Defiant Muses
Exhibition tour by Babette Mangolte, Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez and Giovanna Zapperi
![Delphine Seyrig y la actriz Viva Lors, durante el rodaje de Sois belle et tais-toi [Se hermosa y cállate]. Fotografía, 1975. Cortesía de Archivo Seyrig](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/large_landscape/public/Actividades/musas-g.gif.webp)
Held on 24 sep 2019
The exhibition Defiant Muses. Delphine Seyrig and the Feminist Video Collectives in France in the 1970s and 1980s (Museo Reina Sofía, 25 September 2019 – 23 March 2020) explores the intersection between film, video and feminism in France during these two decades of political turmoil, combining videos, artworks, photographs, documentary archives and films in sections which articulate myriad civic concerns. Via a guided tour prior to the exhibition’s unveiling, the photographer and experimental filmmaker Babette Mangolte and the show’s curators, Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez and Giovanna Zapperi, will underscore the complex network of alliances between writers, artists and film-makers, of which Seyrig was a part, along with other activists, such as actress and friend Jane Fonda, film-maker Babette Mangolte, poet and painter Etel Adnan and writer Kate Millet, among others.
Delphine Seyrig (1932–1990) is known as an actress through the roles she played in French auteur cinema, most notably in Alan Resnais’s film Last Year at Marienbad (1961), in which her character symbolises an idealised femininity. Yet ‘acting’ was not just a profession for Seyrig — in the 1970s it would become a form of feminist activism. At the same time, her collaborations with film-makers like Chantal Akerman, Marguerite Duras and Ulrike Ottinger afforded her the chance to study a wide array of feminine roles and unravel her own image as a diva. Around 1975, with video artist Carole Roussopoulos and translator Ioana Wieder, she produced an audiovisual series under the collective name "Les Insoumuses" (Defiant Muses), whereby video would be used as an emancipatory tool and an agent of political activism. In 1982, the three women created the Centre audiovisuel Simone de Beauvoir in Paris, comprising an unprecedented audiovisual archive on the struggles of the time, for instance the fight against torture and the Vietnam War, and the fight for legal abortion, the rights of sex workers and political prisoners, and for the anti-psychiatry movement.
In collaboration with
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía
Participants
Babette Mangolte, photographer and French experimental filmmaker. After training in the study program of the École Nationale de Photographie et de Cinématographie she moved to New York, where she lives and works since 1970. She documented through photography the performances of the artists and dancers of the New York downtown artistic scene, such as Marina Abramović, Trisha Brown and Philip Glass. She worked with Chantal Akerman and Yvonne Rainer as director of photography until in 1975, when she began producing her own films.
Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez is an independent curator, editor and writer. She is the curator of Contour Biennale 9 (Belgium, 2019) and associate curator at Kadist, Paris, as well as the co-founder, with Elisabeth Lebovici and Patricia Falguières, of the seminar Something You Should Know, at EHESS (School for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences, Paris), editor of L’Internationale Online and the journal Manifesta and co-director of Les Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers.
Giovanna Zapperi is an art historian and a lecturer of Contemporary Art History at the University of Tours. She works at the intersection between art history, visual studies and feminism and has published L’artiste est une femme. La modernité de Marcel Duchamp (2012), Lo schermo del potere. Femminismo e regime della visibilità (2012) with Alessandra Gribaldo, and Carla Lonzi. Un’arte della vita (2017, French edition in 2018).
Más actividades
27th Contemporary Art Conservation Conference
Wednesday, 4, and Thursday, 5 March 2026
The 27th Contemporary Art Conservation Conference, organised by the Museo Reina Sofía’s Department of Conservation and Restoration, with the sponsorship of the MAPFRE Foundation, is held on 4 and 5 March 2026. This international encounter sets out to share and debate experience and research, open new channels of study and reflect on conservation and the professional practice of restorers.
This edition will be held with in-person and online attendance formats, occurring simultaneously, via twenty-minute interventions followed by a five-minute Q&A.
Submitting Proposals
The deadline for presenting proposals ends on 28 September 2025. Those interested must send an email to jornada.conservacion@museoreinasofia.es, submitting the following documents:
- An unpublished proposal related to the conservation or restoration of contemporary art.
- A 1,700-word summary, written in Word, on the theme addressed. Please indicate the topic at the top of the document with five keywords and the presentation format (in-person or virtual). Preference will be given to the in-person format.
- CV and contact details.
- Only one proposal per person will be accepted.
- Proposals related to talks given in the last three conferences will not be accepted.
