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Wednesday, 11 May 2022 Nouvel Building, Auditorium 200
Duchamp Is My Lawyer. The Polemics, Pragmatics and Poetics of UbuWeb
Lecture
TicketsIn this lecture, Goldsmith tells the story of UbuWeb and the reasons behind its creation, as well as explaining how artworks are archived, received and distributed online. He also describes how the platform avoids copyright and the ways in which it challenges traditional configurations and orthodox histories of the avant-garde. Moreover, he touches on the growth of other “libraries in the shadows” that run in parallel to UbuWeb and spotlights contemporary artists who have incorporated the aims, aesthetics and spirit of the platform..
Language: English, with simultaneous interpreting
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Thursday, 12 May 2022 Nouvel Building, Study Centre
Workshop of Radical Archive Practices
RegistrationArchiving is a way to organise and create structure through documents. At the same time, the act of archiving in its most rational and empirical side resembles algorithm logics and artificial intelligence, according to which information is reduced to like for like and standardised according to taste. In what way can a contemporary art archive participate from the nomadic and sprawling sense of contemporary artistic practices? How can an archive be made without algorithm logic?
Language: English
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Monday, 16 May 2022 Sala Mariana Pineda, Palacio de La Madraza (calle Oficios 14, Granada)
Uncreative Writing Workshop
RegistrationIt seems obvious that the idea of creativity, appreciated for so long, is under attack, eroded by the exchange of archives, media culture, widespread sampling and digital replication. How does writing respond to this new environment? This workshop tackles these challenges, employing strategies of appropriation, replica, plagiarism, piracy, sampling and looting as compositional methods. Across two sessions, the rich history of falsifications, fraud, deceit, vicissitudes and impersonations spanning the arts are traced, with the stress placed on how they use language. There is also an analysis of how modern notions of chance, procedure, repetition and aesthetics of boredom fit into popular culture to usurp conventional concepts of time, place and identity, and all expressed from linguistics.
Language: English

Held on 11 may 2022
The Documents programme explores the relationships between art and publishing, and other subjects that include the effects of archive on narratives of art history, the artist’s book and publishing as an artistic practice. This latest edition welcomes poet, artist and editor Kenneth Goldsmith (New York, 1961), an archive theorist, a poet in the sphere of “uncreative writing” — a concept based on plagiarism, appropriation and the non-subjective use of literature — and the creator of the digital platform UbuWeb, a paradigm of the immaterial museum of modern and contemporary art. On this occasion, Goldsmith will give a lecture on the history and challenges of this platform, a workshop on radical archive practices in the Museo Reina Sofía, and a second workshop on “uncreative writing” in the Centro de Arte José Guerrero and La Madraza.
In 2020, the use of digital escalated to affect the culture and museum spheres equally. This acceleration paradoxically led the internet towards a new feudalism in which information and its circulation was concentrated into towering monopolies, with the control and surveillance of citizens becoming increasingly more invasive and questionable. In what way can the future museum hybrid, between the digital and the real, escape this neo-feudalism of networks? Founded in 1996, UbuWeb is a repository-archive of the avant-garde art which belongs to the internet’s utopian archaeology, an autonomous, decentralised and illuminating place. Yet after three decades of work it has managed to resist both the logics of the art system — the aura of the artwork, the authorship of genius — and a new restrictive phase online. How can we learn from UbuWeb to think about a future museum and its archive practices, not from property and control but from the digital commons? This is the question that motivates and shapes this programme.
Kenneth Goldsmith is an artist who teaches writing at the University of Pennsylvania and is a senior editor of PennSound, an online poetry archive. The founder of avant-garde art archive UbuWeb, Goldsmith was also the editor and host of the weekly radio show Radio Boredcast on WFMU. His books include New York, Capital of the 20th Century (Verso Books, 2015), Uncreative Writing: Managing Language in the Digital Age (Columbia University Press, 2011), Wasting Time on the Internet (Harper Collins, 2016) and Duchamp Is My Lawyer. The Polemics, Pragmatics, and Poetics of UbuWeb (Columbia University Press, 2020). In the field of uncreative writing, he has published the trilogy The Weather (2005), Traffic (2007) and Sports (2008), books which, respectively, entail the written transcription of weather reports, traffic flows and a baseball game (all published by Make Now Press). He has also edited I'll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews (Da Capo Press, 2004) and, with Craig Dworkin, Against Expression: An Anthology of Conceptual Writing (Northwestern University Press, 2011). In 2012, he was invited to participate at Documenta 13 in Kassel.
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía, Centro de Arte José Guerrero and La Madraza. Centro de cultura contemporánea, University of Granada
Collaboration
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EMOTIVE INTERFACE. The Films of Metahaven
Thursday, 27, Friday, 28, and Saturday, 29 November 2025 – check times
The Museo Reina Sofía and the Márgenes International Film Festival in Madrid, here in its fifteenth edition, present this series devoted to the artist collective Metahaven. The programme is framed inside the working strand both institutions started in 2024, focusing on an exploration of contemporary audiovisual narratives, a hybridisation of languages and the moving image as a tool for practising critical gazes on the present. Emotive Interface. The Films of Metahaven comprises two sessions of screenings and a masterclass delivered by the collective, centring on the relationship between the internet, technology, time and the moving image. All sessions will be presented by the artists.
The work of Metahaven — Dutch artist duo Vinca Kruk and Daniel Van der Velden — encompasses graphic art, video, installations, writing and design around urgent issues related to governance, identity, power and transparency in the digital age. Thus, their practice stands at the crossroads of art, film and critical thought, as they employ visual language as a tool to explore the tensions between technology, politics and perception, their practice combining the rigour of the visual essay and a strong poetic component, where graphic design, digital animation and documentary material fuse into dense, emotionally ambiguous compositions that speak of post-digital romanticism through an allegorical formulation. The spotlight of this series shines brightly on some of Metahaven’s recent works, for instance The Feeling Sonnets (Transitional Object) (2024), in which they examine language, poetry and digital time, and on The Sprawl (Propaganda About Propaganda) (2015), an essay which explores how the internet and social media have radically altered the relationship between truth, power and perception. Finally, the duo’s masterclass is set forth here as a survey of the main themes explored by both artists.

