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Together and Rising Up
ACTIVITIES
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Thursday, 11 February 2021 – 12pm / online platform
Pink Triangle 3
Encounter between Miguel Missé and the Education Community
With the Pink Triangle encounters, the Museo looks to consolidate a space of convergence between different agents working in the sphere of affective-sexual diversity and gender in schools. The third edition of the programme features the participation of Miguel Missé, a sociologist, trans activist and independent educator in the sphere of public policies for diversity. Setting out from Missé’s experience, the encounter prompts joint thinking around the concepts of identity and diversity and shared experiences that help to understand how these realities are lived in schools.
Design and coordination: Cristina Gutiérrez Andérez and Fran MM Cabeza de Vaca
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination
Education programme developed with the sponsorship of the Banco Santander Foundation -
Sunday, 14 February 2021 – 12pm / Nouvel Building, Auditorium 400
Territorio Doméstico. Politicising Aprons, Pots and Streets
Screening and Round-table discussion
Territorio Doméstico. Politicising Aprons, Pots and Streets is a documentary audiovisual piece that records the history of the make-up and struggle of the feminist collective Territorio Doméstico (Domestic Territory), a group of domestic workers who live in the Community of Madrid but come from all over the world.
Participants: Vera Bartolomé, Justa Montero, Amaia Pérez Orozco, Mayo Pimentel, and members of Territorio Doméstico
Organised by: Museo Situado
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination
Collaboration: Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung (Madrid Office) -
Friday, 26 February 2021 – 6pm / Nouvel Building, Auditorium 200
Exile. Feminism. Essay Film: The Body as a Remnant
Lecture by Margarita Ledo
This edition of the Juan Antonio Ramírez Chair features a master lecture by film-maker, poet and writer Margarita Ledo, who sets forth a reflection on the body as a remnant, as a point of arrival after tracing an invisible thread that extends across film based on memory, anti-establishment practices, the marginalisation of women in public spaces, the estrangement of their own bodies and the power of essay films as an artistic practice.
Programme: Juan Antonio Ramírez Chair
Force line: Avant-gardes
Collaboration: MA in Contemporary Art History and Visual Culture conducted in the Museo Reina Sofía Study Centre, in collaboration with the Autonomous University of Madrid (UAM) and the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM)
Education programme developed with the sponsorship of the Banco Santander Foundation -
Nouvel Building, Auditorium 400
They Wanted Arms but People Arrived
A Radio Series on Migration and Domestic Work
They Wanted Arms but People Arrived is a radio series and theatre piece on migration and domestic work, written and performed by women from the Territorio Doméstico (Domestic Territory) association and featuring the participation of sound artist Susana Jiménez Carmona and the work cooperative Pandora Mirabilia. Its direction and mise en scène are overseen by actress, playwright and director Sandra Arpa. In the piece, the unwelcome experiences of three migrant women, Yuritsi, Quisqueya and Amalia, who live in Madrid, are narrated as they negotiate borders, deal with labour abuses and combine care with their own lives on both sides of the Atlantic.
Participants: Susana Jiménez Carmona, Pandora Mirabilia, and members of Territorio Doméstico
Organised by: Museo Situado
Coordinated by: Territorio Doméstico
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination -
Thursday, 4 March 2021 – 6pm / Auditorium 200, Nouvel Building
Documents 16. “It’s Just a Joke, Love!” Is it a Joke?
Misogyny and Symbolic Violence in Graphic Humour
The Documents programme explores the relationships between art and publishing. On this occasion, artist Raquel Manchado presents and carries out a critical reading of part of her graphic art collection, comprising postcards, comic strips, posters, calendars, newspapers, magazines and other widely distributed formats published since the early twentieth century and which, under the veneer of humour, degrade women over their physical appearance or behaviour.
Programme: Documents
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination -
Friday, 5 March 2021 – 6pm / Nouvel Building, Protocol Room and online platform
Situated Voices 18
Trans Law*. Lives and Rights
In recent years, the fight for trans* and non-binary depathologization and the attainment of their civil rights has questioned the debates of feminisms. The publication of the draft bill for Real and Effective Equality for Trans People, which broadens gender self-determination, sets forth a public debate that once again draws attention to key issues that were a decades-long part of feminist theory. This debate is set out as a conversation between people with first-person trans* experiences, their families and their environments in order to situate the specific demands of the collectives involved, and understand the key parts to this future law and underlying problems.
