Thinking

Thinking

The Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo is launching a study and research group on ‘Art and Seclusion’. This working group was founded with the intention of using art to inquire into the frameworks related to seclusion, including both mental health and psychiatry on the one hand, and everything related to creation under circumstances of social exclusion on the other. This latter, an art of the marginal which encompasses Art Brut, a label coined by the artist Jean Dubuffet in the 1940s, refers to all artistic expressions made with no regard to either officialdom or even culture itself. And finally, it inquires into what is directly related to penitentiaries as spaces of limitation by examining works made under conditions of isolation.

Made up of Mery Cuesta, Inés Plasencia, María Rufilanchas, Pilar Soler and Tania Pardo, this group will meet periodically in closed- and open-door sessions which different creators and researchers related to this topic will be invited in order to gradually construct a body of work by analysing different artists, movements and projects that reflect all these topics. The outcome of the research will be presented in late 2025.

Mery Cuesta 

MERY CUESTA  

A culture critic, exhibition curator and teacher, she specialises in languages of popular culture. She is a researcher and associate professor of Contemporary Art in the Faculty of Audiovisual Communication at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona) and director of the Master’s in Illustration and Visual Narrative at ELISAVA-Design and Engineering Faculty of Barcelona-UVic. As an art critic, she has written for La Vanguardia and El Mundo and reported for the Radio Nacional de España show ‘El Ojo Crítico’ (RNE1). She has curated around thirty exhibitions on popular culture and outsider art, such as Quinquis de los 80 [Kinkies of the Eighties] (CCCB, La Casa Encendida) and Humor absurdo: Una constelación del disparate en España [Absurd Humour. A Constellation of Follies in Spain] (Museo CA2M, Madrid ). She was the curator of the Catalan pavilion at the 2017 Venice Biennale. Her latest published book is Humor absurdo (Ed. Astiberri, 2021)..

Pilar Soler

PILAR SOLER 

Pilar Soler Montes is an art historian, researcher and freelance curator. She has produced various exhibitions, including Estudio cromático para el Azul for the Off PhotoEspaña Festival (2015), El ojo eléctrico at La Casa Encendida (2019), Cabeza de lobo by Blanca Gracias at Sala de Arte Joven of the Regional Government of Madrid (2022), Histeria. La transgresión del deseo at TEA, Tenerife (2023), La torre invertida. El tarot como forma y símbolo at La Casa Encendida (2024), and Lo camí del sol by Felipe Talo at Justo Gallego’s Cathedral in Mejorada del Campo (2025).

She has worked with several institutions, directing and curating projects like Fantasmagorías contemporáneas (2023) and Estudios de carne y gesto (2024) as part of the Madrid31 programme at Sala Alcala 31 of the Regional Government of Madrid and the Círculo de Bellas Artes (2023), El archivo invisible at the FelipaManuela Research Residency Centre (from 2020 to 2022), the Programa Chimenea at La Casa Encendida (from 2019 to 2020), and the Tabacalera Estancias residencies for curators funded by Spain’s Culture Ministry (from 2018 to 2020).

She has given talks and taken part in lecture series at Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Fine Arts Faculty, 2022), Universidad del País Vasco (UPV-EHU Fine Arts Faculty), Universidad de Málaga (Education Faculty, 2022), and the Museo Thyssen Bornemisza, Madrid (2014).

 

María Rufilanchas

MARÍA RUFILANCHAS

She is the founder of molaría, a creative studio specialising in copywriting, and teta & teta, a nonprofit feminist brand which aims to desexualise breasts and the environment. In 2018, she launched the ‘A las olvidadas’ initiative, a project to collect books to give them to women imprisoned in penitentiaries in Spain.

 

Inés Plasencia

INÉS PLASENCIA CAMPS 

She is a curator, researcher and cultural manager. She has a Master’s in Contemporary Art History and Visual Culture and a PhD in Art History and Theory from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. She is currently an associate professor at that university and teaches classes at Duke University in Madrid. Her main lines of research are the visual arts, postcolonial studies, the visual culture of colonialism and its continuities as applied to debates, questions and ways of critically questioning the contemporary world. The current core of her work is the exploration of the contemporary artistic and cultural practices of fear and what happens after death. She regularly partners with numerous institutions, such as Tabakalera (San Sebastián); the Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, where she directed the ‘Norma y disidencia’ conference; and the Museo Reina Sofía, where she was a member of the team that researched and conceptualised the Rethinking Guernica project (2015–2017), part of the contemporary debates around the digital humanities and archives, where she curated the virtual exhibition Con tres heridas yo (2020). She is a regular member of variable curatorial teams to develop her projects to include other forms of knowledge, voices and sensibilities that transcend the auteur curatorial perspective to articulate critical collective spaces of action and thinking.

