
Held on 18 May 2023
Once again, the Museo Reina Sofía participates in this year’s annual International Museum Day. The theme chosen by the International Council of Museums (ICOM) is “Museums, Sustainability and Well-being”, with the stress placed on museums’ contribution, as threads in a shared social fabric, to the well-being of communities and to meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). More specifically, 2023 is centred on Goal 3: Good Health and Well-being; Goal 13: Climate Action; and Goal 15: Life on Land.
Diversity, art and music come together on this day of festivities and vindication, in which Radio 3 sets up in the Nouvel Building Courtyard to offer a line-up of artists who will perform live —streamed on the Radio 3 website — without interruption from 7am to 10pm. The day will conclude with upbeat music in the Sabatini Building Garden from 9pm to midnight.
Entry to the Museo will be free of charge throughout the day, with visits available to the temporary exhibition An Act of Seeing that Unfolds. The Susana and Ricardo Steinbruch Collection, the Museo Reina Sofía Collection and guided tours.
With the support of

Patron of the Museo

-
Thursday, 18 May 2023 Nouvel Building, Courtyard; Sabatini Building, Garden and online platform
Radio 3’s Day of Live Music
Online platformThroughout the day, the Museo will play host to a day of live performances organised by Radio 3 and staged in the Nouvel Courtyard, with the radio station’s daily broadcast schedule punctuated with live performances running from 7am to 10pm. The day can be streamed live on the Radio 3 website. To conclude proceedings, a group of Radio 3 DJs will play more upbeat sets until midnight.
-
Until 2 October, 2023 Nouvel Building, Floor 1
An Act of Seeing that Unfolds
The Susana and Ricardo Steinbruch Collection
TicketsThe Susana and Ricardo Steinbruch Collection is a major repertory of different temporalities and geographies centred, first and foremost, on Latin American contemporaneity — particularly Brazilian — and the artistic practices that transpired in Eastern Europe across the second half of the twentieth century. The pieces selected for the show pivot around the theory of gestures coined by Czech-Brazilian thinker Vilém Flusser. Therefore, a dialogical and non-linear survey is laid out, starting from a site-specific project by Fernanda Gomes and moving through anti-art movements in the former Yugoslavia, Neo-concretism and artistic responses that sparked political events in the 1960s and 1970s in the contexts mentioned.
-
Thursday, 18 May 2023 Sabatini Building and Nouvel Building
Communicating Vessels. Collection 1881–2021
TicketsThe Museo Reina Sofía Collection aims to offer narratives and experiences which, without seeking to be exhaustive or categorical, speak of the present time through a critical study of the common past. What takes precedence is not the chronological succession of events and works, but rather the relationships and genealogies that we can weave and disclose from the present. In this instance, visitors can survey the following Episodes: 1. Avant-garde territories: City, Architecture and Magazines; 3. Campo Cerrado; 4. Double Exhibition: Art and Cold War; and finally 6. A Drunken Boat: Eclecticism, Institutionalism and Disobedience in the 1980s.
-
Thursday, 18 May 2023 Meeting Point: Sabatini Building, Floor 1, Education desk
Where Do I Start?
Taster Tour of the Museo and its Collection
TicketsThe first question that springs to visitors’ minds when they enter the Museo is: Where do I start? To answer this question and for first-time visitors to the Collection to get their bearings, this taster tour is made available, whereby the Mediation Team offers key routes and pointers to plan an independent visit. Being worded as such, as a question, is also an invitation for people to wander around the rooms.
Más actividades

Cinema, for the First Time
7 and 14 June 2026 – 12:00 pm
The final session in this Moon Projector season contemplates the feeling around the first experience of cinema — cinema as revelation, magic, fantasy and mystery from the first gaze, from the first contact with the medium, and imagery etched on the retina of childhood. The programme shows Émile Cohl’s landmark Fantasmagorie (1908), the first ever hand-drawn animation, and Ignacio Agüero’s Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train, 1988), a feature-length film on play and the origins of cinema.
Fantasmagorie (1908)by Émile Cohl (Paris, 1857– Villejuif, 1938) is the first expression in the history of animated drawing. Émile Cohl was an illustrator who belonged to the Parisian art group Arts incohérents (1882–1895), who was bestowed with an absurdist and pre-Surrealist talent. Whereas the Lumière brothers were able get audiences out of their seats as they witnessed a train moving towards them in 1895, Fantasmagorie is a supernatural experience, akin to an apparition yet also innocuous and entertaining — the inanimate comes to life out of nothing and figures seemingly move with little sense. From the outset, animation was related to caricature, fabulation and the comical, a sweet spot for the dreams of the youngest audience.
From the discovery of new imagery arising from the animated line to knowledge of the world through a screen, Cien niños esperando un tren (1988), by Chilean director Ignacio Agüero (Santiago, 1952), narrates a group of young people’s discovery of cinema in a workshop on the origins of the medium in a poverty-stricken town on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. Play, fun and learning combine with a fascination with images, as viewing Émile Cohl’s Fantasmagorie (1908) in the workshop becomes an act of freedom.

