Other Movidas: The Music Video

Session 3. Playback: The Sublime Image. Video Art in Spain (1970–1987)

Josu Zabala, Mata a tu Viejo (Kill Your Old Man), 1985, film

Josu Zabala, Mata a tu Viejo (Kill Your Old Man), 1985, film

Date and time

Held on 14 Mar 2026

The third session gathers youth music subcultures from the mid-1980s, a vibrant time for music video language, exploring how music, partying and night-life encapsulate a profound desire for total change, reflected in the formal experiments of the works here. The Basque radical rock of La Polla Records (Juan José Narbona with Txus), Hertzainak (Josu Zabala with Mata a tu viejo) and Kortatu (Tipula Beltza with Sarri, Sarri) with latent terrorist conflict (Ramón de Vargas with Canciones vascas), mixed with the telluric, histrionic Galician punk of Os Resentidos and Antón Reixa in Abdul, a music video with scenography by artists Menchu Lamas and Antón Patiño, and Alicia en Galicia Caníbal, a music video of Galician identity seen through the lens of counterculture via the track “Galicia cannibal”. The session concludes with Andalusian folklore in the witty, night-time style of Círculo Vicioso in Temperamento cañí.

Acknowledgments

Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA)

Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

Accessible activity  
This activity has two spaces reserved for people with reduced mobility 

Programme

Juan José Narbona. Txus  
Spain, 1985, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 3’  

Xavier Villaverde. Alicia en Galicia Caníbal (Alice in Cannibal Galicia)  
Spain, 1987, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 7'. Museo Reina Sofía Collection 

Antón Reixa. Abdul (excerpt from Salvamento e socorrismo [Rescue and Lifesaving])  
Spain, 1985, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 5’35’’. Museo Reina Sofía Collection 

Ramón de Vargas. Canciones vascas (Basque Songs) 
Spain, 1980–1984, DCP, colour, sound, original version, 4’   

Tipula Beltza (Andoni Gallego, Imanol Sistiaga, Txabi Basterretxea and Hasier Etxeberria). Sarri, Sarri   
Spain, 1985, DCP, black and white, colour, sound, original version in Basque without subtitles, 3'. Museo Reina Sofía Collection

Josu Zabala. Mata a tu viejo (Kill Your Old Man) 
Spain, 1985, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 4’30’’  

Manuel Raya. Temperamento cañí (Romani Temperament) 
Spain, 1986, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 15’ 

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Activity within the program...

Playback: The Sublime Image

Video Art in Spain (1970–1987)

During the month of March, the dawn of video as an artistic medium in Spain takes over the Museo Reina Sofía’s Cinema theatre, doing so distinctively by retrieving The Sublime Image. Video Art in Spain (1970–1987), the first exhibition on this new audiovisual language held in Spain. The show, curated by Manuel Palacio and coordinated by Guadalupe Echeverría and Pedro Santos, with the collaboration of Eugeni Bonet and Antoni Mercader, mapped youth subcultures, an eagerness for new media, the seeping of artistic languages into one another, and a DIY aesthetic.   

The Museo Reina Sofía’s origins midway through the 1980s reflect a yearning that was twofold: on one side, the desire to become acquainted with international contemporary art in its most resounding and monumental capacity, and on the other, to show new languages transforming the traditional field of art, reflecting a country transformed by the end of the dictatorship that sought to assimilate into Western democracies. It is unsurprising that along with major international exhibitions (Matisse, Miró, Diego Rivera, minimal sculpture) a pathway opened to a broad number of shows on new media, for instance Procesos: cultura y nuevas tecnologías (Processes: Culture and New Technology, 1986), La imagen sublime. Vídeo de creación en España (1970-1987) (The Sublime Image. Video Art in Spain [1970–1987], 1987), solo shows devoted to Muntadas and Marcel Odenbach (both in 1988) and the Bienal de la Imagen en movimiento (The Moving Image Biennial, 1990 and 1992). As a result, a nascent institution shaped, before becoming a museum in 1992, its identity as an art centre, as an institution historically focused on experimentation and the contemporary.  

This “playback” of The Sublime Image. Video Art in Spain (1970–1987) also bears a relation to the original event in that it similarly assembles two formats: exhibiting in exhibition space, this time in a room inside Collection. Contemporary Art: 1975–Present, and a programme of screenings in the Museo’s Cinema. Further, this present-day series seeks to recover the approach of the original sessions, which manifested the multiple nature of video in relation to performance and Action Art, as well as television, the music video and post-cinema narratives, while also revealing an attitude and a gaze among artists, programmers and the public that were an integral part of 1980s Spain. The playback also offers the chance to rediscover forgotten audiovisual pioneers like Regina Álvarez and Marta Batlle, and to revise the early work of recognised figures in video art in Spain, such as Muntadas and the recently deceased Eugènia Balcells. On a final note, it brings the audience closer to the early works of artists who would later become points of reference in the Spanish audiovisual industry, for example Xavier Villaverde, and shines a light on forgotten works from the era that remain pertinent today, among them those made by Javier Codesal, Manuel Abad and Manel Muntaner.    

Admission: Free, until full capacity is reached. Tickets may be collected at the Museo’s Ticket Offices or on the Museo Reina Sofía website (a maximum of 2 per person). 20% of the visitor-capacity will be reserved for attendance without ticket collection on the day of the activity. Doors open thirty minutes before each screening 

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