Tania

TANIA PARDO

(Madrid, 1976) She has been the director of the Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo since March 2024, and until June 2023 she was a Fine Arts Advisor for the Community of Madrid. A curator and researcher, she holds a degree in Art History from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. She has been in charge of the Department of Exhibitions at La Casa Encendida (2015–2019) and an Art History professor at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (2014–2019), and she is currently a member of the teaching team for the Master’s in Curatorial Studies at the Universidad de Navarra and the Master’s in Cultural Management at the Universidad Carlos III. She has been a curator at MUSAC, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León, was in charge of programming at Laboratorio 987 (2005–2010) and was a Project Director at the Fundación Santander 2016 (2009–2010). She has developed different curatorial projects with different institutions, including: Sin heroísmos, por favor [No Heroics, Please] (Iván Argote-Teresa Solar Abboud-Sara Ramo) at the CA2M (March 2012); the En Casa [At Home] project at La Casa Encendida (2012) and 1465 Tizas [1465 Chalks] by Maider López at the Nave 16 in MATADERO Madrid. She co-directs the Studio Workshops on Contemporary Spanish Art (Fundación Helga de Alvear / La Casa Encendida and Museo Unión FENOSA) and the course on ‘Curating the Present’, which has been held at La Casa Encendida since 2012. She also develops projects related to the approach to contemporary art and education in conjunction with the UCM’s Fine Arts Faculty and organised the ‘Summer Salon’ (July 2014). She is in charge of the portfolio-viewing project CAFÉ DOSSIER organised by the Ministry of Culture (2013 and 2014) and launched the Madrid 45 / Línea 3 Visual Culture Programme organised by the Community of Madrid (2015–2016). She publishes in different specialised media, has regularly contributed to the El País cultural supplement Babelia as an art critic, writes for exhibition catalogues, teaches classes and seminars on contemporary art and is a jury member for different prizes and contests related to contemporary art. She and Manuel Segade recently curated the show Dialecto CA2M [CA2M Dialect] focused on the CA2M and Fundación ARCO collections and the individual show Casi 400 m2 para dos paisajes [Almost 400 m2 for Two Landscapes] by the artist Mitsuo Miura at the CA2M Museum.

Entrance

The Museo Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo is launching a study and research group on ‘Art and Seclusion’. This working group was founded with the intention of using art to inquire into the frameworks related to seclusion, including both mental health and psychiatry on the one hand, and everything related to creation under circumstances of social exclusion on the other.

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Arte y reclusion
‘ART AND SECLUSION’ STUDY AND RESEARCH GROUP
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Clemente Bernad. "Cárcel de Carabanchel", 1998. Museo CA2M Collection.

Type Thinking / Community
Topics Thinking
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Is it a cycle?
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The universe is an indomitable force that cuts through our very existence and shapes our spirit. We are sorceresses, clairvoyants and mediums from birth, experts in the power of divination, clairvoyance and communication with the great beyond. If you’re reading this, fate and cosmic vibrations attracted you to this page so you could communicate with us. We can channel the essence of elements to attract positive energy and stave off the evil eye. We will reveal the answers to your existential questions and attract balance to your life to fill it with light and spiritual wellbeing. Request information, no strings attached.

You’re not on the wrong page. Cultural mediation can have a bit of divination, witchcraft and esotericism about it. Mediation for Five Handrails is a collaborative project between AMECUM and the CA2M Museum throughout the 2023-2024 academic year, where we rethought mediation itself in its context by putting the mediator’s body in the centre, amidst so many objects and words. This project is also regarded as an inquiry revolving around two lines of action at AMECUM: reflection and experimentation in mediation, good practices and other ways of seeing it; and bringing visibility and recognition to the figure of the cultural mediator.

Through this announcement, we want to invite you to the project presentation, where we’ll share the results of the inquiry conducted by AMECUM, which started with an invitation from the CA2M Museum to conduct visits to the exhibitions. Thus, we wanted to engage in an open act/performance/ritual to freeze time and record the fleeting footprints of our mediations, which still exist as living spectres.

Dates header text
12 June
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Through this announcement, we want to invite you to the project presentation, where we’ll share the results of the inquiry conducted by AMECUM, which started with an invitation from the CA2M Museum to conduct visits to the exhibitions. Thus, we wanted to engage in an open act/performance/ritual to freeze time and record the fleeting footprints of our mediations, which still exist as living spectres.

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Amecum
MEDIATIONS FROM THE GREAT BEYOND
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Picture: AMECUM (Mar Sáenz-López, Ximena Ríos, Jesús Morate, Alex Martínez y Ana Folguera).

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19:00- 21:00
Is it a cycle?
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Directed by Inés Plasencia, Noemí de Haro and Patricia Mayayo.

The Conference on the Study of The Image is an event dedicated to collective reflection on the theory, practice, semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures. It includes a forum for debate, seminar and workshops, as well as a public call for research projects (details below).

This conference is an encounter of artistic, theoretical and activist perspectives on mental health and attempts to address these intersections through specific collaborative artistic practices as well as public participation. Even before the Covid-19 pandemic unleashed a wave of depression and anxiety-related disorders, the question of its impact on particular, very specific communities, as well as critiques of certain medical positions related to their diagnosis and treatment, have increasingly come into the spotlight, overwhelming traditional spaces of legitimisation.

Mental health and its connection to neurodivergence are part of a dialogue that is often tense when it comes to treatment methods and curative principles, as well as with denial strategies used against collective causes: particularly critical areas, such as grassroots activist movements and artistic practice, defend personified positions and denounce the violence and the stigmatisation of a great deal of psychiatric practice.

At the same time, “over-diagnosis” is prone to critique, among other things, because it excludes the most socially marginalised groups, making them invisible. Artistic and activist practices propose definitions and approaches to mental health that focus on more intimate, affective aspects of mental health, as well as the vindication of visions read as neurodivergent and the importance of networks for overcoming collective discomfort.

