Reina Sofía Museum Private Visits

A program of exclusive tours makes a special and preferential way of getting to know the Museum

The Reina Sofía Museum offers exclusive openings for those interested in the unique experience of enjoying a private viewing of its masterpieces of modern and contemporary art.

The private guided tour program is aimed at private individuals, firms or institutions that want to offer their clients or employees a special and preferential opportunity to explore the Museum and its exhibitions.

Private visits can be rounded off with drinks, cocktails, lunches or dinners at one of the venues rented out for these purposes by the Museum. They moreover provide a perfect complement for business meetings, conferences or company events, which can also be organized on the premises.

The private visits are held when the Museum is closed to the general public (except public holidays): Tuesdays, all day; Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, up to 10 am and after 9 pm; and Sundays, up to 10 am and after 7 pm. The program of guided visits includes transversal tours that take in a large number of the Museum’s rooms, as well as visits or commentaries that concentrate in depth on a small group of works.

Groups are accompanied by art historians with an expert knowledge of the Museum’s collections. Guernica Context

A tour focusing on the most emblematic work in the Museum’s Collection, ’s Guernica. The visit is structured around three themes:

• The Pavilion of the Spanish Republic at the International Exposition in . Analysis of the scale model of the building and the works of other artists who, like Picasso, also showed their support for the Republic by making or lending works for this international event: Bardasano, Gutiérrez Solana, Horacio Ferrer, Julio González, Alberto Sánchez, Alexander Calder, Joan Miró.

• Detailed analysis of the picture: symbolism, context of its creation, travels and exhibitions, interventions and restorations.

• The Civil War as seen from abroad: with the rapid spread of news through the international press, the Civil War became a subject for artists like Le Corbusier, David Smith or René Magritte. The Irruption of the 20th Century

“The Irruption of the 20th Century: Utopias and Conflicts (1900-1945)” visits the first part of the Permanent Collection, focusing on the beginnings of modernism in and the irruption of the avant-gardes, with their search for new languages: the rupture of ; the return to order, clarity and traditional genres in the 1920s; Surrealism as a path to the liberation of the individual through the subconscious.

This tour analyses the work of artists like Anglada Camarasa, Gutiérrez Solana, Pablo Picasso, , Julio González, Pablo Gargallo, Joan Miró, and Salvador Dalí. The Poetic

A tour of the second part of the Collection, from the forties to the sixties, through the concept of “the poetic” in works that refer only to themselves, displaying the processes of their own making and the materiality of language, and furnishing an experience of the real that lies outside illusionism.

This is therefore a poetics of absolute vision, as becomes clear not only in the material artworks of the Spanish informalists Antoni Tàpies, Luis Feito and Manuel Millares, but also in the monochromes of the Frenchman Yves Klein or the large canvases of the American artists Clifford Still, Robert Motherwell and Adolph Gottlieb. Hidden Museum

Guided visit focusing on several works in the Museum’s Collection, with in-depth commentaries on their context, history or state of conservation. This tour includes commentaries on the following works:

. Pablo Picasso (Pablo Ruiz Picasso), Woman in Blue, 1901 . José Solana (José Gutiérrez Solana), The Gathering at the Café de Pombo, 1920 . Pablo Picasso (Pablo Ruiz Picasso), Guernica, 1937 . Alexander Calder, Carmen, 1974 Sculptures in the Museum

The visit is organized as a tour of the two buildings which make up the Museo Reina Sofía: the historic Sabatini Building, the former provincial hospital of Madrid, and the modern Jean Nouvel Building. The guiding thread of the visit is the study of the large sculptures that have been moved out of the rooms in search of a better location, and now dynamize a number of public spaces around the Museum: sculptures by Calder, Chillida, Miró or Lichtenstein are exhibited in these transit zones, courtyards and terraces. Temporary exhibitions

The Museum has a wide program of temporary exhibitions. Information on current programming is obtainable at this link: www.museoreinasofia.es/en/exhibitions Nouvel Protocol Room Location and access Nouvel Entrance Study Centre Lobby Auditorium 400 Auditorium 200 Sabatini Building Rooftop Santa Isabel, 52 Nouvel Building Ronda de Atocha, s/n

Garden 28012 Sabatini Protocol Room Cloister 1st Floor Madrid Nouvel Entrance Sabatini Auditorium Sabatini Building

Sabatini Entrance Nouvel Building

Transport

Public parking Buses Underground Train Atocha train station Líneas 6, 8, 10, 14, 19, Line 1 - Atocha Atocha-RENFE train Station Plaza Sánchez Bustillo 24, 26, 27, 32, 34, 36, Line 3 - Lavapiés 37, 41, 45, 47, 54, 55, 57, 59, 60, 78, 85, 86, 102, 116, 118, 119, 141, 148, 247, E3, C1, C2 More information Contact: www.museoreinasofia.es Tel: Email: +34 91 774 1000 [email protected] Extensions 2025/2004 [email protected]