Writing the present

Held on 02 Dec 2013
What type of writing is explaining the present? This activity brings together a group of writers and theorists representative of the return to the essay as a type of writing that is both prospective and interrogative, that makes proposals and also poses questions, and that has become one of the few spaces where readers find arguments regarding the social and institutional crisis.
Over half a century ago, Maurice Blanchot said that “all art draws its origin from an exceptional fault.” Now, with a present, and a country, in a state of precariety, this phrase is gaining strength and at the same time it points to a certain hope. Given today’s critical situation, it is reasonable to imagine a sort of cultural relaunch which, arising from everything that has brought us here, is also capable of countering it, with new wisdom.
The contemporary essay illustrates the impact of this potential. Shaken by the crisis, although not limited to it in its subject matter, the essay has begun to think from events, instead of about them. And from there, it bursts in on reality, showing that a good essay, more than “studying” a problem, manages to insert it into the order of events.
For this reason, the new essay has often been dissociable from activism, although its authors have taken part in the debate free of the rhetoric and the position that characterised the old figure of the organic intellectual in the past. For them, the transformation of the circumstances cannot be separated from the transformation of the tools of the essay used to address such circumstances. We are talking about an essay that – in all its heterogeneity – clearly contains a sense of critique, but that also has a self-critical dimension.
By expanding the limits and usual structures of this genre, this type of essay no longer behaves exclusively like a literary genre or an academic pursuit. It is also an attitude and, especially, a map that foreshadows another cartography of society; a sketch of an early, imperfect estimate of a reality that is not yet fully formed.
With this perspective, the May 15th movement can connect with the global impact of the 1968 events and the capitalism crisis associated with the fall of the Berlin Wall. At the same time, there are signs of a return to our debts to modernity, to another way of dealing with daily life, the construction of community, family, the place of the new technologies and the meaning and definition of democracy in a period characterised by the degradation of politics.
Interested in what is emerging, Museo Reina Sofía has invited four key authors to debate with one another and with the audience, in an initial exploration of this phenomenon. The authors participating in the event have recently published books that have knocked down taboos, myths that were supposedly untouchable. Hovering over them is the certainty that thinking the present is nothing but anticipating the future and subjecting it to debate.
Participants
Antonio Baños. Author of La economía no existe. Un libelo contra la econocracia (Los libros del lince, 2009), Posteconomía: Hacia un capitalismo feudal (Los libros del lince, 2012) and La rebel-lió catalana (La Butxaca, 2013). He is a journalist and has worked in the written press and also as a contributor to the public radio program Asuntos Propios, in the section Economía para idiotas. In television, he works with the channels La Sexta and Cuatro.
Ramón González Férriz. Last year he published La revolución divertida (Debate, 2012), his first book. He is an editor, translator and media writer. He is in charge of the Spanish division of the cultural journal Letras Libres, and he writes about culture and politics in the Spanish and Latin American media.
Iván de la Nuez. He is an essayist, critic and exhibition curator. He just published El comunista manifiesto: Un fantasma vuelve a recorrer el mundo (Galaxia Gutenberg, 2013). He has served as director of La Virreina Centre de la Imatge and also as the director of cultural activities at CCCB. His books include La balsa perpetua (Casiopea, 1998), El mapa de sal (Mondadori, 2010), Fantasía roja. Los intelectuales de izquierda y la revolución cubana (Debolsillo, 2010), and Inundaciones. Del Muro a Guantánamo: invasiones artísticas en las fronteras políticas (Debate, 2010).
Cesar Rendueles. Professor of sociological theory at the Faculty of Political Science and Sociology at Universidad Complutense de Madrid. He recently published Sociofobia (Capitán Swing, 2013). A founding member of the cultural intervention collective Ladinamo, he has also been in charge of cultural coordination and project direction at the Círculo de Bellas Artes of Madrid. He has published two compilations of works by Karl Marx: an anthology of selections from Capital and a selection of texts on the theory of historical materialism. He has edited the publication in Spanish of essays by authors such as Walter Benjamin, Karl Polanyi and Jeremy Bentham and he curated the exhibition Walter Benjamin. Constelaciones (Círculo de Bellas Artes, 2010-2011).
Más actividades

Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art
23 February – 14 December 2026 – Check programme
Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art is a study group aligned towards thinking about how certain contemporary artistic and cultural practices resist the referentiality that dominates the logics of production and the consumption of present-day art. At the centre of this proposal are the concepts of difficulty and deviation, under which it brings together any procedure capable of preventing artistic forms from being absorbed by a meaning that appears previous to and independent from its expression. By ensuring the perceptibility of their languages, difficulty invites us to think of meaning as the effect of a signifying tension; that is, as a productive and creative activity which, from the materiality of art objects, frees aesthetic experience from the representational mandate and those who participate in it from the passiveness associated with tasks of mimesis and decoding.
The economy of the referential norm translates the social logic of capitalism, where insidious forms of capturing subjectivity and meaning operate. In the early 1980s, and adopting a Marxist framework, poet Ron Silliman highlighted how this logic entailed separating language from any mark, gesture, script, form or syntax that might link it to the conditions of its production, rendering it fetichised (as if without a subject) and alienating its users in a use for which they are not responsible. This double dispossession encodes the political strategy of referential objectivity: with no subject and no trace of its own consistency, language is merely an object, that reality in which it disappears.
The political uses of referentiality, more sophisticated today than ever before, sustain the neoliberal-extractivist phase of capitalism that crosses through present-day societies politically, economically and aesthetically. Against them, fugitive artistic practices emerge which, drawing from Black and Queer studies and other subaltern critical positions, reject the objective limits of what exists, invent forms to name what lies outside what has already been named, and return to subjects the capacity to participate in processes of emission and interpretation.
Read from the standpoint of artistic work, the objective capture of referentiality may be called transparency. Viewed from a social contract that reproduces inequality in fixed identity positions, transparent in this objectivity are, precisely, the discourses that maintain the status quo of domination. Opposite the inferno of these discourses, this group aims to collectively explore, through deviant or fugitive works, the paradise of language that Monique Wittig encountered in the estranged practices of literature. For the political potency of difficulty — that is, its contribution to the utopia of a free language among equals — depends on making visible, first, its own deviations; from there, the norm that those deviations transgress; and finally, the narrowness of a norm which in no way exhausts the possibilities ofsaying, signifying, referring and producing a world.
From this denouncement of referential alienation, fetishisation and capture, Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art turns its attention to the strategies of resistance deployed by contemporary artists and poets. Its interest is directed towards proposals as evidently difficult or evasive as those of Gertrude Stein, Lyn Hejinian, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, Kathy Acker, María Salgado and Ricardo Carreira, and as seemingly simple as those of Fernanda Laguna, Felix Gonzalez Torres and Cecilia Vicuña, among other examples that can be added according to the desires and dynamics of the group.
The ten study group sessions, held between February and December, combine theoretical seminars, work with artworks from the Museo Reina Sofía’s Collections and exhibitions, reading workshops and public programs. All these formats serve as spaces of encounter to think commonly about certain problems of poetics — that is, certain political questions — of contemporary writing and art.
Difficulty. Forms and Political Effects of Deviation in Writing and Contemporary Art inaugurates the research line Goodbye, Representation, through which the Museo Reina Sofía’s Studies Directorship seeks to explore the emergence of contemporary artistic and cultural practices which move away from representation as a dominant aesthetic-political strategy and redirect their attention toward artistic languages that question the tendency to point, name and fix, advocating instead for fugitive aesthetics. Over its three-year duration, this research line materializes in study groups, seminars, screenings and other forms of public programming.

CLINIC 2628. A Community of Writing and Research in the Arts
February – October 2026
Clinic 2628 is a project which supports and brings together writings which stem from the intention to offer a space and sustainable time for research work in art and culture. Framed within an academic context which is increasingly less receptive to the forms in which thinking happens and is expressed, the aim is to rescue the academic from its neoliberal trappings and thus recover the alliance between precision and intuition, work and desire. A further goal is to return writing to a commons which makes this possible through the monitoring of processes and the collectivisation of ideas, stances, references and strategies.
The endeavour, rooted in a collaboration between the Museo Reina Sofía’s Studies Directorship and the Artea research group, via the i+D Experimenta project, is shaped by three annual editions conceived as spaces of experimentation, discussion and a demonstration of writings critical of what is put forward by today’s academia.
What forces, forms and processes are at play when writing about art and aesthetics? In academia, in museums and in other cultural institutions, the practice of writing is traversed by productivist logics which jeopardise rhythms of research and experimentation. The imposition of both scientism inherent in the structure of “the paper” and the quantifying of results which demand a criterion of quality and visibility sterilise and smoothen, from the outset, the coarseness that is particular to writing understood from the concrete part of language: phonic, graphic, syntactic and grammatical resistance connecting the language user to the community the language unites and activates. They also sterilise the roughness enmeshed in the same desire to write, the intuitive, clear and confusing pathways that once again connect the writer to those reading and writing, participating in a common good that is at once discovered and produced.
The progressive commercialisation of knowledge propelled by cognitive capitalism moves further away from the research and production of knowledge in artworks and artistic languages and practices. The work of curators and archive, criticism, performances and essays formerly saw a horizon of formal and emotional possibilities, of imagination that was much broader when not developed in circumstances of competition, indexing and impact. Today, would it be possible to regain, critically not nostalgically, these ways; namely, recovering by forms, and by written forms, the proximity between art thinking and its objects? How to write in another way, to another rhythm, with no more demands than those with which an artwork moves towards different ways of seeing, reading and being in the world?

