28th edition. The International Contemporary Art Fair will turn the Spanish capital into a major showcase for the cutting-edge visual arts. Organised by Ifema and now fully consolidated on the annual art market calendar, Arco is bringing together works of art from around 240 galleries and over 2,000 artists. These proposals include the curated sections Solo Projects, Expanded-Box and Cinema, presenting projects expressly created for the occasion together with works by emerging artists using new technologies, e-art, net art and video creation. This overview of contemporary art is rounded off with a spotlight on India.
Once again, the International Contemporary Art Fair will turn the Spanish capital into a major showcase for the cutting-edge visual arts. Held from February 11th to 16th 2009 at the Madrid Exhibition Centre, the 28th ARCOmadrid is one of the most exciting events in the international art scene, with a top-notch selection of galleries from around the world.
Organised by IFEMA and now fully consolidated on the annual art market calendar, ARCOmadrid is bringing together works of art from around 240 galleries and over 2,000 artists. These proposals include the curated sections SOLO PROJECTS, EXPANDED-BOX and CINEMA, presenting projects expressly created for the occasion together with works by emerging artists using new technologies, e-art, net art and video creation. Similarly, the PERFORMING ARCO section will host international live art with striking visual impact. For the second year running, the core section GENERAL PROGRAMME is including ARCO40, a subsection focusing on recent contemporary creation.
This overview of contemporary art is rounded off with a spotlight on India, this year's Guest Country, within the PANORAMA: INDIA section, another step further in ARCOmadrid's increasing focus on emerging markets. With a wide-ranging selection of galleries and artists chosen by the curator Bose Krishnamachari, ARCOmadrid offers European collectors and investors an impressive cross-section of the Indian art scene. This insight into the Indian subcontinent is reinforced by a number of fringe exhibitions, film seasons, concerts and activities revolving around Indian art, held in Madrid's main museums and art centres and overseen by Shaheen Merali and other internationally acclaimed curators.
During the week spanning February 11th through 16th, Madrid is the world's contemporary art capital. Collectors, gallerists, dealers and artists will get a first-hand look at the art projects on display at the fair as well as the activities and exhibitions organised throughout the city concurrently with ARCOmadrid.
ARCO40, differentiating young art of today
Focal Point for Emerging Art at ARCOmadrid
Following last year’s success, for the second year running ARCOmadrid is presenting ARCO40, a subsection of the General Programme showing the best new art from Spain and worldwide. A total of 55 galleries from the world’s most significant emerging markets will be showing works by a maximum of three artists, made over the last three years, all in 40m2 stands. This attractive formula opens another gateway to the fair for major international galleries.
Participants include renowned galleries taking part for the first time at the fair. The excellent cross-section shares the common feature of offering a new insight into contemporary art. ARCO40 is set to focus the attention of art collectors and art lovers again this year.
Spanish Galleries
Nineteen Spanish galleries are showing at this young space at ARCOmadrid. With a highly versatile programme, Spain is the best represented country in the second edition of ARCO40, reflecting the multi-focus impetus of the art scene from different areas of Spain. Younger spaces alongside more consolidated galleries, yet with the common goal of presenting a new vision of contemporary practice.
Barcelona is home to ADN GALERIA since 2003, a gallery showing at ARCOmadrid for the second time. Its stand will feature the technical, visual and sensorial experiments of Concha Pérez’s lens and the uninhibited and carefree art of Eugenio Merino. Also from Barcelona comes LLUCIÀ HOMS, a gallery on this occasion opting for the variety of art languages, embracing video and photography, of the US artist Nina Katchadourian and also for the photographs and sculptures by the Austrian Gerold Tagwerker. The Barcelona contingent is rounded off with the debut at the fair of MAS ART, a gallery combining Spanish artists with significant international art practitioners.
An example of the decentralised art scene that is the common currency in Spain is the special boom experienced by contemporary art in Murcia. From this region in southeast Spain comes ART NUEVE which will show works by Juan de Sande, Sergio Porlán and Javier Pividal, three young artists with works proposing strategies of resistance vis-à-vis the range of totalitarianisms prevailing in the contemporary image.
ADORA CALVO, from Salamanca, will be in ARCOmadrid for the third time to show works by a range of creators combining young practitioners with mid-career artists. The mainstay of the art scene in Vigo, the BACELOS gallery will be bringing an interesting programme focused on new trends.
Photography is to the fore in the exhibition programme of several galleries. For instance, the Santander-based gallery JUAN SILIÓ will provide a comprehensive view of today’s photography from Carlos Irijalba, a promising young Spanish photographer, who will exhibit his works next to those by the prestigious Spanish artist Chema Alvargonzalez and the internationally renowned German artist Michael Najjar.