These spaces and feelings built around the idea of community self-management of mental health find that creating is not only a tool for healing, but also for protest. The conference, directed by Inés Plasencia, Noemí de Haro and Patricia Mayayo, will include talks, participatory workshops, dialogues between artists, presentations of projects and communications selected through open calls, as well as a screening and subsequent conversation with the director.

UAM Coordination: Mónica Salcedo Calvo. This conference is part of the project The audiences of contemporary art and visual culture in Spain. new forms of collective artistic experience since the 1960s (PID2019-105800GB-I00, Agencia Estatal de Investigación). Participants in the programme include: Fernando Balius, Clara López (Mesa Camilla), Ana CSC, María Ruido, Inés Molina, Alicia Utiyama, David Crespo, Sasha Warren, Costa Badía, Silvia Maestre Limiñana, Jesús Etxart, Gemma B. Palacios, Rebecca Tolosa, Toxic Lesbian, Irene García Molina, Rafael Sánchez-Mateos, Fátima Masoud.

INFORMATION NOTE:

  • Registration is required in order to attend the conference.
  • You can attend individual sessions, but priority will be given to registered participants
  • To attend the workshops, you must register for all the conferences. Each workshop lasts 2 mornings. It is only possible to register for one.
  • We ask that those who have registered be punctual. If, ten minutes after the start of the first afternoon session, there are empty seats, these may be taken by anyone who has not registered until all the seats are filled.
  • Certificates of attendance will be issued for those who attend 80% of the sessions.
  •  

PROGRAMME

Thursday 16 November.

11:00-14:00 Workshop: From painting mandalas to stories that tell stories. Part 1. Conversations on madness and collective meaning Fernando Balius*

11:00-14:00 Podcast workshop. Pain as a gift: strategies and rituals for mental health care. Part 1. Clara Lopez (Night Table)*

16:30 Start and presentation of the programme.

16:45 A crazy opening conference. Ana CSC (Locus)

17:30 Debate

18:00-18:15 Break

18:15-20:00 Presentation of projects. Session 1. The world as diagnosis.

  • It’s not you, it’s ableism. Costa Badía.
  • Clinical Report: F84.1. Silvia Maestre Limiñana.
  • “DropExpander” (psycho-magnetic embodiment of interferon on basic biological mechanisms). Jesús Etxart.

Friday 17 November.

11:00-14:00 Workshop: From painting mandalas to stories that tell stories. Part 2. Conversations on madness and collective meaning Fernando Balius.

11:00-14:00 Podcast workshop: Pain as a gift: strategies and rituals for mental health care. Part 2. Clara López (Bedside Table).

15:30-17:15 Presentation of projects. Session 2. The shores of art

  •  “What to cure?” Poetry behind the antiseptic tunnel in Anne Sexton, Unica Zürn and Alejandra Pizarnik. Gema B. Palacios
  • Sanctity and neurodivergence: minor artistic practices between the abject and the sacred. Rafael Sánchez-Mateos
  • Art brut, bruta tú 100mg. Fatima Masoud.

17:15 Break

17:30-19:15 Presentation of projects. Session 3. Own repair

  • (Im)possible images. Rebecca Tolosa.
  • Tales that are Never Told and In the Wind. Toxic Lesbian.
  • Stories of autistic mothers. Research, dissemination, action. Irene García Molina.

19:15 Break

Saturday 18 November

11:00-12:00 Critical positions from the perspective of artistic practice. Conversation with David Crespo and Alicia Utiyama

12:00 Debate

12:15 Break

12:30 The workshop of the mad. Talk by Sasha Warren

13:15-14:00 Debate

14:00-16:00 Lunch break.

16:00 Public presentation of the workshop: From painting mandalas to stories that tell stories. Conversations on madness and collective meaning Fernando Balius.

17:00 Public presentation of the podcast workshop: Pain as a gift: strategies and rituals for mental health care. Clara López (Night Table)

18:00 Closing speech at the end of the conference.

18:15 Screening. State of discomfort. María Ruido.

19:15-20:00 Debate with María Ruido.

Activity type
Dates
16, 17 AND 18 NOVEMBER
Target audience
Entrance

The Conference on the Study of The Image is an event dedicated to collective reflection on the theory, practice, semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures. It includes a forum for debate, seminar and workshops, as well as a public call for research projects (details below).

Categoría cabecera
jei 2023
28th CONFERENCE ON THE STUDY OF THE IMAGE. CROSSING WORLDS: THE PUBLIC, CONTEMPORARY ART AND MENTAL HEALTH
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Laura Ramírez Palacio, "Un elefante blanco", 2021.

Is it a cycle?
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Duration
MORNING AND AFTERNOON
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Nosotras dolemos. Clara López (Mesa Camilla)

Ciudad Sur (‘Southern City’) is a space for shared experimentation launched in 2021 which, taking Móstoles as its starting point, aims to explore the many facets and many riches that generate a sense of belonging in the cities that make up the Madrid’s metropolitan area.   

In this third edition, we will approach Móstoles as post-tourist guides, travelling together through a series of architectures composed of layers of time, experiences and lived moments around what we call free time, based on a proposal of shared experimentation in which this dormitory town will become a holiday destination. 

