Programme
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Thursday, 6 June 2024 Nouvel Building, Protocol Room and online platform
Artistic Research Encounter
4pm Welcome and Presentation
― With Laia Blasco Soplon and Anna Busquets4:15pm Presentation of Work from UOC’s Bachelor’s Degree in Art
― With Carmen Collado Jiménez, Albert Iglesias Aulet, Núria Iglesias Rodríguez (Piròmana d’Argos), Merce Irigoyen Jiménez and Conchi Torreblanca Mendo (Conchitagoras)Nébulas que forman lagos (Nebulae that Form Lakes, 2024) by Carmen Collado Jiménez
The lake transcends its condition merely as a mass of water in a distant world. It is erected as a portal towards the unknown, zealously guarded by creatures whose origin remains shrouded in mystery. These ethereal beings, with translucent bodies oscillating between light and shade, emit an ancestral and enigmatic energy, their mere presence imbuing the air with a perturbing aura, warning mortals to refrain from crossing their borders. This project explores the convergence of digital art, classical sculpture and fantasy literature.Mort de l’himne de Felanitx (2022) by Albert Iglesias Aulet
This expanded, site-specific space retrieves public space and links it to art, organically and directly vindicating it with no intermediates, authorisations or barriers. The collective, socialising and cooperative act is essential. Of particular interest is setting challenges that cannot be met alone, but must be filled with meaning when they move in company, with involvement, with collaboration.Perfecto no es afecto (Perfect Is Not Affect, 2023) by Núria Iglesias Rodríguez (Piròmana d’Argos)
The installation is constructed with a phenomenological attitude in an old room in a house. The appearance of fungi on the ceiling makes it a harmful place to rest in and it via this immersive nature that they are hidden to reveal other events. Affect implicitly entails trial-error, experimentation, action: deployment, resilience and freedom of difference.Habitaciones (Rooms, 2024) by Merce Irigoyen Jiménez
This work seeks to conceptualise the meaning of intimacy, freedom, moral autonomy and self-determination in material and spatial terms. The way to contextualise these ideas is by exhibiting Habitaciones (Rooms), through which lives, lives that are limited by the walls of their rooms, pass. Rooms are places where everything is exhibited, where everything is shown.Las directoras del Reina Sofía (Women Directors of the Reina Sofía, 2024) by Conchi Torreblanca Mendo (Conchitagoras)
This project seeks to make visible, in comic book form, the work carried out by the female directors who have been at the helm of the Museo Reina Sofía: María del Corral (1990–1994) and Ana Martínez de Aguilar (2004–2007). Both engage in conversation to discuss some of the most important landmarks during their tenures, for instance the transfer of Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937) and managing the disappearance of Richard Serra’s thirty-eight-tonne sculpture Equal-Parallel: Guernica-Bengasi (1986), the whereabouts of which remain a mystery to this today.5:30pm Debate
― Supported by Laia Blasco Soplon and Muriel Gómez Pradas6:30pm Break
7pm Re-imagining Territory: New Institutionalisms and Art Ecosystems in the Rural Environment
Conversation between Amparo Moroño Díaz and Sira Pizà
― Supported by María Iñigo Clavo and Aida Sánchez de Serdio MartínThis encounter sees Amparo Moroño Díaz and Sira Pizà discuss their experience as art professionals in the rural environment. Urban areas are currently experiencing a major housing crisis and European cities are becoming places of work and real estate speculation. Since the twentieth century, art, essentially, has had an urban quality and has been at the centre of avant-garde rivalries between major cities. The predominance of cities in global art circles has overshadowed processes of cultural and artistic production which occur in other territorial spheres, stopping more complex, polyphonic and decentred visions of the art world from taking shape. What effect does demographic decentralisation have on culture? What place can there be from contemporary art and institutional critique in rural areas and what are its resilience strategies? What type of networks and affects favour a non-urban context? What possibilities and conflicts can arise between different ways of culturally inhabiting ruralness?
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Friday, 7 June 2024 Nouvel Building, Protocol Room
Rethinking the Museum. Among Muses, Witches and Pandora’s Boxes
Workshop
― Conducted by Claudia Delso Carreira and Mabel Tapia
The previous edition saw Patricia Esquivias and Matteo Locci go on a walk to test the Museo Reina Sofía’s centripetal force, putting into practice the methodology of performative research. This time around, Claudia Delso Carreira and Mabel Tapia set out to rethink and re-imagine the Museo as a political-sensitive device and reflect on the construction of other possible practices and institutional acts, following the thread of the conversation between Moroño Díaz and Sira Pizà in the previous day of this programme. This workshop is rooted in the work developed inside the framework of the Seminar Rethinking the Museum (Institutional Practice and Mezzo-politics), from the Museo Reina Sofía’s study Programme, Connective Tissue.
Aimed specifically at students currently studying or recently graduated in Art or Fine Art