Participants: Aitzole Araneta, Rubén Castro, Coco Guzmán, Carolina León and Sabrina Sánchez
Organised by: Museo Situado
Coordinated by: Lucas Platero
Force line: Action and Radical Information -
Tuesday, 13 April 2021 – 7pm / Online platform
Situated Voices 19. Reproductive and Sexual Rights
Struggles for the Right to Decide
The mass victory of abortion rights in Argentina and its escalation across the feminist movement in Latin America contrasts sharply with feminist struggles in Poland, where the same rights attained in the past are now being curtailed. This encounter addresses strategies of organisation and contributions to feminist thought by activisms in different territories; proposals that are framed by the demands for women’s access to sex education and sexual health, contraception resources and the voluntary termination of pregnancy, in addition to the right to the free expression of sexuality and desire.
Participants: Sílvia Aldavert Garcia, Morena Herrera, Marta Lempart, Eleonora Mizzoni, Justa Montero and Martha Rosenberg
Coordinator: Justa Montero
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination -
Wednesday, 21 April 2021 – 6pm / Nouvel Building, Protocol Room
Revisiting Tenerife
Encounter with Carme Nogueira
The Forms of Making, the Making of Forms is a programme on methodologies, tools and techniques in artistic practice. This second edition sees artist Carme Nogueira share her art-making as she revisits, with a group of people from Madrid, her project Tenerife (2020), engaging in dialogue with the homonymous film by Yves Allégret and Eli Lotar. The photograph of a laundry room taken by Lotar in 1932 while she was visiting Madrid in 1932 during a trip with Yves Allégret, in which they would reach the Canary Islands instead of Las Hurdes, marks the trail from which to interrogate the past and present.
Curator: Tamara Díaz Bringas
Programme: The Forms of Making, the Making of Forms
Force line: Rethinking the Museum -
Wednesday, 26 May 2021 – 6pm / Nouvel Building, Protocol Room
Feminisms in Morocco
A Drift Through Territories
At a time of boiling-point and multiplicity in the feminist movement, Maggie Schmitt and Hanan Dalouh Amghar undertook a research process that started with a trip around Morocco in February 2020. This presentation explores the feminist collectives — and/or women’s and gender dissidence collectives — that are currently active in the Moroccan territory, and the practices, debates and challenges put forward among these groups and with Moroccan society, as well as the links that can be established with the situation in Mediterranean Europe.
Participants: Hanan Dalouh Amghar, Souad Eddouada, Zohra Koubia, Nadia Naïr and Maggie Schmitt
Organised by: Museo Reina Sofía and La Laboratoria. Feminist Research Spaces
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination
Programme: In the Meantime -
Thursday, 1 July 2021 – 6pm / Nouvel Building, Auditorium 200
Love Is Not a Crime
With Najat El Hachmi, Zainab Fasiki and Abdelá Taia
This encounter will discuss the arising tensions in Morocco through the ever more frequent protest actions around sexual rights in the private and public spheres. Signs of this is the recent publication L’amour fait loi (Éditions le sélénite, 2020) and the mobilisation that occurred when four hundred and ninety Moroccan women signed the Outside the Law manifesto in defence of their rights.
Organised by: Museo Reina Sofía, Casa Árabe and Medialab Prado
Curator: Susana Moliner (Grigri Projects)
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination
Programme: In the Meantime -
From 5 to 8 July 2021 – 6pm / Sabatini Building, Garden
Weaving a Blanket of Snow
Workshop with Eva Lootz
Creating string figures with Eva Lootz is the starting point of a series of summer afternoons which also include moments of viewing, listening, conversation and pauses; in which intertwined threads and knots relate body, memory and language. This workshop with Eva Lootz is the fourth edition of the programme The Forms of Making, the Making of Forms, which flows between methodologies and techniques of artistic practice.
Curator: Tamara Díaz Bringas
Programme: The Forms of Making, the Making of Forms
Force line: Rethinking the Museum -
Thursday 2, Friday, 3 and Saturday, 4 September 2021 - 11am / Sabatini Building, Workshops
Artivism and the Female Body
Fanzines workshop with Zainab Fasiki
This activity aims to collectively create a fanzine to explore the representation of bodies in the company of Zainab Fasiki, a feminist draughtswoman and illustrator whose first published comic Omor (Things) explores the difficulties facing women living in Morocco. In 2018, she put together Hshouma, a website and comic on taboos in Morocco with a significant social and media impact in her country.
