
Held on 04 Jun 2019
Due to circumstances beyond the organization, this visit will be conducted by the curators of the exhibition, Ana Ara and Fernando López
In conjunction with the solo exhibition Miriam Cahn. Everything Is Equally Important (running until 14 October 2019), the artist will conduct a tour around the exhibition prior to its opening in the Museo, touching on the key points in her creative process and her understanding of painting tied to the body, performance and feminism.
The artistic practice of Miriam Cahn (Basel, Switzerland, 1949) is caught between oppression and fascination. Her works contain figures that pervade the pictorial field, an empty space with scant references; eerie and hallucinatory beings with schematic and primitive traits: their bodies, often naked, sparkle, lit by fluorescent and artificial light, while their faces, with an air of vulnerability, sketch violent and unsettling gestures. The archetypes that inhabit this iconographic universe lead to an interpretation of her painting through existential themes: solitude, sexuality, violence, destruction, whilst also referring, along with her texts, to specific situations, for instance the Gulf War and the Balkan Wars, the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the current refugee crisis and the #MeToo movement.
To the backdrop of her works, Cahn will talk about these connections and how to reconsider the work and the notion of painting in traditionally masculine art history and inside a present-day context with image overload.
In collaboration with
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía
Participants
Miriam Cahn has exhibited her work internationally in numerous solo and collective shows in different museums and art centres, for instance Kunsthalle Basel (1983), the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York (1984), Kunsthaus Zürich (1993), the La Caixa Foundation, Madrid (2003), la Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin (2004), Le Plateau, Paris (2012) and the Tinguely Museum, Basel (2017). She has also taken part in major events such as documenta 7 (1982) and documenta 14 (2017), Kassel.
Más actividades

Exile and Alienation
Saturday 30 May and 6 Jun, 2026 - 18:00 H
In the years of the Popular Unity Government in Chile, three young film-makers, Marilú Mallet, Valeria Sarmiento and Angelina Vázquez, went to the offices of Chile Films to present a film project. This session screens three films which convey the three directors’ experience of exile. In Dos años en Finlandia (Two Years in Finland), Angelina Vázquez depicts the social and working conditions of Chileans exiled in the Nordic country. The fictional work Lentement, directed by Marilú Mallet, follows a young Chilean exile around spaces of Montreal blighted by nostalgia and political rage. In Huellas (Fingerprints), Valeria Sarmiento returns to Chile to explore the memory of violence inflicted by Pinochet’s military dictatorship. The session culminates in a talk with the three directors, gathered here for the first time.

From North to South and South to North
Sunday 31 May and Friday 5 June, 2026
In a kind of road movie, Marilú Mallet travels across her native Chile after forty years of exile. The journey is an exploration of the dynamism of national identity, leading the film-maker to return to questions previously explored in her filmography and to search for new forms of filming the encounter between body and landscape.

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.
