Adolpho Arrietta’s Carte Blanche Session: Jonas Mekas, The Brig
Adolpho Arrietta. The Collection Screened #1

Jonas Mekas. The Brig, film, 1964. Museo Reina Sofía Collection
Held on 12 Jun 2025
“Jonas Mekas showed me this film when I was living in his house on Wooster Street in 1975. I met him after Les intrigues de Sylvia Couski won an award at the Toulon Festival in 1974; he was on the Jury and invited me to New York. He showed me The Brig because it bore little relation to what I knew of his work, his diaries. The film is more in the ilk of classical cinema, and I was surprised by how raw and hard-hitting it is. It is the Living Theater that acts in it, but I knew nothing; for me, it was so real that it seemed more like fiction than documentary. It was hugely emotional, a hard slap. After being with Jonas and his friends, for instance Flo and Ken Jacobs, and Andy Warhol, I was really stimulated and understood that my idea of film was not madness or extravagance. I had a great time and felt highly stimulated by them all”. Adolpho Arrietta
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía
USA, 1964, black and white, DCP (original format: 16mm), original version in English with Spanish subtitles, 65’. Museo Reina Sofía Collection
— With a presentation by Adolpho Arrietta
Participants
This activity has a place for people with reduced mobility.
Activity within the program...
Adolpho Arrietta
The Collection Screened #1
The Collection Screened is a new programme built around materials selected from the Museo Reina Sofía’s film, video and moving image holdings and displayed in the Museo’s Cinema theatre. The programme seeks at once to throw into relief audiovisual works which are seldom exhibited or lack visibility in their entirety and to highlight or broaden an episode, history or artist that is part of the Museo Reina Sofía Collections.
This inaugural programme pays homage to the uniqueness of film-maker Adolpho Arrietta, a pivotal figure in international underground cinema, with the screening of two films by the director acquired by the Museo in 2012: Las intrigas de Sylvia Couski (The Adventures of Sylvia Couski, 1974) and Tam-tam (1976), in addition to a carte blanche session, where Arrietta selects Jonas Mekas’s film The Brig (1964) from the Museo’s Film Collection. The director will deliver a presentation in all sessions.
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Adolpho Arrietta. Les intrigues de Sylvia Couski (The Adventures of Sylvia Couski)
Past activity
A twist on the myth of Pygmalion inspired by the living sculptures of Argentinian artist Alberto Greco (1931–1965), an acquaintance of Arrietta’s in Madrid in the 1960s. The ex-wife of a renowned sculptor convinces her lover to steal the statue her former husband has made for his forthcoming exhibition at the historic Yvon Lambert Gallery. Her lover sees no other option but to put a model there as a real sculpture, which ends up being acquired by a Brazilian collector. Played by professional actors Michèle Moretti and Howard Vernon, as well as amateur actors, such as the transgender community of Les Gazolines, and with counterculture icons Marie France and Hélène Hazéra, the film is a musical about cruising, partying and costume in the post-radical Paris of May ‘68, and a drama which straddles traditional marriage and new amorous forms.

Adolpho Arrietta. Tam-Tam
Past activity
This film, with shades of Buñuel, is about the author of a book called Tam-Tam — played by painter Javier Grandes and with a likeness to Arrietta — who is in New York when really he should be attending a private party in Paris, his absence conspicuous while everyone is waiting for him. Tam-Tam is an altarpiece led by mysterious, attractive characters, denizens of the counterculture of the time, for instance writers Severo Sarduy, Enrique Vila-Matas and Michi Panero, trans designer Maud Molyneux and activist model Paquita Paquin, inviting us to lose ourselves in a never-ending Parisian soirée. Arrietta used a camera lent to him by Jonas Mekas to shoot the opening in New York. The glam-toned, dandyesque improvised dialogues and a visually baroque style speak of the mix between life and cinema. We hear a tam-tam in the background: “Is it the apocalypse”, one character asks. “We are the apocalypse”, answers the other.

Adolpho Arrietta’s Carte Blanche Session: Jonas Mekas, The Brig
Past activity
“Jonas Mekas showed me this film when I was living in his house on Wooster Street in 1975. I met him after Les intrigues de Sylvia Couski won an award at the Toulon Festival in 1974; he was on the Jury and invited me to New York. He showed me The Brig because it bore little relation to what I knew of his work, his diaries. The film is more in the ilk of classical cinema, and I was surprised by how raw and hard-hitting it is. It is the Living Theater that acts in it, but I knew nothing; for me, it was so real that it seemed more like fiction than documentary. It was hugely emotional, a hard slap. After being with Jonas and his friends, for instance Flo and Ken Jacobs, and Andy Warhol, I was really stimulated and understood that my idea of film was not madness or extravagance. I had a great time and felt highly stimulated by them all”. Adolpho Arrietta
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