Organised by: Museo Reina Sofía, Casa Árabe and Medialab Prado
Curator: Susana Moliner (Grigri Projects)
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination
Programme: In the Meantime -
Together and Rising Up
RESEARCH AND STUDY GROUPS
Throughout 2021, the Study Centre will welcome seven residency programmes and two study groups to approach the different research projects situated in relation to archive policies, identity, memory and communal life.
Education programme developed with the sponsorship of the Banco Santander Foundation
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Alejandro Simón
Essays on Tackiness. Readings with Miguel Benlloch’s Creative Practice
Benlloch called himself a “performancero”, not a performer, and his creative practice from the body was also situated along a “diverted” and “tacky” line of performance. In his actions and forms of writing, Benlloch crossed words, objects, actions, places and relations, affording us a resistant reading of art history between the end of the twentieth century and beginning of the twenty-first century in Spain. How can Miguel Benlloch be read without having met him?
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Magui Dávila
Sound Performance Practices in the Framework of Club Culture and the Electronic Music Scene in Madrid from 1985 to 2005, and its Development and Conveyance in Today’s Club Context
This investigation centres on the social context of 1990s Madrid and the political potential of local club culture from the period: knowledge situated in the culture of performative electronic music and collective space shaped by different figures and nightspots in the creative side of social action, in addition to influences and conveyance in other scenes, sounds and activisms. The invisible yet central place of many female DJs in this scene constitutes one of the pillars of the research.
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Ana Sánchez
El Laboratorio 1997–2003. A Genealogy for Practices of the Commons
This archive project got under way in 2017 as a process to recompose and thematise the memory of the El Laboratorio Social Centre, presented at once as a tool to access history (at the crossroads of social, political and artistic movements in the late 1990s in Madrid through the Social Centre) and a tool of thought for the processes of transformation, creation and resistance in the city. Transfeminist stances were a key vector in configuring ways of making this activist experience.
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Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay
Recollecting/Recueillir
Based on French writer and photographer Hervé Guibert’s collection of postcards, shared out among his friends after his death from AIDS-related complications, this project seeks to reinvent networks of kinship in the fourth decade of the epidemic. The accidental archives, epistolary activity and museum visits constitute gestures of resistance against oblivion, the growing distance of today’s queer realities and the complexity of their past.
In the framework of: the L’Internationale project Our Many Europes
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Pablo Santa Olalla
Being from the South, Making Cable TV, Having AIDS, and Other Lived Experiences from the Margins
This research maps out the network Latin American artists such as Raul Marroquin, Ulises Carrión, Flavio Pons and Claudio Goulart created in Amsterdam in the 1970s. As Latin American migrants in Europe and sexual dissidents during the AIDS epidemic, these artists worked from their southernness, placing themselves on the edges of the art system and using alternative communication and media technology like mail art, artist’s publications, performance, video and cable TV.
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Diego Marchante
"Genderhacker", Gendernaut. Queering the ‘90s
Gendernaut is the name that forms this multidisciplinary project started in 2018 and approaching questions around archive, gender, the body, performance and audiovisual creation, setting forth new forms of viewing transfeminist and queer narratives. By way of transmedia and performance projects, this non-binary archive has been conceived as a living interactive space, free from heteropatriarchical codes, inhabited by multiple bodies and subjectivities relating the past, present and future to come.
In the framework of: the L’Internationale project Our Many Europes
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Elisa Fuenzalida and Javi Vargas Sotomayor
The Aroma of Flowers, the Pain of Others: Bodies, Mourning and Commonality
This research seeks to study the modes of interdependence and the organisation of care among bodies of desire and discomfort — also between living and dead bodies — deployed in the context of the social and economic flare-ups in 1990s Latin America, marked by the AIDS epidemic, economic crashes and sanitation, and in relation to fears, collapses, and probable alternatives to the abyss of the present and its new normalities.
In the framework of: the L’Internationale project Our Many Europes
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25 February – 3 June 2021 - 4:30pm / Nouvel Building, Protocol Room
For a Care Statute
A Collective Writing Proposal for a Legal Fiction with Real Effects
This study group proposes a collaborative exercise of legal fiction, with the aim being to formulate, on the basis of Spain’s Workers’ Statute, a possible Care Statue, voluntarily applying the customary labour law language and the trade union struggle as an appropriation that sets in motion political imagination and foreshadows future scenarios.
