
Mauricio Freyre, Limpia con huevo / Mal de ojo (Clean with Egg/Evil Eye), film, 2025
Held on 05 Jun 2025
Raw is a new series held in the Museo’s Cinema and situated among screenings, reflections, creative processes, and the dialogue between the audience and participating artists. Raw invites artists and film-makers to present work that is in progress, full swing, or is barely “cooked”, and to share their influences, ideas and intentions with the audience. This first session gets under way with Mauricio Freyre (Peru, 1976), an artist and film-maker whose work straddles film and contemporary art, exploring the blind spots, dark areas, accidents and distortions in writings of history.
Can the West’s cultural and social prevalence in the classification of knowledge be questioned? What does the silence of archives tell us about different periods and their logics of power? How can we interpret centuries of history from oral and popular cultures? These questions are at the core of Freyre’s work, as attested by the project at the heart of his practice in recent years, Estados generals (General States). In this project, rooted in botany and gaps in archive — the unclassified plants from Latin America in the Collection of the Real Jardín Botánico in Madrid, for instance — he interrogates the construction of a new natural world of the Americas in the colonial mind.
In this open presentation, the artist presents two projects within this research strand. Firstly, Errores fundamentales en la historia temprana (Fundamental Errors in Early History), a performance-reading by performers Laura Pacas and Saló, accompanied by a screening. The piece recreates a fable that relates the quina or cinchona tree — a botanical species native to the Andes — with the cure of malaria, the ensuing European expansion in tropical areas and the noble title of the Madrid village of Chinchón, which gives the plant its name. Errores fundamentals is one of the projects selected for the 2024–2025 open call for Sustainable Art Production research residencies from L’Internationale’s Museum of the Commons – Climate programme.
Secondly, the screening of the short film Limpia con huevo / Mal de Ojo (Clean with Egg/Evil Eye), which interrelates two popular customs and beliefs: the evil eye, of Western origin and based on humoral theory, according to which the eye can cause damages, and was transferred to the Americas; and cleaning with egg, a practice inherited from Native American peoples and acting as a cure for the evil eye. From both, Freyre studies processes of domination, hybridisation and resistance that occur in Hispanic America.
The Museum of the Commons project is organised by L’Internationale’s confederation of museums and is co-financed by the European Union’s Creative Europe programme. L’Internationale is made up of thirteen major European art institutions: Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid, Spain), MACBA (Barcelona, Spain), M HKA (Antwerp, Belgium), MSN (Warsaw, Poland), SALT (Istanbul and Ankara, Turkey), Van Abbemuseum (Eindhoven, Netherlands), MSU (Zagreb, Croatia), HDK-Valand (Gothenburg, Sweden), NCAD (Dublin, Ireland), ZRC SAZU (Ljubljana, Slovenia), IRI (Italy), Tranzit.ro (Bucharest, Cluj and Iasi, Romania) and VCRC (Kiev, Ukraine), and two associate partners: IMMA (Dublin, Ireland) and WIELS (Brussels, Belgium).
Participants
Mauricio Freyre
(Peru, 1976) is an artist and film-maker. He is a research resident at the Museo Reina Sofía on the Sustainable Art Production call from L’Internationale’s Museum of the Commons—Climate programme. Freyre has exhibited his work at Haus der Kulturen der Welt (Berlin), TENT (Rotterdam), CentroCentro (Madrid), Fundación Telefónica (Lima), Bisagra (Lima), W139 (Amsterdam) and the Taiwan Pavilion at the Venice Biennale of Architecture (2021); he has also participated at film festivals such as Collectif Jeune Cinéma (Paris), FIC Valdivia, Festival de Pésaro, Strangloscope (Florianópolis), Les Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin and L'Alternativa (Barcelona). Furthermore, he has been involved with the Matadero Centre of Art Residencies and FIDLab, within FIDMarseille.
Accessible activity
This activity has a place for people with reduced mobility.
Más actividades

Dear Americas
Friday 29 May and 5 June, 2026
In these films, Marilú Mallet travels to Solentiname, in Nicaragua, and Andahuaylillas, in Peru, to paint a portrait of communities which resist the severity of forced industrialisation. In Solentiname, the focus is on the poet and priest Ernesto Cardenal’s founding of a Christian, poetic and revolutionary utopia, while in Andahuaylillas, a town close to Cuzco, Mallet explores the multiple layers of Andean culture.

A Poetics of the Subject
Thursday 28 May and 4 June, 2026
In the tension between documentary and fiction, between the rawness of a tragic political present and narrative escape, lies the truth of the exile’s condition. In Journal inachevé (Unfinished Diary, 1982) Marilú Mallet experiments with her own subjectivity, moving from affirmation to doubt. In Double Portrait (2000), María Luisa Señoret paints her daughter Marilú, who records the process. In this circular relationship, the film-maker constructs a poetics of the portrait as something perpetually unfinished, a process of exploration in which memory, identity and political history merge to become blurred.

Institutional Decentralisation
28 MAY 2026
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 practice continues 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 shows organised by the Museo from the perspective of artists, curators and specialists.