In turn, at the booth of CÁMARA OSCURA GALERÍA DE ARTE, a gallery from Madrid specialised in contemporary photography, with a well-defined style and personality, the photographers Carlos Cid, Julia Fullerton-Batten and Ellen Kooi present the collaborative proposal Building Pictures questioning the hypothetical effectiveness of the “constructed image”.
Also from Madrid comes the gallery CASADO SANTAPAU, presenting works by three artists with a long-standing international trajectory and with works in major private and public collections, namely Salvador Cidras, Alexandre Arrechea and DL Alvarez. Another Madrid-based gallery, RAQUEL PONCE, will present pieces by young artists enjoying widespread acclaim, like Xavi Muñoz, a member of a new generation of Catalan art practitioners, Jorge Pineda, an artist from the Dominican Republic who in a few years has become an emerging promise, and the artist from Bilbao Mabi Revuelta.
Newly arrived to ARC040 is the gallery MAISTERRAVALBUENA, also from Madrid, which also has a booth in the SOLO PROJECTS section. The participation of galleries from Madrid also includes two well-known faces at ARCOmadrid who are back to the fair: MAGDA BELLOTI and EGAM. The presence of these reputable galleries in this space further confirms its high quality.
Another of the newcomers at ARCOmadrid_09 is the gallery from Malaga ARTE CONTEMPORÁNEO GACMA, one of the most significant private initiatives in the Andalusian art circuit, bringing of the best in the Spanish and international scene to the fair.
The Spanish participation includes another five spaces that, although with a certain history at the fair, are a demonstration of the dynamic nature of the Spanish market. That is the case of SANDUNGA, a gallery located in Granada which displays staunch support for emerging art, presenting proposals by young practitioners taking risks in their discourses and artistic vocabularies.
For the second year running, CUBO AZUL, a young gallery based in León, will present works specifically made for ARCOmadrid_09 by three artists whose pieces are clearly interconnected, thus providing a uniform view of this gallery’s programme: the artist from Salamanca Rafa Sendin, the Galicia-born Carlos Maciá and Paloma G. Dotor, from La Mancha. In a similar line, the gallery ESPACIO LÍQUIDO, from Asturias, is clearly demonstrating its intention to back younger artists.
From Valencia comes ROSA SANTOS, a gallery presenting works by three of its most long-standing artists. The young Peruvian Marín López Lam, the Valencian artist Rafael Tormo i Cuenca and the Alicante-based Moisés Mañas will be the focal points of this space with a firm vocation for emerging creation and new art practices.
Last but not least, the Spanish participation is completed with another gallery from Valencia, VALLE ORTI. Though with a long track record to its credit, in recent years it has changed its focus to new art languages including video and new media by young emerging artists working in a number of supports, providing a view of the world in all its complexity.
Major Emerging Scenes
ARCO40 also boasts a significant presence of galleries from the UK and the USA, bringing some of the most groundbreaking works on view in this section.
From the UK, we have works by young artists represented by two galleries covering a highly diverse range of the UK market and with a significant history in ARCOmadrid. GIMPEL FILS, with over 60 years in the London modern art scene, will present pieces by artists working in languages and discourses as diverse as those of Steven Gontarski, Sista Pratesi and Araya Rasdjarmearnsook. The counterpoint comes from ALEXIA GOETHE, who, in tune with its line of work, will present a new vision of today’s art practice.
The effervescent US art scene will be represented at ARCO40 with the proposals from a highly interesting gallery from New York: NEWMAN POPIASHVILI, founded in 2001 and well known for representing international emerging talents and mid-career artists working in varied media.
Asia’s Diversity
The presence of Asia, another of the international emerging axes, will also be noticed in ARCO40. From various points of the continent, and mirroring the heterogeneous nature of its scene, proposals from young creators will be presented at the fair by four galleries from China, Republic of Korea, India and Iran.
The new dynamism of the Asian scene is based on its exciting new art practitioners. A good demonstration is the bold proposals of the youngest Chinese art, on display at the booth of the gallery FEIZI, taking part for the first time. Another gallery debuting at ARCOmadrid is ONE AND J GALLERY from Korea, a country well represented at the fair.
On another note, the diversity and artistic wealth of the Muslim world will be shown at the booth of the Iranian gallery SILK ROAD GALLERY, back again at the fair to promote art creation from Iran and from other countries and backing the exchange of ideas and art experimentation. Finally, from one of Asia’s most emerging markets comes PROJECT 88, reinforcing the grand showcase that ARCOmadrid_09 is putting at the service of India.
