Sven Lütticken

Doing Things with Art History (Even When it Does Things to You)

Carlos Pazos, Tesoro (Pintura) (Treasure [Painting]), 1973. Museo Reina Sofía

Carlos Pazos, Tesoro (Pintura) (Treasure [Painting]), 1973. Museo Reina Sofía 

Date and time

Held on 10 Oct 2025

Academic disciplines are, effectively, disciplinary — they impose habits of thought, ideological parameters and, a priori, methodological parameters on those who have studied them. Yet what does being disciplined by art history mean? What has art history done to us? Further, what can we continue to do with it? The Juan Antonio Ramírez Chair, an annual programme organised by the Museo Reina Sofía which is devoted to reflecting on art history and historiography, and their limits and vanishing points, invites Sven Lütticken to explore these questions in light of different cases chosen by Lütticken and related to his own practice.

His work, framed inside art history and theory, has constantly championed expanding, interrogating and questioning the limits of discipline until it becomes theoretical and (self)critical. Throughout his trajectory, Lütticken has aligned his interest primarily towards historical, critical and theoretical research around autonomy. An important landmark in this working strand is his participation in the The Autonomy Project, an initiative from the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven with different art schools and university departments and resulting in the published volume Art and Autonomy (Afterall, 2022). A second strand is made up of the long-term project Forms of Abstraction, which analyses contemporary artistic practices as interventions in forms of “real abstraction”, such as value-form, precisely as Marx theorised it.

Sven Lütticken will be a resident on Studies Constellation, the Museo Reina Sofía’s annual fellowship programme, and will work on the research project Unacting Personhood, Deforming Legal Abstraction.

Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

Participants

Sven Lütticken

is a senior lecturer at the Academy of Creative and Performing Arts from Leiden University, where he directs PhD projects based on practice within the PhDArts programme, and coordinates the content of the research MA Critical Studies in Art and Culture, at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. He has curated projects such as Deserting from the Culture Wars (2019) at BAK (Utrecht) and written books which most notably include: Secret Publicity: Essays on Contemporary Art (NAi Publishers, 2005); History in Motion: Time in the Age of the Moving Image (Sternberg Press, 2013); Objections: Forms of Abstraction, Vol. 1 (Sternberg Press, 2022); and States of Divergence (Minor Compositions, 2025).

NewsletterSubscribe to our newsletter to keep up to date with the activities organised by the Museo

Más actividades