Leisure, what we call ‘free time’, is one of the things we desire most, a place where we indulge in experiences - lived or projected – which are associated with enjoyment.  

There is a leisure with which we live every day, that which marks the pauses in the flow of daily activity, such as the time we dedicate to sport and its promise of a balanced, healthy, desirable life. But there is also leisure that functions as an escape route, a time and a place where limits are widened: popular festivals, nights out... and of course, the idea of true leisure, and the search for total disconnection: holidays. A long pause that allows us, at least for a while, to pretend to live under another logic, to try to be other people.                                                                                                                

As dormitory towns grew, low-cost ‘getaway’ flights multiplied, definitively linking holidays with the idea of travel. To this end, the tourism industry offers us a myriad of destinations to match our dreams and our wallets, deploying a whole travel imaginary in which this desired ‘freedom’ can take shape. A catalogue of beautiful scenes often constructed in contrast to everyday spaces, based on a play of opposites. From urban grey to the infinite blue skies and seas; from the brick of the city to the white of the Costa Brava, or the warm gold of the sun... But never the ‘brown coast’. This ‘coast’ is Madrid’s metropolitan area, which will be the setting for the activities proposed in this programme, where we will reflect on the evolution of the urban, political and social criteria that have built this city’s landscape of leisure infrastructures. 

The sessions will take place between October 2023 and May 2024: 3rd of October, 7th of November, 12th of December, 16th of  January, 20th of February, 12th of March, 16th of April and 7th of May 2024. 

Coordinated by: Irene de Andrés, La Liminal and Estrella Serrano.

Irene de Andrés was born in one of the world’s most desirable destinations - the island of Ibiza - which has inevitably led her to investigate the evolution of the concept of leisure and the very meaning of travel throughout history, from the first settlers to today’s tour operators. Spas, cruise ships and nightclubs are the key settings for the artist who, through film, sculptural pieces and graphic work, creates journeys through time and through different waters, connecting different historical events that make us reflect on the model of tourist consumption, especially designed for the working class. 

La Liminal is a cultural mediation collective that investigates the city and uses the urban tour as a tool to analyse public space collectively. Our aim is to experiment with the urban landscape in order to propose new readings that focus on those stories that have been made invisible over time, those we have not sufficiently valued, in order to construct alternative discourses that are based on collective learning and that allow for a re-appropriation of the idea of public space as a common good. 

Activity type
Dates
OCTOBER - JUNE
Target audience
Entrance

Ciudad Sur (‘Southern City’) is a space for shared experimentation in which we will approach Móstoles as post-tourist guides to tour a series of architectures made up of layers of time, experiences and experiences around what we call free time. The dormitory town will become a holiday town.

Subtitle
A JOURNEY FROM BRICK TO STONEWARE IN LEISURE CONSTRUCTION
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Ciudad Sur mayo
SOUTHERN CITY. BROWN COAST.
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Photography: “Verano en Móstoles”, 1994. Collection "Madrileños". Regional Archive of the Comunidad de Madrid.

Is it a cycle?
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Duration
ONE SESSION A MONTH 18:00- 20:00H

This audio-visual programme is based on the hypothesis that the ecological crisis also manifests itself in the image as a crisis of representation. Like the gap in our modern cultural heritage that convinced us of the difference between culture and nature and taught us to look at the latter from a distance, either as an object of study and exploitation or as a landscape-spectacle on which to project human emotions and adventures, the only stories worth telling.  

Today, some arts are rebelling against this history of ‘disenchantment’ and its impact on visual culture. Wishing to repair the earthly link, they seek other practices of the image that bring with them other ways of being in the world. There is no common pattern to these emerging forms. Some question the word ‘nature’ and argue that there is a continuum between organisms and technologies, infrastructures and ecosystems. Others study the agency or cognition of non-humans or evoke futures of multi-species habitability. Some call themselves films, others audio-visual installations, others film experiences or even experiences of sensory perception. These practices are formally and aesthetically diverse, but draw on a similar vocation: to create visual vocabularies that break with the naturalistic imaginary of modernity and give the world back its enchantment. These new myth-images accompany us, as Bruno Latour would say, on our necessary journey back down to Earth. 

The cycle is made up of four audiovisual works, each of them framed by an introductory activity where we will expand, through the artistic practice of local agents (Coco Moya, Carlos Monleón and Claudia Rodríguez), the central themes they address in relation to the climate crisis and the problems of its representation also in images. With a programme of talks, workshops and collective exercises, they will work in a space for exchange in which to rethink together the current ecological moment. Each day will conclude with a debate between the invited artists, the public and the curators of the cycle.

Note: In order to attend the full programme of activities, prior registration is required.

The screenings are free admission until full capacity is reached.

Tuesday 10th October

  • 18:30-19:30h “"In the critical zone. Postnatural landscapes, data centres and trans-scalar alchemies" inaugural talk by the Institute for Postnatural Studies.
  • 19:30-20:30h Projection: Armin Linke, "Alpi" (2011, 62min).
  • 20:30-21:00h Open discussion to the public with María Ptqk and Institute for Postnatural Studies.