Proposals may be submitted in Spanish, French or English and will be evaluated by a Scientific Committee, which will select the submissions to be presented during these conference days and will determine their possible participation in a subsequent publication, the inclusion of which will undergo a second and definitive evaluation by the Editorial Committee.
For submissions in a virtual format, participants must send a recording following certain technical requirements they will receive once participation is confirmed.
The programme of sessions will be published in the coming days.
Rethinking Guernica
Monday and Sunday - Check times
This guided tour activates the microsite Rethinking Guernica, a research project developed by the Museo Reina Sofía’s Collections Area, Conservation and Restoration Department and the Digital Projects Area of the Editorial Activities Department, assembling around 2,000 documents, interviews and counter-archives related to Pablo Picasso’s painting Guernica (1937).
The visit sets out an in-situ dialogue between the works hung around the painting and a selection of key documents, selected by the Museo’s Education Team and essential to gaining an idea of the picture’s historical background. Therefore, the tour looks to contribute to activating critical thought around this iconic and perpetually represented work and seeks to foster an approach which refreshes our gaze before the painting, thereby establishing a link with the present. Essentially revisiting to rethink Guernica.
UP/ROOTING
11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 NOV 2025
Museo Reina Sofía and MACBA Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA) invite applications for the 2025 iteration of the School of Common Knowledge, which will take place from November 11th to 16th in Madrid and Barcelona.
The School of Common Knowledge (SCK) draws on the network, knowledge and experience of L’Internationale, a confederation of museums, art organizations and universities that strives to reimagine and practice internationalism, solidarity and communality within the cultural field. This year, the SCK program focuses on the contested and dynamic notions of rooting and uprooting in the framework of present —colonial, migrant, situated, and ecological— complexities.
Building on the legacy of the Glossary of Common Knowledge and the current European program Museum of the Commons, the SCK invites participants to reflect on the power of language to shape our understanding of art and society through a co-learning methodology. Its ambition is to be both nomadic and situated, looking at specific cultural and geopolitical situations while exploring their relations and interdependencies with the rest of the world.
In the current context fraught with war and genocide, the criminalization of migration and hyper-identitarianism, concepts such as un/belonging become unstable and in need of collective rethinking:
How can we reframe the sense and practice of belonging away from reductive nationalist paradigms or the violence of displacement? How to critically hold the entanglement of the colonial routes and the cultural roots we are part of? What do we do with the toxic legacies we inherit? And with the emancipatory genealogies and practices that we choose to align with? Can a renewed practice of belonging and coalition-making through affinity be part of a process of dis/identification? What geographies —cultural, artistic, political— do these practices of de/centering, up/rooting, un/belonging and dis/alignment designate?
Departing from these questions, the program consists of a series of visits to situated initiatives (including Museo Situado, Paisanaje and MACBA's Kitchen, to name a few), engagements with the exhibitions and projects on view (Project a Black Planet: The Art and Culture from Panafrica), a keynote lecture by Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, as well as daily reading and discussion gatherings, editorial harvest sessions, and conviviality moments.
Ylia and Marta Pang
Thursday, 6 November - 8pm
The encounter between Spanish DJ and producer Ylia and visual artist Marta Pang is presented in the form of a premiere in the Museo Reina Sofía. Both artists converge from divergent trajectories to give form to a new project conceived specifically for this series, which aims to create new stage projects by setting out from the friction between artists and dialogue between disciplines.
Situated Voices 36
Thursday, 16 October 2025 – 7pm
Territorio Doméstico is a feminist collective made up of female domestic and care workers who live in the Community of Madrid. They form a cross-border space which responds to a number of urgent problems: defending labour rights for female domestic workers and demanding the regularisation of migrant workers, as well as the right to family reunification, social recognition and the reparation of care debt by institutions.
The collective will provide accompaniment in this encounter by putting forward a cross-sectional round-table discussion centred on professional illnesses suffered by specific collectives of women doing jobs that are predominantly physical, such as care and domestic work and farm work. The aim is to shine a light on the physical and psychological tolls these body-oriented jobs take on the people that do them, in addition to the scant social, legal and healthcare recognition they receive.
Professional illnesses for women are often not recognised as such and are diagnosed simply as common illnesses, and with everything that entails on a legal and administrative level. Furthermore, obtaining sick leave can often become a huge struggle, thereby breaching labour rights.
The Museo Situado assembly convenes to discuss this reality, granting it the space it deserves to collectively call for solutions which respect the rights of all female worker.