Francisco López and Barbara Ellison
Thursday, 11 December - 8pm
The third session in the series brings together two international reference points in sound art in one evening — two independent performances which converse through their proximity here. Barbara Ellison opens proceedings with a piece centred on the perceptively ambiguous and the ghostly, where voices, sounds and materials become spectral manifestations.
This is followed by Francisco López, an internationally renowned Spanish sound artist, who presents one of his radical immersions in deep listening, with his work an invitation to submerge oneself in sound matter as a transformative experience.
This double session sets forth an encounter between two artists who, from different perspectives, share the same search: to open ears to territories where sound becomes a poetic force and space of resistance.

Long Live L’Abo! Celluloid and Activism
4, 5, 6 DIC 2025
L’Abominable is a collective film laboratory founded in La Courneuve (Paris, France) in 1996. It came into being in response to the disappearing infrastructures in artisan film-making and to provide artists and film-makers with a self-managed space from which to produce, develop and screen films in analogue formats such as Super 8, 16mm and 35mm. Anchored in this premise, the community promotes aesthetic and political experimentation in analogue film opposite digital hegemony. Over the years, L’Abominable, better known as L’Abo, has accompanied different generations of film-makers, upholding an international movement of independent film practices.
This third segment is structured in three sessions: a lecture on L’Abo given by Pilar Monsell and Camilo Restrepo; a session of short films in 16mm produced in L’Abo; and the feature-length film Une isle, une nuit, made by the Les Pirates des Lentillères collective.

Estrella de Diego Lecture. Holding Your Brain While You Sleep
Wednesday, 3 December 2025 – 7pm
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.

Juan Uslé. That Ship on the Mountain
Tuesday, 25 November 2025 – 7pm
Ángel Calvo Ulloa, curator of the exhibition Juan Uslé. That Ship on the Mountain, engages in conversation with artist Juan Uslé (Santander, 1954) in the Museo’s Auditorium 400 to explore in greater depth the exhibition discourse of this anthological show spanning four decades of Uslé’s artistic career.
The show casts light on the close relationship Uslé’s work bears to his life experiences, establishing connections between different stages and series which could ostensibly seem distant. Framed in this context, the conversation looks to explore the artist’s personal and professional journey: his memories, experiences of New York, his creative process, conception of painting, and ties with photography and film, and the cohesiveness and versatility that characterise his art. Key aspects for a more in-depth understanding of his artistic sphere.
The conversation, moreover, spotlights the preparatory research process that has given rise to this exhibition to grant a better understanding of the curatorial criteria and decisions that have guided its development.
These inaugural conversations, part of the main working strands of the Museo’s Public Programmes Area, aim to explore in greater depth the exhibition narratives of the shows organised by the Museo from the perspective of artists, curators and specialists.



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