Maike Aden is an art historian and musicologist from Germany. Her work focuses on twentieth-century art history and theory through music and sound. She has devoted her studies to artists like Ulises Carrión and Bas Jan Ader, among others, and, most recently, is curator of the exhibition Disonata. Art in Sound Until 1980 (Museo Reina Sofía, 17 June – 8 November 2020).
Bettina Brach is a curator at the Centre for Artists' Publications, Weserburg Museum of Modern Art (Bremen, Germany), which holds one of the biggest international collections of artist’s books, multiples, books objects, ephemera, art and sound recordings. Its holdings also notably include the archive of Small Press & Communication, the publishing house founded by Anne and Guy Schraenen in 1974.
Emanuele Carcano is the founder of Alga Marghen, a record label specialised in music and sounds from twentieth-century avant-garde art.
Katarzyna Cytlak is an art historian from Poland based in Buenos Aires and Poznan. Her research focuses on artistic production and exchanges in Central Europe and Latin America in the second half of the 20th century, with her main concerns encompassing conceptual art, radical and utopian architecture, socially committed art and the theory of art in relation to post-socialist countries.
Mela Dávila specialises in documentation and contemporary art and her research is centred on art archives, artists’ publications, bibliographical collections and other related fields. From 2015 to 2017, she was director of Public Activities at Museo Reina Sofía after directing the Museu d’Art Contemporani (MACBA) Study and Documentation Centre in Barcelona, from 2006 to 2012, where she was previously in charge of the Publications Department.
João Fernandes is director of the Moreira Salles Institute in Brazil. He was director of Museo Serralves from 2003 to 2012 and deputy director of Museo Reina Sofía from 2012 until 2019. Throughout his career he has curated numerous exhibitions, including Pessoa. All Art Is a Form of Literature (Museo Reina Sofía, 2018), Luciano Fabro (Museo Reina Sofía, 2014–2015) and Cildo Meireles (Museo Reina Sofía, 2013).
Manuel Fontán del Junco is a doctor of philosophy and between 1995 and 2005 he directed three Instituto Cervantes offices in Europe — Bremen, Lisbon and Naples. Since January 2006 he has served as director of exhibitions at Fundación Juan March, and has organised a wide range of shows on modern and contemporary art, for instance the recent Listening with the Eyes. Sound Art in Spain 1961–2016 (2016).
José Iges is an artist and composer. From 1985 to 2008 he directed the programme Ars Sonora (Radio Clásica-RNE). In his solo work, or with artist Concha Jerez, he carries out installations, performances, concerts, radio pieces, videos and graphic art work. He has also conducted lectures, courses and workshops on sound art.
Lilijana Stepančič is director of the International Centre of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana (MGLC, Slovenia), a museum housing modern and contemporary art prints, based on the collection of the Biennial of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana, which was founded in 1955, the same year as documenta in Kassel. The centre also possesses a distinguished collection of artist’s books, ephemera and posters.
Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven and Danny Devos are two artists from Belgium whose practices include performance and body art. In 1981, they founded the art initiative and noise band Club Moral. Their artistic concerns lie in the study of criminality and violence, the representation of women in the media, the exploration of the subconscious and the search for the obscene from a female perspective.