Wednesday 11th October

  • 18:30-19:30h  "Club de piedras", speculative workshop with Coco Moya.
  • 19:40-20:15h Projection: Cao Minghao and Chen Jianjun, "Observing Point" (2019, 17 min) and "Habitat, Geology and Energy Basis" (2021, 15 min).
  • 20:15-21:00h Open discussion to the public with Coco Moya, María Ptqk and Institute for Postnatural Studies.

Tuesday 17th October

  • 18:30-19:30h "Un canto de nácar", workshop with Carlos Monleón.
  • 19:40-20:25h Projection: Sonia Levy, "For the Love of Corals" (2018, 23 min) and "Creatures of the Lines" (2021, 19 min).
  • 20:25-21:00h Open discussion to the public with Carlos Monleón, María Ptqk and Institute for Postnatural Studies.

Wednesday 18th October

  • 18:30-19:30h “Volver a la naturaleza”,  "natural" writing workshop with Claudia Rodríguez-Ponga.
  • 19:40-20:30h Projection: Ana Vaz, "É Noite na América" (2021, 50 min).
  • 20:30-21:00h Open discussion to the public with Claudia Rodríguez Ponga, María Ptqk and Institute for Postnatural Studies.

Audiovisual curator: Maria Ptqk.

Curated and coordinated by: Institute for Postnatural Studies.

Maria Ptqk is a curator, researcher and cultural manager. Born in Bilbao in 1976, she has been working in the cultural sector since 2000. She works as a curator, project manager and consultant. She has worked, among others, with Medialab Prado (Madrid), Azkuna Zentroa - Alhóndiga Bilbao, CCCB in Barcelona, Jeu de Paume Visual Arts Centre (Paris), La Gaité Lyrique (Paris), GenderArtNet (European Cultural Foundation), Donostia-San Sebastián 2016. European Capital of Culture, LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial (Gijón). She has been a member of the Basque Council for Culture (2009-2012) and of the scientific committee of the VI Encuentro Cultura y Ciudadanía (Ministry of Culture and Sport). She has curated the exhibitions "Soft Power" with Proyecto Amarika Proiektua (Vitoria-Gasteiz, 2009), "A propósito del Chthuluceno y sus especies compañeras" (Espace virtuel du Jeu de Paume, Paris, 2017), "Reset Mar Menor. Laboratorio de imaginarios para un paisaje en crisis" (CCC Valencia, 2020), "Ciencia fricción. Life among companion species" (CCCB Barcelona, 2021). She is currently curator of the Getxophoto 2023 festival, advisor to the art publisher and producer consonni and the Chaire Arts & Sciences (École polytechnique, l'École des Arts Décoratifs - PSL, Fondation Daniel et Nina Carasso) and member of the programming committee of ISEA Paris 2023 (International Symposium on Electronic Art).

The Institute for Postnatural Studies (IPS) is a centre for artistic experimentation from which to explore and problematise postnature as a framework for contemporary creation. Founded in 2020, it is conceived as a platform for critical thinking, a network that brings together artists and researchers concerned with the problems of the global ecological crisis through experimental formats of exchange and open knowledge production. From a multidisciplinary approach, IPS develops long-term research focused on issues such as ecology, coexistence, politics and territories. These lines of research take different forms and formats, including seminars, exhibitions and residencies as spaces for academic and artistic experimentation.

Activity type
Dates
10 AND 11 OCTOBER - 17 AND 18 OCTOBER
Target audience
Entrance

This audiovisual programme is based on the hypothesis that the ecological crisis is also manifested in the image. The cycle is made up of four audiovisual works, each of them framed by an introductory activity in which the relationship with the climate crisis and the problem of its representation in the image are addressed. The programme is completed with talks, workshops and collective exercises.

Categoría cabecera
Cine y pensamiento
DOWN TO EARTH: FILM EXPERIENCES TO COME DOWN TO EARTH
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Image: “É Noite na América”, 16mm transferred to HD, Ana Vaz, 2021. Courtesy of the artist and Fondazione in Between Art and Film.

Is it a cycle?
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Duration
FORM 18:00 TO 21:00H

Cities are responsible for the emission of 75% of all greenhouse gases. But cities are also at the forefront of the most far-reaching transformations to make sustainability a reality. To counteract ecoanxiety, the best remedy is putting into practice practical measures. To discover the kinds of actions that are already being implemented in other places. And to borrow inspiration from their experience. In this cycle of four workshops we will overview the main proposals coming from cities all over the world to fight the environmental crisis and we will take action by imagining, with pragmatism but also with poetry, a Móstoles where we can live happily within the limits of our planet.

PROGRAMME

  • Tuesday 13. The city and sustainable food: growing food in the city.
  • Wednesday 14. The city and sustainable energy: cooking with free energy from the sun.
  • Thursday 15. The city and sustainable mobility: a three-in-one in rights.
  • Friday 16. The eco-social revolution shall be urban or it shall not be.

This cycle of workshops is organized in collaboration with Instituto de Transición Rompe el Círculo [Break the Circle Transition Institute], a collective from Mostoles with plenty of experience in community sustainability projects, creating new imaginaries on new models of society and putting into practice some of their ideas.

