To Transform Papers and Keep Memory

Community Workshops with Studio Lenca

Studio Lenca, Monuments, 2024, papel, mantas y materiales encontrados. Fotografía: Studio Lenca

Studio Lenca, Monuments, 2024, paper, muslin and found materials

Photograph: Studio Lenca

Date and time

Held on 05, 06, 09 Jun 2026

Inside the framework of the Cáder Institute of Central American Art (ICAC), the Tentacular Museum works with El Salvador artist Jose Campos (La Paz, 1986), known as Studio Lenca, to carry out collaborative workshops throughout 2026 which produce art materials and tools for present-day social struggles. The workshops look to activate and produce elements to accompany the 2026 Picnic del barrio  

Picnic del barrio is an encounter organised with the Museo Situado assembly, whereby the Museo’s Garden becomes a public square and where the struggles of Lavapiés residents are celebrated and vindicated through the workshops, concerts, political activations, smells, colours and flavours that occupy the Museo from the neighbourhood. In 2026 the core articulation of the Picnic is the campaign of the Regularización Ya (Regularisation Now) movement, which defends the regularisation process of undocumented migrant people in Spain. In preparation for the Picnic, these workshops with Studio Lenca are aimed at people with an interest in producing images, objects and narratives related to the neighbourhood’s struggle for a decent life and the process of regularisation in progress. 

Jose Campos draws from his own biography for his artistic output, marked by migration from El Salvador to the United States, and then to the UK. Thus, these encounters put forward the construction of vessels, objects which are customarily used to carry food or liquid but which in this context are used to keep life stories. Starting with recycled material from documents and cut-outs offered by neighbourhood residents and the Museo, paper becomes an object that carries memories and life stories, its materiality resignified to collectively build glasses that keep, speak, recall and show local residents’ right to a decent life. 

Inside the framework of

With the support of

The Museo Reina Sofía Foundation

Participants

Jose Campos

(La Paz, El Salvador, 1986) was forced to migrate to the USA during his childhood because of the Salvadoran Civil War, settling in San Francisco, California. As a queer member of Latinx diaspora, he focuses his artistic practice on issues related to migration, memory, difference, knowledge and visibility. His work, traversed by creative activism and different forms of collective praxis, unfolds through performance, video, drawing and the creation of objects and is distinguished by the use of colour and forms that embrace and vindicate shared struggles. Campos works under the name Studio Lenca: “Studio” understood as a space of experimentation and constant transformation and “Lenca” a recovered term referring to the Indigenous peoples of his native El Salvador.

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