Participants: Marta Busquets Gallego, Silvia Federici, Luisa Fuentes Guaza, Graciela Gallego Cardona, Marta Malo, Helen Torres and Cristina Vega
Coordinators: Luisa Fuentes Guaza and Marta Malo
Force line: Action and Radical Imagination; Contemporary Disturbances -
8 April – 8 July 2021 – 4pm / Online platform
Politics and Aesthetics of Memory. Fears, Violence, Affection
This study group looks at a conception of memory as an agent for deciphering and re-reading fragments and scenes, procedures and narratives, rhetoric and politics of the body and the image that continue to question the present with their performative force. At the crossroads between art, subjectivity, social discourse, culture and institutions, the group seeks to better understand the challenges of this tension between neoliberal operations fostering a forgotten past and the necessary political-critical retrieval of memory.
Coordinator: Nelly Richard
Force line: Politics and Aesthetics of Memory -
Together and Rising Up
COLLECTION
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Room 427
Outside the Canon. Women Pop Artists in Spain
This room displays the work of women artists whose careers started in the 1960s and 1970s and who, forgotten in mainstream accounts, have come to the fore through recent research. Two places form the major focal points in bringing about feminist artistic discourses: Barcelona – where works were imbued with conceptual practices — and Valencia. Women artists added anti-Franco discourses and social critique to their attacks on the customary representation of women, in which they were strongly objectified as much in the mass media as in the Pop Art imagery of many of their male contemporaries.
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Room 206.09
Front and Rearguard: Women in the Civil War
The role of women during the Spanish Civil War was at once active and diverse, most notably exemplified in Kati Horna (Budapest, 1912 – Mexico City, 2000) and Gerda Taro (Stuttgart, 1910 – El Escorial, 1937), two photographers who travelled to Spain to cover the armed conflict, disseminating their work in national and international publications such as Umbral, Regards and Die Volks-Illustrierte. In the sphere of visual arts, figures such as Francis Bartolozzi Sánchez “Pitti” (Madrid, 1908 – Pamplona, 2004) and Juana Francisca Rubio (Madrid, 1911–2008) created graphic art to the backdrop of war, while the role of female workers and militiawomen to serve the cause was broadly depicted in different media. In this room, two lines of ongoing research which are key to the Museo Reina Sofía Collection converge: the context of the 1930s and the Spanish Civil War, and the recovery of the work of women artists, often ignored or obscured by the output of their male counterparts.
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Together and Rising Up
EXHIBITIONS
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7 April – 16 August 2021 / Sabatini Building, Floor 3
Charlotte Johannesson
Take Me to Another World
The work of Charlotte Johannesson (Malmö, 1943), a textile artist and digital graphic art pioneer, is an early example of the conceptual synchrony between artistic languages and a technique involving computer programming and the loom. The binary nature of the image resulting from both technologies — produced both by zeros and ones and the weft and warp — facilitated the artist’s transition from weaving to computer-based art.
Organised by: Museo Reina Sofía
Curators: Lars Bang Larssen and Mats Stjernstedt -
2 June - 27 September 2021 / Sabatini Building, Floor 3
Ida Applebroog
Marginalias
The exhibition the Museo Reina Sofía devotes to Ida Applebroog (New York, 1929) is the largest and most exhaustive retrospective of her work to date. The selection of pieces, spanning more than five decades of continual work, places the stress on the interests and concerns that were constants across her life, such as violence, power, gender politics and female sexuality.
Organised by: Museo Reina Sofía
Curators: Manuel Borja-Villel and Soledad Liaño -
Together and Rising Up
GUIDED TOURS
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From Monday to Sunday Meeting Point: Sabatini Building, Floor 1, Education Desk
Feminism. A Feminist Gaze on Avant-garde Movements
TicketsThis tour explores the spaces of the Collection devoted to historical avant-garde movements and questions women’s role and visibility in art history by means of an analysis of women as producers, recipients and subjects-objects of artistic production. It is part of a series of transversal tours that put forward new gazes of the Collection, questioning traditional interpretations and revealing the wealth of historical, social and political ramifications of artistic activity. It seeks to ignite a new gaze, to critically consider images of male domination and to prompt recognition of women’s work in overcoming roles and models.
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From Monday to Sunday
Charlotte Johannesson. Take Me to Another World
7 April – 16 August 2021
A guided tour around the exhibition the Museo devotes to Charlotte Johannesson (Malmö, 1943), a textile artist and digital graphic art pioneer, and an early example of the conceptual synchrony between artistic languages and a technique involving computer programming and the loom.
