Estrella de Diego Lecture. Holding Your Brain While You Sleep

Art and Exile Lecture Series

Maruja Mallo, Selvatro, 1970-1975

Maruja Mallo, Selvatro, 1970-1975, Museo Reina Sofía

© Maruja Mallo, VEGAP, Madrid, 2025

Framed inside the Museo Reina Sofía’s retrospective exhibition devoted to Maruja Mallo, this lecture delivered by Estrella de Diego draws attention to the impact of the artist’s return to Spain after her three-decade exile in Latin America.   

Committed to values of progress and renewal in the Second Republic, Mallo was forced into exile to Argentina with the outbreak of the Civil War and would not go back to Spain to settle definitively until 1965 — a return that was, ultimately, a second exile.  

Mallo saw out her prolific artistic trajectory with two impactful series: Moradores del vacío (Dwellers of the Void, 1968–1980) and Viajeros del éter (Ether Travelers, 1982), entering her most esoteric period in which she drew inspiration from her “levitational experiences” of crossing the Andes and sailing the Pacific. Her travels, both real and imaginary, became encounters with superhuman dimensions.  

In parallel, her public persona gained traction as she became a popular figure and a key representative of the Generation of ‘27 — the other members of which also started returning to Spain.  

This lecture is part of the Art and Exile series, which seeks to explore in greater depth one of the defining aspects of Maruja Mallo’s life and work: her experience of exile. An experience which for Mallo was twofold: the time she spent in the Americas and her complex return to Spain.    

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Inside the framework of:

Encounters

Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

Public Programme with the collaboration of

Bimba y Lola

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

Participants

Estrella de Diego

(Madrid, 1958) is an essayist and lecturer in Art History at the Complutense University of Madrid, as well as a full member of the San Fernando Royal Academy of Fine Arts. She is a pioneer of gender studies applied to Art History. 

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