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Venue: Gropius Bau
Was also part of: exp. 1
Founded 1971 in Santiago de Chile, CL
Gracia Barrios, born 1927 in Santiago de Chile – died 2020 in Santiago de Chile
José Gamarra, born 1934 in Tacuarembó, UY – lives and works in Paris, FR
Teresa Gazitúa, born 1941 in Santiago de Chile – lives and works in Santiago de Chile
Beatriz González, born 1938 in Bucaramanga, CO – lives and works in Bogotá, CO
Claude Lazar, born 1947 in Alexandria, EG – lives and works in Paris
Clemencia Lucena, born 1945 in Bogotá – died 1983 in Cali, CO
Teresa Montiel, born 1942 in Chile – lives and works in Paris
Taller 4 Rojo (Diego Arango, Nirma Zárate), founded 1971 in Bogotá – disbanded 1974
Diego Arango, born 1942 Manizales, CO – died 2017 in Bogotá
Nirma Zárate, born 1936 in Bogóta – died 1999 in Bogotá
María Teresa Toral, born 1911 in Madrid, ES – died 1994 in Madrid
Maria Helena Vieira Da Silva, born 1908 in Lisbon, PT – died 1992 in Paris
Artists from El pueblo tiene arte con Allende, 1970
Can a museum be a weapon? The Museo de la Solidaridad (1971–73) has its origins in a small-scale counter-information campaign called Operación Verdad (Operation Truth), which was devised to defend Salvador Allende’s presidency and “revolution without arms” from a CIA-sponsored international smear campaign. As an act of political solidarity with the struggle of the Chilean people, artists from around the world were asked to donate works towards the creation of an anti-imperialist experimental art institution for the “underprivileged of the Third World.” The artworks collected would form the basis for the Museum of Solidarity, containing “the cultural and artistic contradictions of the century,” and founded on the principle that art and politics are inseparable.
Conceived as a free museum open to all and aimed at challenging the geopolitical monopoly of art and the privileges sustained by museums of capitalist metropoles, the Museum of Solidarity offered a collection “for the people, by the people.” Over 700 artworks had been received by the time of the military coup on September 11, 1973. All of these works were confiscated by the military, but from 1975 to 1989 those originally responsible for the museum, then political refugees, began to rebuild the collection under the name Museo Internacional de la Resistencia Salvador Allende (International Museum of Resistance Salvador Allende). It functioned as an itinerant museum-in-exile, with newly donated works to be exhibited around the globe.
During the process of redemocratization, the museum’s many lives converged in the Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, established in 1992. Gathering the disappeared artworks and those dispersed abroad, the institution’s original intention to radically question prevalent criteria of value in art was often undermined by the need to justify its precarious subsistence through exhibiting works by well-known artists in the collection. The selection presented here focuses on rarely seen works, mostly by Latin American artists, which convey the struggles that gave life to the museum “whose very name was already a program.”
María Berríos
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
Invitation to the Species: Cecilia Vicuña
Tamaas / Cecilia Vicuña
Podcast
Struggle as Culture: The Museum of Solidarity, 1971–73
María Berríos
Essay
Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (MSSA) in Berlin
A conversation between María Berríos and Melanie Roumiguière
Conversation
III: La familia son quiénes se alegran con nuestros actos diarios. Detrás de las curadoras de la XI
María Berríos, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Was also part of: exp. 1
Founded 1971 in Santiago de Chile, CL
Gracia Barrios, born 1927 in Santiago de Chile – died 2020 in Santiago de Chile
José Gamarra, born 1934 in Tacuarembó, UY – lives and works in Paris, FR
Teresa Gazitúa, born 1941 in Santiago de Chile – lives and works in Santiago de Chile
Beatriz González, born 1938 in Bucaramanga, CO – lives and works in Bogotá, CO
Claude Lazar, born 1947 in Alexandria, EG – lives and works in Paris
Clemencia Lucena, born 1945 in Bogotá – died 1983 in Cali, CO
Teresa Montiel, born 1942 in Chile – lives and works in Paris
Taller 4 Rojo (Diego Arango, Nirma Zárate), founded 1971 in Bogotá – disbanded 1974
Diego Arango, born 1942 Manizales, CO – died 2017 in Bogotá
Nirma Zárate, born 1936 in Bogóta – died 1999 in Bogotá
María Teresa Toral, born 1911 in Madrid, ES – died 1994 in Madrid
Maria Helena Vieira Da Silva, born 1908 in Lisbon, PT – died 1992 in Paris
Artists from El pueblo tiene arte con Allende, 1970
Can a museum be a weapon? The Museo de la Solidaridad (1971–73) has its origins in a small-scale counter-information campaign called Operación Verdad (Operation Truth), which was devised to defend Salvador Allende’s presidency and “revolution without arms” from a CIA-sponsored international smear campaign. As an act of political solidarity with the struggle of the Chilean people, artists from around the world were asked to donate works towards the creation of an anti-imperialist experimental art institution for the “underprivileged of the Third World.” The artworks collected would form the basis for the Museum of Solidarity, containing “the cultural and artistic contradictions of the century,” and founded on the principle that art and politics are inseparable.
