For an Archive Imagination. Session 3

Archives of the Commons VI

Image of the project Les Archives des luttes des femmes en Algérie.

Image of the project Les Archives des luttes des femmes en Algérie

Courtesy of Hichem Merouche

Date and time

Held on 11, 11, 11 Mar 2026

Organising committee

Lucía Esperanza Bianchi, Sara Buraya Boned, Lucía Cañada, Marjolaine David, Maria Mallol González, Guille Mongan and Julia Morandeira Arrizabalaga

Agenda

miércoles 11 mar 2026 a las 11:00

No Limits?: Archiving in Digital

— With Laura Pelayo (Museo Reina Sofía Library and Documentation Centre). Accompanied by the Tentacular Museum

miércoles 11 mar 2026 a las 17:00

Unexpected Alliances, Strange Kinships. Responsibility and Joint Responsibility

— Round-table discussion with Awel Haouati (the Archive of Women’s Struggles in Algeria), Marta Hernangómez (the Historical Archive of Social Movements) and Marjolaine David Briand (Red Constelaciones). Accompanied by Sara Buraya Boned and Lucía Cañada 

This round-table raises questions around how to work with and build archives with divergent social agents, and how to map boundaries and overflows in a way that is jointly responsible and interdependent, where the public, the private and the commons converge to search for spaces of intersection and collaboration. It also explores strategies and alliances which allow for material conditions for the long-term preservation of archives and which, at the same time, look to guarantee the agency and autonomy of communities’ archive processes.

miércoles 11 mar 2026 a las 19:00

Conclusion. Open Assembly 

— Facilitated by the Red Conceptualismos del Sur and the Tentacular Museum (Museo Reina Sofía)

Participants

Lucía Cañada

holds a PhD in Art History and Theory and is a professor at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina. Her research focuses on the link between artistic practices and education during the dictatorships in Latin America. Since 2025 she has been in charge of cataloguing the political graphic art collection from the Juan Carlos Romero Archive. She is also part of the Southern Conceptualisms Network node and develops the Romero Archive for/to come project.

Marjolaine David Briand

is a PhD candidate in Social Sciences and Cultural Studies at the University of Buenos Aires and Bordeaux Montaigne University. Her research focuses on artistic and political forms of occupying urban space developed by artistic, sexual-dissident and feminist activisms in Argentina from 2001 to 2021. She is part of the Southern Conceptualisms Network Archive node and the team of Red Constelaciones, an activism and research project which looks to create a digital archive tool of aesthetics and poetics in street interventions and struggles from Argentina.

Awel Haouati

is a researcher in Anthropology at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). Her work centres on press photography during the 1990s war in Algeria. In 2019 she founded the project Archives des luttes des femmes en Algérie (Archives of Women’s Struggles in Algeria), which she manages jointly with Saadia Gacem, a fellow researcher in anthropology. She also works as an independent writer and photographer.

Marta María Hernangómez

holds a degree in Geography and History, an MA in Electronic Administration and Government, and is a civil servant in the Faculty Corps of Archivists, Librarians and Archaeologists. She collaborates with the project Aulas con Memoria (Classrooms with Memory), from the Association to Recover Historical Memory, and with the Anselmo Lorenzo Foundation. Currently, she is the director of the Historical Archive of Social Movements, a state archive created in 2021, under Spain’s Ministry of Culture, with the sole remit of preserving documentary and bibliographic heritage generated and conserved by different organisations and social movements in contemporary Spain, making it available to the public.

Laura Pelayo

is head of the Museo Reina Sofía’s Library and Documentation Centre. With a PhD in Art History and Theory from the Autonomous University of Madrid, her professional career as a researcher in contemporary art goes hand in hand with her growing interest in the possibilities that libraries and archives offer culture and the development of contemporary artistic practices. Since 2019 she has worked in the Museo’s Library and Documentation Centre, focusing on archives, dissemination and driving forward research activity.

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Image of the project Les Archives des luttes des femmes en Algérie.
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Activity within the program...

Archives of the Commons VI

For an Archive Imagination

Archives of the Commons, organised jointly by the Museo Reina Sofía and the Red Conceptualismos del Sur, is a bi-annual encounter which came into being in 2015 out of the need to urgently initiate a dialogue between spaces of creation and care for memories. Its aim is to put forward opportunities for exchange and reflection around archive practices understood as exercises of political, artistic and social commitment, as well as giving thought to experiences that evoke future memories and pasts to come, essential exercises of imagination and critique to articulate and construct narratives of memory in resistance. 

This sixth edition explores the notion of archival imagination, understanding archive practices not only as the safe-keeping of past memory, but also as speculative projections and the creating of worlds. American historian and writer Saidiya Hartman puts forward critical fabulation as a writing practice from which to respond to voids and the systemic violence of colonial archives. This means negotiating and exceeding their limits, and reclaiming life stories to recount the present as a practice of freedom, that which “could have been a story told with and against archive”.  

Furthermore, in their introductory text, Fernanda Carvajal, Moira Cristiá and Javiera Manzi, members of the Red Conceptualimos del Sur, allude to the Archives of the Commons III publication on archive imagination as an active willingness to reformulate modes of making archive. Upon interrupting or flowing beyond norms (modes of classification, description and automated practices), imagination works as an “inventiveness available to times of caring for archives and respect for the singularity of their forms, a practice which enables past experience to be recovered and reformulated to respond to the present, beyond mere documentary organisation”.  

From a constellation of practices and experiences made possible by this notion, the seminar convenes a whole programme of conversations which address the production, maintenance and reconstruction of archives lost from or non-existent in imagination. The different guest archives share and reflect on the methodologies, institutional forms and artistic gestures that have unfolded to deal with erasure and destruction, as well as absence and emptiness. They are all horizons which raise questions around an archive-based creative power that challenges a hegemonic linearity of time and history and invents new forms of naming and organising in its making.        

In parallel to the seminar is the launch of the international graphic art campaign Why the Question and Not the Statement Today? convened by pasafronteras, the Red Conceptualismos del Sur publisher. This campaign is understood as “a cross-border seedbed of questions to shake up the world, to activate archives, to open futures”, in the words of artist Graciela Carnevale. Contributions to the campaign will be shown during the days of the encounter.

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