Among the most notable projects in this line of action are the Roof Terrace Garden workshops at CA2M (2013 - 2021), the Hammockdrome at Finca Liana park (2018) and the exhibition Será una vez Móstoles 2030, plus a series of conversations and debates like Oil-free Móstoles (2012) or Transition Picnics (2015-2016). This cycle features input from two of its members: Emilio Santiago Muíño (climate anthropologist and researcher at CSIC) and Xisela García Moure (expert in agroecology and movement in transition).

Activity type
Dates
13-16 December 2022
Target audience
Acceso notas adicionales

Maximum capacity: 25 persons

Entrance

Cities are responsible for the emission of 75% of all greenhouse gases. But cities are also at the forefront of the most far-reaching transformations to make sustainability a reality. To counteract ecoanxiety, the best remedy is putting into practice practical measures. To discover the kinds of actions that are already being implemented in other places.

Categoría cabecera
Ciudades Sostenibles
SUSTAINABLE CITIES: REMEDIES AGAINST ECOANXIETY
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Picture: Patri Nieto

Is it a cycle?
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Cycle dates
-
Actividades asociadas al ciclo
Duration
From 18:00 to 20:00h

A pond emerges
A frenetic sprouting of the phreatic
An invisible flow
There are holes in the history of this pond and each one is filled in their own way
Dug out by a giant
A gigantic company, a gigantic machine, a gigantic desire
And then nothing can dry it, but it will evaporateIf you stop nearby, you can sometimes hear a choir of children from a nearby bilingual public school learning the song the water cycle… 
When the children go back to school in September they are taken to the pond
They spend the morning sitting down, looking, they see that it is no longer there
They had visited the pond in February, collected samples of its crystal-clear water
And one evening in spring they went to listen to the frogs
An historian, a lawyer and an artist agree to start there.

Ciudad Sur is a shared experimental space begun in 2021 which, taking its starting point in Móstoles, wishes to explore the many faces and manifold riches that generate a sense of belonging in the cities within the metropolitan area of Madrid. Its second edition is called Brota invisible (Invisible Flow).

Brota invisible is aimed at all those interested in a shared rethinking of the inhabited space. Over the course of six sessions, spaced out between May and December 2022, we will explore the idiosyncrasy of Móstoles based on an omnipresent yet very often invisible element, which is water. Up until relatively recently, the people of Móstoles sourced their water locally, underground. This all changed when Móstoles connected to Isabel II canal water supply network. Taking our point of departure in this rupture, and all its ensuing implications, we will open the conversation. But there are also other elements in the various strata of the city that are forgotten about: the memory of those who are no longer with us and those that were silenced. And also the initiative of locals to decide how to build their own city. We will try to bring to the surface and throw light on some of these invisible flows, rivers that run underneath the ground we stand on, ponds that disappear and which, almost as if by magic, suddenly reappear.

The first session will take place on Tuesday 24 May and will consist of a walk which will start at CA2M at 6:00 pm. The following sessions will take place on 21 June, 27 September, 25 October, 22 November and 13 December. Each session will centre on this core theme as well as the interests suggested by participants. The enrolment form for the first session is already available.

AHIMOS (Amigos de la Historia de Mostoles, Friends of the History of Mostoles) is a relatively new association which came about with the purpose of investigating and promoting the past of this city in the Region of Madrid. Despite its newness, some of its members have been involved in these activities for almost twenty years, on a journey involving thousands of hours spent digging into archives and libraries, into excavations in search of treasure that nobody expected, of strolling streets and countryside to portray them as they are... and all with the goal of bringing the past customs, events and society closer to the local community today, in the hope that they will appreciate and feel a greater attachment to the place where they live.

Patricia Esquivias grew up in the suburbs on the outskirts of Madrid. Since she came of age she has lived in different cities, always searching in them for traces of local crafts and artisanship. Since 2005 she has mainly worked with video, a discipline she uses to share her narratives on history and the city. In 2016 she had a solo show at CA2M called “At Times Embellished”.

Carlos Copertone studied Law and obtained a PhD on the ways cities grow. In his teaching practice he literally proposed taking to the streets to explore and rethink them. All these approaches have gradually taken him closer to the field of architecture and contemporary art. He has curated various exhibitions and has also published books and is closely involved with Caniche, a publishing production and action platform outside conventional exhibition circuits that came into being in 2015.

Dates header text
24th May to 13th December
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Capacity: 20 people

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Ciudad Sur is a shared experimental space begun in 2021 which, taking its starting point in Móstoles, wishes to explore the many faces and manifold riches that generate a sense of belonging in the cities within the metropolitan area of Madrid. Its second edition is called Brota invisible (Invisible Flow).

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Laguna Coperlim
CIUDAD SUR 2022. I N V I S I B L E F L O W
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Laguna Coperlim de Móstoles. Picture: Patricia Esquivias.

Type Thinking / Community
Topics Thinking
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One Tuesday a month
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Curated by Jesús Alcaide, Néstor García Díaz and Víctor Aguado Machuca.

Bogomir Doringer, Chenta Tsai AKA Putochinomaricón, Carles Congost, Ana Laura Aláez, Joan Morey, The Congosound, Magui Dávila, Nayare Soledad Otorongx, Gema Marín Méndez, Manuel Segade, Snap Bitch! X Don’t hit a la negrx (Galaxia, Wat3rmami AKA Donovan Toxic), Espai d’Art Contemporani de Castelló research group (Bartolomé Limón, Rubén Serna and María Sánchez), DIDDCC working group (Andrea Martín, Manuela Muñoz, Clara Neches, Manuel Padín, Natalia de la Piedra and Rita Zamora).