Conceived as a free museum open to all and aimed at challenging the geopolitical monopoly of art and the privileges sustained by museums of capitalist metropoles, the Museum of Solidarity offered a collection “for the people, by the people.” Over 700 artworks had been received by the time of the military coup on September 11, 1973. All of these works were confiscated by the military, but from 1975 to 1989 those originally responsible for the museum, then political refugees, began to rebuild the collection under the name Museo Internacional de la Resistencia Salvador Allende (International Museum of Resistance Salvador Allende). It functioned as an itinerant museum-in-exile, with newly donated works to be exhibited around the globe.
During the process of redemocratization, the museum’s many lives converged in the Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, established in 1992. Gathering the disappeared artworks and those dispersed abroad, the institution’s original intention to radically question prevalent criteria of value in art was often undermined by the need to justify its precarious subsistence through exhibiting works by well-known artists in the collection. The selection presented here focuses on rarely seen works, mostly by Latin American artists, which convey the struggles that gave life to the museum “whose very name was already a program.”
María Berríos
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
A World Without Bones
Agustín Pérez Rubio
BLM KOREA ARTS
#BlackLivesMatter #BLMKoreaArts
Young-jun Tak
Statement
El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno
Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala
Chronicle
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
O Bailado do Deus Morto
Flávio de Carvalho
Play
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Was also part of: exp. 1
Founded 1971 in Santiago de Chile, CL
Gracia Barrios, born 1927 in Santiago de Chile – died 2020 in Santiago de Chile
José Gamarra, born 1934 in Tacuarembó, UY – lives and works in Paris, FR
Teresa Gazitúa, born 1941 in Santiago de Chile – lives and works in Santiago de Chile
Beatriz González, born 1938 in Bucaramanga, CO – lives and works in Bogotá, CO
Claude Lazar, born 1947 in Alexandria, EG – lives and works in Paris
Clemencia Lucena, born 1945 in Bogotá – died 1983 in Cali, CO
Teresa Montiel, born 1942 in Chile – lives and works in Paris
Taller 4 Rojo (Diego Arango, Nirma Zárate), founded 1971 in Bogotá – disbanded 1974
Diego Arango, born 1942 Manizales, CO – died 2017 in Bogotá
Nirma Zárate, born 1936 in Bogóta – died 1999 in Bogotá
María Teresa Toral, born 1911 in Madrid, ES – died 1994 in Madrid
Maria Helena Vieira Da Silva, born 1908 in Lisbon, PT – died 1992 in Paris
Artists from El pueblo tiene arte con Allende, 1970
Can a museum be a weapon? The Museo de la Solidaridad (1971–73) has its origins in a small-scale counter-information campaign called Operación Verdad (Operation Truth), which was devised to defend Salvador Allende’s presidency and “revolution without arms” from a CIA-sponsored international smear campaign. As an act of political solidarity with the struggle of the Chilean people, artists from around the world were asked to donate works towards the creation of an anti-imperialist experimental art institution for the “underprivileged of the Third World.” The artworks collected would form the basis for the Museum of Solidarity, containing “the cultural and artistic contradictions of the century,” and founded on the principle that art and politics are inseparable.
Conceived as a free museum open to all and aimed at challenging the geopolitical monopoly of art and the privileges sustained by museums of capitalist metropoles, the Museum of Solidarity offered a collection “for the people, by the people.” Over 700 artworks had been received by the time of the military coup on September 11, 1973. All of these works were confiscated by the military, but from 1975 to 1989 those originally responsible for the museum, then political refugees, began to rebuild the collection under the name Museo Internacional de la Resistencia Salvador Allende (International Museum of Resistance Salvador Allende). It functioned as an itinerant museum-in-exile, with newly donated works to be exhibited around the globe.