Meeting point: Sabatini Building, Garden
Registration: only for one-hour visits. Tours organised at the meeting point in strict order of arrival, from 30 minutes before the start of the visit. -
Together and Rising Up
DIGITAL PROJECTS
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Microsite Based on the Collection
Front and Rearguard: Women in the Civil War
The 1930s was a paradigmatic era in the progress and regression of the situation women faced in Spain across all spheres. Women’s public visibility in the years of the Second Republic was strengthened through their active role in the Civil War, both on the front and in the rearguard, but curtailed by the victory of the Nationalist faction. This microsite, therefore, explores in greater depth the lines of research and acquired works that have given rise to the room Front and Rearguard: Women in the Civil War, and also features collaboration with different specialists who analyse the context of women artists and the most significant works from this period in the Collection.
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Research and playlist
Sicaliptic Women, Unknowingly Avant-garde Artists
With the Worst Dual Purpose, 1907–1940
The Spanish neologism sicalipsis is customarily associated with morally transgressive and mischievous eroticism, yet sicalipsis was also related to the price of bread, the workers’ struggle, feminism, changing gender roles and avant-garde movements. Sicaliptic women inhabited a territory bordering legality and illegality, hence their strategy of resistance in the recurrent use of dual purpose. This playlist also has a dual purpose: the tornado woman built with the neurasthenic woman, the wage earning woman built with the revolutionary activist woman, the highly politicised woman built with the apolitical woman, the traditional, autochthonous woman constructed with the cosmopolitan woman.
Curators: Gloria G. Durán and Miguel Molina-Alarcón
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Together and Rising Up
RRS RADIO
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Conversations with Mattin, Marisa Pérez Colina and Brigitte Vasallo
The New Reaction. Antidotes and Synergies
In this podcast, Agnès Pe assembles some of the cornerstones of the encounter held in the Museo Reina Sofía in November 2020 around the specific means that mobilise forces from the New Right. Furthermore, it centres around how to preserve the continued existence of emancipatory conquests, now under threat after centuries of struggle, generating spaces of thought from new feminisms, struggles for recognition and equality, and social and migration movements, among others.
Together and Rising Up
Transfeminist Struggles

Held on 01 Feb 2021
A red lightning bolt stirs Poland, and thence the world. A red lightning bolt, a tide of green handkerchiefs, thousands of bodies painted purple, the flap of multi-coloured flags, extending far and wide and flashing with danger in that instant. Uprisings that render an account of a time of promise in which feminist power becomes at once mass and radical, converging with other historical or intersectional fights, struggles of class, race and coloniality. At the same time, it is an historical moment that co-exists with a time of menace, where a new reaction attempts to advance on already conquered rights and diminish them, refuse them passage, break them up. A time in which mourning and celebration join, in which different generations mix and share the wisdom and experience of numerous women, share the irreverent and irrepressible passion of others. A time of rebellion in bedrooms, houses, on streets, and also in institutions. A time in which the museum, intersected and affected by these struggles, must take up its position.
The programme Together and Rising Up assembles a series of activities, exhibitions, rooms from the Collection, study groups, guided tours and digital projects inside the Museo, to be presented over the course of 2021, and thus reflecting the plural nature of transfeminist struggles and the complexity of new challenges for feminism.
Más actividades

Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art
23 February – 14 December 2026 – Check programme
Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art is a study group aligned towards thinking about how certain contemporary artistic and cultural practices resist the referentiality that dominates the logics of production and the consumption of present-day art. At the centre of this proposal are the concepts of difficulty and deviation, under which it brings together any procedure capable of preventing artistic forms from being absorbed by a meaning that appears previous to and independent from its expression. By ensuring the perceptibility of their languages, difficulty invites us to think of meaning as the effect of a signifying tension; that is, as a productive and creative activity which, from the materiality of art objects, frees aesthetic experience from the representational mandate and those who participate in it from the passiveness associated with tasks of mimesis and decoding.
The economy of the referential norm translates the social logic of capitalism, where insidious forms of capturing subjectivity and meaning operate. In the early 1980s, and adopting a Marxist framework, poet Ron Silliman highlighted how this logic entailed separating language from any mark, gesture, script, form or syntax that might link it to the conditions of its production, rendering it fetichised (as if without a subject) and alienating its users in a use for which they are not responsible. This double dispossession encodes the political strategy of referential objectivity: with no subject and no trace of its own consistency, language is merely an object, that reality in which it disappears.
