On the Art of Occupying Spaces and Curating Film Programmes 

Cinema Commons #1

Red Horse, Red Horse’s depiction of the destruction of Custer’s command at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, 1881, graphite, coloured in pencil and ink. National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Department of Anthropology/Wikimedia-Commons

Red Horse, Red Horse’s depiction of the destruction of Custer’s command at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, 1881

Graphite, coloured in pencil and ink

On the Art of Occupying Spaces and Curating Film Programmes is a film programme overseen by Miriam Martín and Ana Useros, and the first within the project The Cinema and Sound Commons. The activity includes a lecture and two films screened twice in two different sessions: John Ford’s Fort Apache (1948) and John Gianvito’s The Mad Songs of Fernanda Hussein (2001).  

“By virtue of a group of film curator enthusiasts, small plazas and vacant lots in Madrid’s Lavapiés neighbourhood became cinemas with the arrival of summer. The city streets made room for everyone: the local residents who came down with their seats tucked under their arms, or those who simply came across the Lavapiés Film Festival with no prior knowledge of it, but knowing how to recognise a free and convivial film screening, as enticing as light is to moths. The Festival’s film curators had to first reach a consensus with one another, by assembly, and then with others, addressing issues ranging from electricity to the transfer of rights to show the films. 

Whereas the annually organised Festival resembled a camp, the weekly CSOA (Squatted Self-managed Social Centre) La Morada film society looked more like a settlement. In each squatted social centre, a micro civilisation is founded, and nestled among its infrastructures is always a film society. Why? We’ll see. A direct outcome of the 15M anti-austerity movement, this film society was contentless in form (the content, the films, were decided upon from session to session). Anyone was free to enter, and therefore free to curate the line-up, although not haphazardly — there was a method, ultimately devised so the community would not close, so it would never have one set image of itself.   

Part of this method entailed relating the film from the following week to the recently viewed one, and the same method has gone into putting together this two-session programme. The Festival and the film society were, moreover, attempts at rectification: the festival logic and the very same film-club logic, according to which film boils down to an excuse for debating serious issues. There would be nothing to debate but much to ponder. For instance, about the manufacturing of enemies by a nation that chooses enemies in the world, with one film from the year the State of Israel was proclaimed and another from the year the Twin Towers were razed to the ground. The USA manufactures functional enemies and heroes and American cinema, in addition to showing us this, manufactures unforgettable characters: the Apache chief, Cochise, and mother courage, Fernanda Hussein. We’ll see”.     

Miriam Martín and Ana Useros

Read more

Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

L'Internationale - Museum of the Commons

Accessible activity
This activity has two spaces reserved for people with reduced mobility

 

Agenda

jueves 23 oct 2025 a las 19:00

Session 1. Lecture by Miriam Martín and Ana Useros 

—Encounter with Miriam Martín and Ana Useros to discuss the CSOA La Morada film society and the Lavapiés Film Festival. 

viernes 24 oct 2025 a las 19:00

Session 2. John Ford. Fort Apache

USA, 1948, black and white, 35mm, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 127’
—With a presentation by and conversation with Miriam Martín and Ana Useros

Men who are not afraid of dying are often afraid of living. The soldiers in Fort Apache ward off this fear with dancing, jokes and drink. Lieutenant Colonel Owen Thursday, assigned to be in command of these soldiers, averts this fear by living for posterity; that is, for death. He gives orders, and they obey, for “the uniform is not a subject for individual expression”. The newspaper headlines he dreams of come to declare war on another people. The Apaches perhaps could have shown the border outpost community what a stateless people can look like, yet the possibility of founding something new is reached by the past, by European civilisation, by Boston civilisation. Thursday lets his wrath rain down with overwhelming force and Ford, a realist film-maker and here with his version of the Battle of Little Bighorn, conveys at once the facts and the legend.

sábado 25 oct 2025 a las 19:00

Session 3. John Gianvito. The Mad Songs of Fernanda Hussein

USA, 2001, colour, DA, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 168’
—With a presentation by and conversation with Miriam Martín and Ana Useros

A woman who takes the surname Hussein by marriage, a teenager, and a former soldier are the three characters whom the Gulf War removes from their homes and turns them into nomadic figures. Set on the frontier, like Fort Apache, the film begins with the bodies of two children floating on Río Grande. As with Ford’s supporting roles, we soon encounter them fleetingly but with intensity, enough for their deaths to matter. By the 1990s, the enemy had shifted from Indians to Arabs. The here of fiction mixes with the there of documentary; fiction in the USA wraps and preserves the records of Iraq: a musical composition on the bombing of the al-Amiriyah shelter, photos of the “highway of death” that nobody wanted to publish. The roaming figures wander and beauty and terror occur, yet no feeling is definitive.

jueves 30 oct 2025 a las 19:00

Session 2 (second screening). John Ford. Fort Apache

USA, 1948, black and white, 35mm, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 127’

viernes 31 oct 2025 a las 19:00

Session 3 (second screening). John Gianvito. The Mad Songs of Fernanda Hussein

USA, 2001, colour, DA, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 168’

Participants

Miriam Martín has devoted her whole adult life to film, and part of her pre-adult life. First as a viewer, then as a film curator at different institutions. For just shy of six years, she organised the Chantal film society, an aesthetic and political experience organised weekly. In 2019, she made the film La espada me la ha Regalado, and in 2023 premiered Vuelta a Riaño.

Ana Useros is a translator and activist who has been part of the organising assembly of the Lavapiés Film Festival for seventeen years. 

NewsletterSubscribe to our newsletter to keep up to date with the activities organised by the Museo
David Escalera, Clausura de la 8ª Muestra de Cine de Lavapiés, 2011, fotografía
John Ford, Fort Apache, 1948, película
John Gianvito, The Mad Songs of Fernanda Hussein, 2001, película
See image gallery

Más actividades