Publications

  • libro Juan Muñoz
    Publicación

    Todo lo que veo me sobrevivirá, que recoge el doble proyecto retrospectivo de las exposiciones Todo lo que veo me sobrevivirá celebrada en la Sala Alcalá 31 y En la hora violeta, todavía visitable en el Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, ambas con motivo del setenta aniversario del nacimiento de Juan Muñoz.

  • June Crespo
    Publication

    Published to mark the exhibition They Saw Their House Become Fields at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo in 2023, this publication offers an in-depth look at June Crespo’s artistic practice and unravels the particular spatial and material relationships at play in her work.

  • Karlos Gil
    Publication

    The catalogue that accompanies the exhibition Decline, which was on at the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo between February and May 2023, is the first to examine his work and offers a complete overview of his oeuvre. It includes a comprehensive selection of his previous work as well as new pieces created in connection with the exhibition. With contributions by Peio Aguirre, Jussi Parikka, Bernardo José de Souza and Laura Tripaldi.

  • Xabier Salaberria
    Publication

    This book was designed to form part of the exhibition of the same name, curated by Catalina Lozano and co-designed by Patxi Eguíluz.

  • Mitsuo
    Publication

    To mark the exhibition Mitsuo Miura. Almost 400 m² for Two Landscapes, we have published, together with DA2 in Salamanca, a book that looks back over the career of this Japanese artist who has been living in Spain since the 1960s. With texts by Eva Lootz, Glòria Picazo, Sergio Rubira and Tania Pardo.

  • Martin Wong
    Publication

    Dedicated to the exhibition Martin Wong. Mischievous Mischief, this book is an important contribution to the exhibition.

  • Disco- relatoria
    Publicación

    Aquí puedes escuchar el disco-relatoría El triángulo que hizo Julián Mayorga a raíz de lo que sucedió en el proyecto sobre escucha entre un colegio, un conservatorio y un coro experimental del museo en el curso 2019-2020-2021 que se alargó por la pandemia y que trajo miles de  sonidos inauditos y espectaculares.

  • Espejo y Reino
    Exhibition

    This book, which accompanies the exhibition, is centred on three bodies of work. The first is a compilation of photographs that the artist Álvaro Perdices took while the Army Museum’s headquarters in the Salón de Reinos building in Madrid was being dismantled, and which forms a kind of archive around which the exhibition revolves. The second section unfolds and expands with the written word. For the third, the photographer Manolo Laguillo captured images of the installation inside the room. It includes texts by Juan Herreros, María Virginia Jaua, María Dolores Jiménez-Blanco, Álvaro Perdices and Manuel Segade.

  • Stages
    Exhibition

    The exhibition Portrait of a Movement. Renate Lorenz & Pauline Boudry, is accompanied by a retrospective publication that offers an in-depth exploration – in a joint work by Övül Öof – of the artistic and theoretical vocabularies by Boudry/Lorenz. Durmusoglu and Boudry/Lorenz, with texts by Élisabeth Lebovici, Amelia Groom, Ana Janevski, Rindon Johnson, Pablo Lafuente, Miguel A. López, Mason Leaver-Yap, Irene Revell, Mayra Rodríguez Castro and Yolande Zola Zoli van der Heide.

  • El Testigo. Teresa Margolles
    Exhibition

    The Witness is the title of Teresa Margolles’ exhibition at the CA2M MUSEUM, curated by María Inés Rodríguez. The exhibition provides an overview of her recent work via a series of work produced over the last five years. It sends us on a circular path, both real and figurative, that loops around the recent history of Ciudad Juárez.

  • Diego Bianchi
    Exhibition

    Renato Mauricio Fumero, Isabel de Naverán and Diego Vecchio have been invited to write a series of texts. In keeping with the spirit of the collection as a whole, we have included a story by Lynne Tillman starring Madame Realism.

  • catalogo Pedro Neves
    Publication

    The exhibition YWY, Visions is made up of films, interviews and assorted documentation that Neves Marques uses to reaffirm the role of fiction to document environmental and political violence, while also reflecting on different imaginaries of other possible futures for gender, technology, the question of indigenousness and science fiction.