Cultural Work
Thursday, 12 February 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.
Session number two looks to approach film as a place from which cultural work is made visible and processes of production engage in dialogue with artistic creation. From this premise, the session focuses on exploring how audiovisual content is produced, assembled and distributed, from the hands that handle the images to the bodies that participate in its circulation. The aim is to reflect on the invisible effort, precarity and forms of collaboration that uphold cultural life, that transform the filmic experience into an act that recognises and cares for common work.
![Basel Abbas y Ruanne Abou-Rahme, At Those Terrifying Frontiers Where the Existence and Disappearance of People Fade Into Each Other [En esas fronteras aterradoras donde la existencia y la desaparición de personas se disuelven entre sí], 2019](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Colecci%C3%B3n/abbasabourahme.png.webp)
Gaza and Aestheticide
Tuesday February 10, 2026 – 16:00 h
This seminar examines the systematic destruction of Palestinian collective sensibility — what we might call “aestheticide” — that has accompanied Israel’s genocide and ecocide in Gaza, and considers the conditions of artistic practice in its aftermath. Over more than two years, the demolition of universities, archives, museums, and libraries has not only erased cultural and intellectual infrastructure but has also targeted the very possibility of representation itself. The destruction of a people has been accompanied by the destruction of their image, their history, and their capacity to be known: reportage, scholarship, and cultural memory have been deliberately undermined, with media institutions, universities, and museums often complicit in this repression. Gaza consequently functions as a rehearsal space for a possible global future — of fascism, post-liberal authoritarianism, militarized borders, and AI-enabled warfare —, a laboratory for an emerging world order. What, then, becomes of critical analysis and resistance under these conditions? And what becomes of aesthetics and politics?
This seminar takes place thanks to the art historian’s invitation to Spain by the Miró Foundation. In the context of the museum, it engages in dialogue with a broader line of work on the climate emergency and decolonial perspectives developed within the Museum of the Commons project (2023–2026) of the L’Internationale network, of which the Museo Reina Sofía is a member; as well as with some of the questions that animate the study group Aesthetics of Peace and Desertion Tactics. Finally, it is also embedded in a wider strategy of support for and commitment to the artistic and discursive practices of Palestinian artists and cultural practitioners, most clearly reflected in the TEJA network.

Images for an Urgent Present
Friday, 23 January 2026 – From 6pm to 8pm
Within the framework of the Cáder Institute of Central American Art (ICAC), the Tentacular Museum works in collaboration with Salvadoran artist Jose Campos (La Paz, 1986), known as Studio Lenca, via three collaborative workshops conducted across 2026 and centred on the production of materials for present-day social struggles.
Studio Lenca’s artistic practice draws from his own biography, shaped by a childhood in El Salvador disrupted by civil war and his ensuing migration to the USA, his work including different collaborative installations, for instance Rutas (Routes), made in two spaces, Mixteca in New York and the Casa Tochán hostel in Mexico City, and later displayed at MoMA PS1. A work that configures a space where people who have crossed the border to the USA without documents narrate their journey through images.
Through this gaze, Studio Lenca sets forth different workshops traversed by the core aspects that mark a life of present-day struggles and social movements: rights such as housing, residency registration, healthcare, the regularisation of migrant people and children’s right to play. These workshops, aimed at people, collectives and social movements with an interest in collectively producing images, are conceived as spaces of enjoyment, play and co-existence, where activism germinates from cities, rest and collective construction. Moreover, they are developed to invite people to think about, together and from the artist’s working strand, the materials and collective gestures that can be transferred to public space in demonstrations and street encounters.