The idea behind the Image Symposium is to provide a space for collective thinking on the theory, practice, semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures, taking the form of a forum for debate, a symposium and workshops, and an open call for research projects.

The point of departure for this year’s symposium is the work of a research group at CA2M which has sourced in Manel Clot’s texts a discursive output which has left us, more than anachronisms, reminiscences of the 1990s, like, for instance, underscoring the connections between the concept of club culture and art practice; or inventing and implementing appreciative and operative categories, where none previously existed, for the consideration of new expressive repertoires and new meaningful registers that would become symptomatic of a time and a place. In fact, the title given to this year’s symposium comes from Musée des phrases (2003-2015) by Manel Clot and the image is by Carles Congost, taken in Manel Clot’s studio with the assistance of Daniel Riera; in it one can see a young Fine Art student called Joan Morey.

The symposium is spread over three days with a full programme of conversations, reading sessions, performative lectures and listening sessions, which will help to situate a number of issues concerning club culture but, at once, they will also respond to the demand to expand the field of given representations of subjectivity, of the fluctuation of its value, of the position of desire; of recognizing possibilities of dissidence with regards social distribution or other relationships between the body and temporality.

 

PROGRAMME:

19 May. Impure Scenifications (1)
12:00–13:30 Research group at Espai d’Art Contemporani de Castelló. Reading session on the exhibition and archive for Hypertronix, by Manel Clot.
16:00–17:00 Magui Dávila: Escribir una session (Writing a Session), DJ session and performative lecture.
17:00–17:30 Manuel Segade: Hacer noche (Making the Night), presentation.
17:30–19:30 Ana Laura Aláez, Joan Morey, Carles Congost and Jesús Alcaide: Un soplo en el corazón (A Heart Murmur), selection of frequencies around Manel Clot.
19:30–20:30 The Congosound, DJ selector.

20 May. Dance this Mess around (2)
12:00–13:30 DIDDCC working group: Party and Protest, expanded reading session.
16:00–16:30 Néstor García Díaz: Dance this Mess Around, presentation.
16:30–18:00 Bogomir Doringer: From I Dance Alone to Dance of Urgency, lecture.
18:00–19:00 Manel Clot: Musée des phrases, video-screening.
19:00–19:30 Gema Marín Méndez: Notas a una/sola voz (Notes in one/single voice), performative lecture.
19:30–20:30 Cute aggression, DJ session.

21 May. Sonic, somatic fictions (3)
12:00–13:30 Shared reading session on More Brilliant that the Sun, by Kodwo Eshun.
16:00–16:30 Víctor Aguado Machuca: “Éxtasis; faktura subjetiva”, presentation.
16:30–17:30 Nayare Soledad Otorongx: Cuerpxs que da pánico soñar (Bodies we don’t dare to imagine), performance.
17:30–19:00 Galaxia, Wat3rmami AKA Donovan Toxic: Snap Bitch! X Don’t hit a la negrx.

 

INFORMATIVE NOTE:

Prior enrolment is required to attend the symposium. Attendance at individual sessions may be allowed although priority will be given to persons previously enrolled. We would also ask all persons enrolled to please be punctual. Ten minutes after the beginning of the first session of the afternoon, any remaining places will be given to persons who have turned up for the session without previous enrolment.

Bogomir Doringer’s lecture is in English with simultaneous translation. All morning reading sessions will be held in the Aula, and the afternoon activities in SUI. The audience will be invited to take part after each conversation and at the end of each session and each day’s symposium.

Certificates of attendance will be issued to enrolees who attend 80% of the afternoon’s session. The morning sessions are voluntary and free while places last, but will not be taken into account when issuing certificates of attendance.

 

Activity type
Dates
19, 20 and 21 May
Target audience
Registration
-
Acceso notas adicionales

In order to attend the sessions, prior registration is required. Limited capacity.

Entrance

The Image Study Days are dedicated to collective reflection on theory, practice, semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures. This edition is structured in three study days made up of talks, reading sessions, performative conferences and listening sessions, which place themes related to club culture.

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High Culture Carles Congost
27th IMAGE SYMPOSIUM. DANCE THIS MESS AROUND
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"High culture", 1996. Carles Congost © The Congosound o Carles Congost, VEGAP, Madrid, 2022.

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Duration
From 12:00 to 20:30

The idea behind the Image Symposium is to provide a space for collective thinking on the theory, practice, semantic openings and contemporary demarcations of visual cultures, taking the form of a forum for debate, a symposium and workshops, and an open call for research projects.

The point of departure for this edition of the symposium is the work of a research group at MCA2M which has sourced in Manel Clot’s texts a multitude of incipient ideas, obsessive desires, textured references, serious nostalgia, untimely utopias and sudden fatigues that underpinned the brevity and transience of his sentences and dominated his thinking almost permanently. Rather than anachronisms, his discursive output has left us reminiscences of the 1990s: one worth underscoring is the connections between the concept of club culture and art practice; another is the invention and implementation of appreciative and operative categories, where none previously existed, for the consideration of new expressive repertoires and new meaningful registers that would become symptomatic of a time and a place.