The political uses of referentiality, more sophisticated today than ever before, sustain the neoliberal-extractivist phase of capitalism that crosses through present-day societies politically, economically and aesthetically. Against them, fugitive artistic practices emerge which, drawing from Black and Queer studies and other subaltern critical positions, reject the objective limits of what exists, invent forms to name what lies outside what has already been named, and return to subjects the capacity to participate in processes of emission and interpretation.
Read from the standpoint of artistic work, the objective capture of referentiality may be called transparency. Viewed from a social contract that reproduces inequality in fixed identity positions, transparent in this objectivity are, precisely, the discourses that maintain the status quo of domination. Opposite the inferno of these discourses, this group aims to collectively explore, through deviant or fugitive works, the paradise of language that Monique Wittig encountered in the estranged practices of literature. For the political potency of difficulty — that is, its contribution to the utopia of a free language among equals — depends on making visible, first, its own deviations; from there, the norm that those deviations transgress; and finally, the narrowness of a norm which in no way exhausts the possibilities ofsaying, signifying, referring and producing a world.
From this denouncement of referential alienation, fetishisation and capture, Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art turns its attention to the strategies of resistance deployed by contemporary artists and poets. Its interest is directed towards proposals as evidently difficult or evasive as those of Gertrude Stein, Lyn Hejinian, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, Kathy Acker, María Salgado and Ricardo Carreira, and as seemingly simple as those of Fernanda Laguna, Felix Gonzalez Torres and Cecilia Vicuña, among other examples that can be added according to the desires and dynamics of the group.
The ten study group sessions, held between February and December, combine theoretical seminars, work with artworks from the Museo Reina Sofía’s Collections and exhibitions, reading workshops and public programs. All these formats serve as spaces of encounter to think commonly about certain problems of poetics — that is, certain political questions — of contemporary writing and art.
Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art inaugurates the research line Goodbye, Representation, through which the Museo Reina Sofía’s Studies Directorship seeks to explore the emergence of contemporary artistic and cultural practices which move away from representation as a dominant aesthetic-political strategy and redirect their attention toward artistic languages that question the tendency to point, name and fix, advocating instead for fugitive aesthetics. Over its three-year duration, this research line materializes in study groups, seminars, screenings and other forms of public programming.

CLINIC 2628. A Community of Writing and Research in the Arts
February – October 2026
Clinic 2628 is a project which supports and brings together writings which stem from the intention to offer a space and sustainable time for research work in art and culture. Framed within an academic context which is increasingly less receptive to the forms in which thinking happens and is expressed, the aim is to rescue the academic from its neoliberal trappings and thus recover the alliance between precision and intuition, work and desire. A further goal is to return writing to a commons which makes this possible through the monitoring of processes and the collectivisation of ideas, stances, references and strategies.
The endeavour, rooted in a collaboration between the Museo Reina Sofía’s Studies Directorship and the Artea research group, via the i+D Experimenta project, is shaped by three annual editions conceived as spaces of experimentation, discussion and a demonstration of writings critical of what is put forward by today’s academia.
What forces, forms and processes are at play when writing about art and aesthetics? In academia, in museums and in other cultural institutions, the practice of writing is traversed by productivist logics which jeopardise rhythms of research and experimentation. The imposition of both scientism inherent in the structure of “the paper” and the quantifying of results which demand a criterion of quality and visibility sterilise and smoothen, from the outset, the coarseness that is particular to writing understood from the concrete part of language: phonic, graphic, syntactic and grammatical resistance connecting the language user to the community the language unites and activates. They also sterilise the roughness enmeshed in the same desire to write, the intuitive, clear and confusing pathways that once again connect the writer to those reading and writing, participating in a common good that is at once discovered and produced.
The progressive commercialisation of knowledge propelled by cognitive capitalism moves further away from the research and production of knowledge in artworks and artistic languages and practices. The work of curators and archive, criticism, performances and essays formerly saw a horizon of formal and emotional possibilities, of imagination that was much broader when not developed in circumstances of competition, indexing and impact. Today, would it be possible to regain, critically not nostalgically, these ways; namely, recovering by forms, and by written forms, the proximity between art thinking and its objects? How to write in another way, to another rhythm, with no more demands than those with which an artwork moves towards different ways of seeing, reading and being in the world?

