric guitar, piano, synthesisers and voice to generate exciting sound experiences. She has issued her own records, contributed to soundtracks and performance pieces and stood out on tours around Europe and Latin America with powerful live presentations.

Doris Steinbichler (Vienna, 1965) is a vocal improvisational artist and creator of transmedia performances in Austria and Mexico. She has won awards in Mexico in performance and radio and has founded projects like ‘Remediar’, ‘Trinchera Ensemble’ and ‘4shrooms’. Her works explore vocal experimentation and multimedia and have been presented at important museums and festivals. In 2023, she celebrated thirty years of her career at Ex Teresa Arte Actual (CdMX), reaffirming her contribution to transdisciplinary art.

 

Activity type
Dates
WEDNESDAY 18 DECEMBER
Target audience
Topics
Entrance

Presentation of the book on the occasion of the exhibition 1502 people face to the wall by Santiago Sierra, with the presence of Carlos TMori, Juan Albarrán, Sandra Guimaraes, Alexis Callado and Tania Pardo. After the presentation, we will have the sound activation ‘Variación 90’, directed by Ugo Martínez Lázaro and featuring Arianna Cana Mackenzie, Narcoléptica and Doris Steinbichler.

Categoría cabecera
Santiago libro
LAUNCH OF THE BOOK 1502 PERSONS FACING THE WALL AND ‘VARIATION 90’ SOUND ACTIVATION BY UGO MARTÍNEZ LÁZARO.
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Picture: Roberto Ruiz. © Santiago Sierra. VEGAP, Madrid, 2024.

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

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
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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
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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
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Picture: Roberto Ruiz.

Is it a cycle?
Disabled
Duration
2 HOURS