This symposium is curated by Jesús Alcaide, Néstor García and Víctor Aguado. The title is borrowed from Musée des phrases, 2003-2015, by Manel Clot. The image (High Culture, 1996) is by Carles Congost, produced for an exhibition at Transmission Gallery and taken in Manel Clot’s studio with the assistance of Daniel Riera. The image shows a young Fine Art student called Joan Morey.

CALL

MCA2M announces an open call for the submission of research projects to be presented at the 27th Image Symposium, whose theme is club culture: club culture as the act and practice of expanding the field of given representations of subjectivity, of producing fictions of somatic permanence, fluctuations in desire, possibilities of dissidence towards the social distribution or other relationships between the body and temporality.

The selected projects may be presented in two different formats:

(1) Presentation of papers or performative lectures, with a duration of 30-45 minutes during the afternoon, based on or presenting for the first time a research project related with the theme of the symposium.

(2) Commented listening sessions on a theme of interest for the symposium, with a duration of 45-60 minutes during the morning, either closed or open to the participation of attendants in the construction of meaning.

Projects submitted to the open call should send: application form and project dossier to the following email: recepcion.ca2m@madrid.org. When attaching video or audio files, please follow the specific instructions included in the form. The submission and presentation of the project can be made in English or Spanish. Forms with incomplete information shall not be accepted.

The deadline for presenting projects is 31 March. The curators of this edition of the symposium shall select a maximum of 6 projects, bearing in mind the selection criteria of the relevance of the project to the theme and format of the symposium, as well as its overall coherence within an artistic or research practice.

The names of the selected projects will be announced on 7 April. Although persons selected shall be informed of the exact day and time of the presentation, it is expected that they be available to attend the symposium on all three days: 19, 20 and 21 May.

Selected projects shall receive a fee of €300 for their presentation at the symposium, which shall be subject to obligatory tax deductions. When necessary MCA2M shall also run with the travel and accommodation expenses.

Dates header text
Until March 31st
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Registration:
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Entrance

MCA2M announces an open call for the submission of research projects to be presented at the 27th Image Symposium, whose theme is club culture: club culture as the act and practice of expanding the field of given representations of subjectivity, of producing fictions of somatic permanence, fluctuations in desire, possibilities of dissidence towards the social distribution or other relationships between the body and temporality.

Subttitle
19, 20 & 21 May 2022
Header category
High Culture Carles Congost
27th IMAGE SYMPOSIUM DANCE THIS MESS AROUND
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© The Congosound o Carles Congost, VEGAP, Madrid, 2022.

Type Thinking / Community
Topics Thinking
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Is it a cycle?
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The Research, Data, Documentation, Enquiring and Causation Department (DIDDCC) is a temporary and intermittent structure, directed by Sergio Rubira, that constitutes a space for the study and collaborative research of the museum institution and what it means to call the CA2M by that name. It also addresses the act of curating: what it means to create a public collection, what is collected, how a collection is put together and who does it, how it is set up and then exhibited. The DIDDCC will also enquire what has been excluded, or continues to elude them, from the seemingly objective narrative established by museums through their collections and through the way in which they display them: what they have decided not to tell and, therefore, does not make it into the museum, what they prefer to hide in the warehouses stored away or pushed to the back of a shelf, or what is forbidden as it breaks the rules. They will imagine possibilities to establish other methods of narrating that break with the chronological and progressive discourse that appears so natural within the museum. They will reflect on what the displays mean and which are the rhetorical resources it uses. And, finally, via the exhibition their collections, who they challenge and affect.

The DIDDCC gets its name, as a sort of homage, from Seth Siegelaub’s calling card. A the fundamental reference for anyone wishing to trace the history of exhibition curating, he would use said card to outline the activities he undertook as the director of his foundation, the Stichting Egress Foundation, which specialises in contemporary art and textile history, topics which he was extremely knowledgeable about.

The DIDDCC will focus on these aspects and use the collections of the CA2M as a case study: the centre’s own and those of the ARCO Foundation. The DIDDCC’s structure involves lecture seminars, work sessions on specific cases and meetings with guests who have worked in these areas, and demands a commitment to research that goes beyond just face-to-face sessions. One of the DIDDCC’s main objectives is to create a context for the pieces that form part of the CA2M collections and build a possible discourse regarding its creation.

The DIDDCC offers activities that are integrated into the centre’s own programming.

Dates header text
FRIDAY FROM OCTOBER 29 TO MARCH 11
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This activity is aimed at graduates, degree-holders, last-year graduates or master’s students or doctoral candidates in Art History, Fine Arts, Architecture, Humanities or related disciplines. The ability to read in English is essential

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The Research, Data, Documentation, Enquiring and Causation Department (DIDDCC) is a temporary and intermittent structure, directed by Sergio Rubira, that constitutes a space for the study and collaborative research of the museum institution and what it means to call the CA2M by that name

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Subttitle
THE RESEARCH, DATA, DOCUMENTATION, ENQUIRING AND CAUSATION DEPARTMENT
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DIDDCC
DIDDCC
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Type Thinking / Community
Topics Thinking
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Duration
FRIDAY FROM OCTOBER 29 TO MARCH 11 | 16:30 - 20:00
Is it a cycle?
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