Cultural Work
Thursday, 12 February 2026 – 5:30pm
This series is organised by equipoMotor, a group of teenagers, young people and older people who have participated in the Museo Reina Sofía’s previous community education projects, and is structured around four themed blocks that pivot on the monstrous.
Session number two looks to approach film as a place from which cultural work is made visible and processes of production engage in dialogue with artistic creation. From this premise, the session focuses on exploring how audiovisual content is produced, assembled and distributed, from the hands that handle the images to the bodies that participate in its circulation. The aim is to reflect on the invisible effort, precarity and forms of collaboration that uphold cultural life, that transform the filmic experience into an act that recognises and cares for common work.

The (legal) person and the legal form. Chapter II
8, 12, 15 January, 2026 – 16:00 to 19:00
As part of the Studies Constellation, the Study Directoship’s annual fellowship, art historian and theorist Sven Lütticken leads the seminar The (Legal) Person and the Legal Form: Theoretical, Artistic, and Activist Commitments to foster dialogue and deepen the hypotheses and questions driving his research project.
This project, titled Unacting Personhood, Deforming Legal Abstraction, explores the dominance of real abstractions—such as exchange value and legal form—over our processes of subjectivation, and asks how artistic practices can open up alternative ways of representing or performing the subject and their legal condition in the contemporary world.
The seminar consists of eight sessions, divided into three chapters throughout the academic year. While conceived as non-public spaces for discussion and collective work, these sessions complement, nourish, and amplify the public program of the Studies Constellation.
In this second chapter of the seminar, the inquiry into the aesthetics and politics of legal form continues with three sessions that pick up the discussions held in Chapter I but propose new lines of flight. The first session focuses on international law via the writings of the British author China Miéville, which allows us to reconsider the notion of the legal form –following Evgeny Pashukanis— and, through it, a variety of (people’s) tribunals. While the crucial concept of the legal person –as the right-holder central to the form of law— was debated in Chapter I, the second session focuses on attempts to extend personhood not (just) to corporations, but rather to nonhuman animals or ecosystems. Finally, the third session poses the question: how can groups and networks use officially recognized organizational forms (such as the foundation or the cooperative) and/or use a collective persona (without necessarily a legal “infrastructure” to match) to act and represent themselves?

TEJA 2026. Open Call for Emergency Art Residencies
Proposal submission until 12 January, 2026
TEJA / Red de espacios culturales en apoyo a situaciones de emergencia [Network of Cultural Spaces in Support of Emergency Situations] has the mission to promote transnational cooperation by offering temporary art residencies to artists and cultural practitioners who find themselves in complex socio-political situations in their countries of origin. During their stay in Spain, residents receive accommodation, legal and psychological counseling, and access to a network of organizations and professionals with whom they can share, develop, and continue with their creative projects. The goal is to provide a safe and stimulating environment where artists can continue their work despite adverse circumstances and generate dialogue spaces that ensure freedom of expression through joint activities both in Spain and with international collaborators.
During 2026, TEJA hosts three new residencies, each lasting three months, dedicated to supporting artists and cultural practitioners residing in the West Bank and Jerusalem. In addition, in the second half of the year, TEJA hosts three additional residencies for Gazan artists, which are offered by invitation (as Spain is currently unable to facilitate evacuations from Gaza, these invitations are coordinated through France). These residencies aim to provide a stable, creative environment and foster artistic exchange in the face of ongoing adversities. Through this new program, TEJA reaffirms its commitment to amplifying Palestinian voices and empowering artists as they navigate these turbulent times.
The selection is carried out by the TEJA network in close collaboration with each hosting partner. This year the hosting partners are: La Escocesa (Barcelona), hablarenarte / Planta Alta (Madrid), Espositivo (Madrid), Institute for Postnatural Studies (Madrid), Casa Árabe (Córdoba). The selection prioritizes the artist’s personal and professional situation first, and then the alignment with the practices and themes of the hosting spaces. Proposal submission deadline is January 12th, 2026, 23:59 h.



![Miguel Brieva, ilustración de la novela infantil Manuela y los Cakirukos (Reservoir Books, 2022) [izquierda] y Cibeles no conduzcas, 2023 [derecha]. Cortesía del artista](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ecologias_del_deseo_utopico.jpg.webp)
![Ángel Alonso, Charbon [Carbón], 1964. Museo Reina Sofía](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/perspectivas_ecoambientales.jpg.webp)