Institutional Decentralisation
Thursday, 21 May 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.
This fourth and final session centres on films that take the museum away from its axis and make it gaze from the edges. Pieces that work with that which is normally left out: peripheral territories, unpolished aesthetics, clumsy gestures full of intent. Instead of possessing an institutional lustre, here they are rough, precarious and strange in appearance, legitimate forms of making and showing culture. The idea is to think about what happens when central authority is displaced, when the ugly and the uncomfortable are not hidden, when they are recognised as part of the commons. Film that does not seek to be to one’s liking, but to open space and allow other ways of seeing and inhabiting the museum to enter stage.

Ordinary, Common and Public. Common Fixes for Ordinary Communities
Tuesday, 26, and Wednesday, 27 May 2026 – Check programme
Ordinary, Common and Public. Common Fixes for Ordinary Communities is the title of the fourteenth encounter run by Sociología Ordinaria, a transdisciplinary research group that explores daily knowledge deemed ordinary, superficial or frivolous from a traditional academic and intellectual viewpoint.
This latest edition seeks to approach and map connections between concepts of the commons and the public realm — remembering that the ordinary is also the commons — and to ensure affects and moods of discontent are mobilised towards hope.
By way of its multiple declinations — community, community-based practices, the commons, the communal — the encounter seeks to reflect on different ways of creating, (re)configuring, maintaining, fixing, arranging, caring for and defending the public realm and the commons. Furthermore, it explores forms of invocation and experimentation as tools opposite the helplessness of an uncertain present, in addition to resistance against attempts of expropriation, distortion, privatisation and touristification.

Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Sweet Revenge
26 MAY 2026
Nancy Spector and Alejandro Cesarco, curators of the exhibition Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Sweet Revenge, will speak with Manuel Segade, director of the Museo Reina Sofía, in a session dedicated to exploring the interpretive frameworks of this first large-scalepresentation in Madrid of the work of Felix Gonzalez-Torres (1957–1996), whose practicecontinues to resonate in the present.
The conversation begins with the exhibition’s title itself, Sweet Revenge, understood as a paradoxical notion that articulates much of the artist’s thinking. From there, the tensions running through his work are explored: the coexistence of opposing registers, ambiguity as a method, and the simultaneously affective and political charge of his works.
The dialogue also touches on some of the themes that run through his body of work, such as thenotions of identity, citizenship, and authority, alongside experiences linked to the AIDS crisis, and emotions such as love, loss, grief, and optimism. Special attention is given to the way in which Gonzalez-Torres shifts languages associated with Arte Povera, conceptualism, and minimalism towards open, participatory, and deeply personal structures.
The session also includes a reflection on the research process that shaped the exhibition, providing context for the curatorial decisions and criteria that structure it. In this context, Gonzalez-Torres’s work emerges as a device that actively engages those who activate orinterpret it, distributing responsibility for the production of meaning—a process that is alwaysunstable and constantly under negotiation.
These inaugural conversations, part of the main working strands of the Museo’s Public Programmes Area, aim to explore in greater depth the exhibition narratives of the showsorganised by the Museo from the perspective of artists, curators and specialists.

International Museum Day 2026 with Radio 3
22 MAY 2026
On Friday, 22 May 2026 the Museo Reina Sofía celebrates International Museum Day by way of a vibrant music programme conducted by Radio 3.
From 9am to 11pm, the Museo’s Nouvel Courtyard will host the live broadcast of Radio 3’s day-long programme —also available on a video streaming on the Radio3 website and app, on RTVEPlay and on the Museo’s social media accounts. The programme comprises more than twenty live acts, including artists such as Carlangas, Shego, Soleá Morente, Kokoshca, La Tania, La Pegatina, Pipiolas, Ángel Stanich, Triángulo de Amor Bizarro and Zahara, and many others.
With this programme the Museo Reina Sofía concludes its celebration of International Museum Day, which takes place on Monday, 18 May. Both on 18 May, from 10am to 9pm, and 22 May admission to the Museo will be free of charge.