During the process of redemocratization, the museum’s many lives converged in the Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, established in 1992. Gathering the disappeared artworks and those dispersed abroad, the institution’s original intention to radically question prevalent criteria of value in art was often undermined by the need to justify its precarious subsistence through exhibiting works by well-known artists in the collection. The selection presented here focuses on rarely seen works, mostly by Latin American artists, which convey the struggles that gave life to the museum “whose very name was already a program.”
María Berríos
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
Weaving Solidarity
Renata Cervetto and Duygu Örs
Q&A
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
Dani Karavan
Memorial
III: La familia son quiénes se alegran con nuestros actos diarios. Detrás de las curadoras de la XI
María Berríos, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Was also part of: exp. 1
Founded 1971 in Santiago de Chile, CL
Gracia Barrios, born 1927 in Santiago de Chile – died 2020 in Santiago de Chile
José Gamarra, born 1934 in Tacuarembó, UY – lives and works in Paris, FR
Teresa Gazitúa, born 1941 in Santiago de Chile – lives and works in Santiago de Chile
Beatriz González, born 1938 in Bucaramanga, CO – lives and works in Bogotá, CO
Claude Lazar, born 1947 in Alexandria, EG – lives and works in Paris
Clemencia Lucena, born 1945 in Bogotá – died 1983 in Cali, CO
Teresa Montiel, born 1942 in Chile – lives and works in Paris
Taller 4 Rojo (Diego Arango, Nirma Zárate), founded 1971 in Bogotá – disbanded 1974
Diego Arango, born 1942 Manizales, CO – died 2017 in Bogotá
Nirma Zárate, born 1936 in Bogóta – died 1999 in Bogotá
María Teresa Toral, born 1911 in Madrid, ES – died 1994 in Madrid
Maria Helena Vieira Da Silva, born 1908 in Lisbon, PT – died 1992 in Paris
Artists from El pueblo tiene arte con Allende, 1970
Can a museum be a weapon? The Museo de la Solidaridad (1971–73) has its origins in a small-scale counter-information campaign called Operación Verdad (Operation Truth), which was devised to defend Salvador Allende’s presidency and “revolution without arms” from a CIA-sponsored international smear campaign. As an act of political solidarity with the struggle of the Chilean people, artists from around the world were asked to donate works towards the creation of an anti-imperialist experimental art institution for the “underprivileged of the Third World.” The artworks collected would form the basis for the Museum of Solidarity, containing “the cultural and artistic contradictions of the century,” and founded on the principle that art and politics are inseparable.
Conceived as a free museum open to all and aimed at challenging the geopolitical monopoly of art and the privileges sustained by museums of capitalist metropoles, the Museum of Solidarity offered a collection “for the people, by the people.” Over 700 artworks had been received by the time of the military coup on September 11, 1973. All of these works were confiscated by the military, but from 1975 to 1989 those originally responsible for the museum, then political refugees, began to rebuild the collection under the name Museo Internacional de la Resistencia Salvador Allende (International Museum of Resistance Salvador Allende). It functioned as an itinerant museum-in-exile, with newly donated works to be exhibited around the globe.
During the process of redemocratization, the museum’s many lives converged in the Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende, established in 1992. Gathering the disappeared artworks and those dispersed abroad, the institution’s original intention to radically question prevalent criteria of value in art was often undermined by the need to justify its precarious subsistence through exhibiting works by well-known artists in the collection. The selection presented here focuses on rarely seen works, mostly by Latin American artists, which convey the struggles that gave life to the museum “whose very name was already a program.”
María Berríos
A Moment of True Decolonization / Episode #6: Sinthujan Varatharajah. Constructing the Tamil Eelam State
The Funambulist / Sinthujan Varatharajah
Podcast
Solidarity and Storytelling. Rumors against Enclosure
María Berríos
Essay
St Sara Kali George
Delaine Le Bas
Soundscape
#fight4rojava
Graffiti
III: La familia son quiénes se alegran con nuestros actos diarios. Detrás de las curadoras de la XI
María Berríos, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.