Europe, a Hub for Experimentation
Central European galleries will play a major role at the fair. ARCO40 welcomes the presence of five galleries from Berlin, working within the pioneering spirit shown by the German capital since the fall of the Wall. For the second year, ARRATIA, BEER presents its proposal for this programme, to which it is contributing new visions of contemporary art practice. Next to it is the young gallery ALEXANDRA SAHEB, with a range of pieces covering a range of heterogeneous media with a stress on technical quality and artistic autonomy. The third of the Berlin spaces at ARCO40 is PERES PROJECTS, for the first time at the fair. With its dynamism and focus on emerging projects, this gallery will present a number of art expressions capable of conveying a diverse vision of the complex multicultural society of today.
A line shared by KUCKEI + KUCKEI and by M+R FRICKE, two spaces opting by a diversity of art languages with pieces presented by young artists defending similar premises. The latter will show works by the British artist Pauline Kraneis and by the Germans David Krippendorff and Mark Pepper.
From Germany’s financial centre, Frankfurt, comes ANITA BECKERS, a space with a firm vocation to promote young artists with works sitting comfortably alongside those by well established practitioners. The gallery’s project for ARCOmadrid_09 reveals a special interest in understanding different ways of perceiving nature in our time. Also outside the Berlin core is CHRISTIAN LETHER, a gallery from Cologne that closes the German participation at ARCO40, the most numerous among all European countries.
Next up comes two important Austrian galleries. PROJECTRAUM VIKTOR BUCHER is based in Vienna, where it was founded in 1995 as a meeting point for the various contemporary art movements and to foster and support the most cutting edge art creation and practitioners. In line with that philosophy they are presenting works by three young women: the Swiss Zoé Byland, the Bulgarian Sevda Chkoutova and the Austrian Julie Hayward. Also present at ARCO40, DANA CHARKASI is back in ARCOmadrid to present its project of new contemporary talent using mixed media, installation and painting.
Two Belgian galleries, one of them a regular at latest editions of the fair, the Brussels-based gallery CROWN GALLERY BRUSSELS, and a new one at ARCO40, VAN DER MIEDEN, from Antwerp, represent Belgium in this section. Particularly noteworthy in the latter are the photographs by the Brazilian Caio Reisewitz as well as the recent works by the Belgians Kris Van Dessel and Christian Noirfalise.
Two consolidated gallery projects plus a young new space represent the most contemporary art practice of Paris. DOMINIQUE FIAT, with a history of twenty years to its credit, and XIPPAS, with nearly the same amount of years devoted to the promotion of contemporary art, will take part at ARCO40 to offer the best of emerging art creation. At its booth, XIPPAS will exhibit three different projects by the Mexican artist Jorge Satorre. A series of 45 drawings and 13 slides entitled National Balloon, the video work Barry’s Van’s Tour and the drawings with the title of Piaxtla Indiciara.
In turn, the younger Parisian gallery CM ART has opted for a programme focused on Russia. The couple of artists Tishkov & B. Bendikov will present their series of photographs Private Moon. Meanwhile, the US photographer A. Moore will present a project dealing with the existence in countries that have lived, or still live, under a Communist regime, such as Russian and Cuba. The third artist exhibiting at this space is Mona Breede, who will show recent digital photographs from her series about Russia and Shanghai.
Italian emerging art is represented by three galleries all of them located outside Rome’s art centre: PERUGI ARTECONTEMPORANEA from Padua, and FEDERICO LUGER GALLERY and PROMETEOGALLERY from Milan, this latter gallery remarkable for a rigorous line of work that combines artists from many origins and in various supports alternating mid-career and emerging new talents.
Three Portuguese galleries will also show the most recent art practice from that country. Two of the galleries have come to ARCOmadrid_09 for the first time: PAULO AMARO, from Lisbon, and FONSECA MACEDO, from the Azores. The latter will show recent works by Augusto Alves da Silva and Maria José Cavaco. The third Portuguese gallery at ARCO40 is ANTONIO HENRIQUES - GALERIA DE ARTE CONTEMPORANEA.
Other European galleries in this section devoted to the latest art experimentation are the Irish RUBICON GALLERY, that has been present at other editions of the fair; MARTIN ASBAEK PROJECTS from Denmark; and the Dutch MIRTA DEMARE, a veteran in ARCOmadrid, and ANNET GELINK, newly incorporated to the fair. New participants are also DOVIN from Hungary, and SUSIE Q PROJECTS from Switzerland.
The Plurality of the Periphery
We also have three galleries from three peripheral yet highly relevant contemporary art scenes. From Mexico comes KBK ARTE CONTEMPORANEO, a veteran gallery at the service of critique, reflection and exhibition of the latest contemporary art in Mexico City. At ARCO40, the gallery is showing recent pieces by the Mexican Ale de la Puente, the Belgian Patrick Hamilton and by the US artist Fernando Carabajal. The gallery HABANA, from Cuba, is also a space firmly consolidated at the fair.
The Latin American participation is completed with the Colombian gallery CASAS RIEGNER, whose booth will display works by three Colombian artists that have been strongly active in the contemporary art scene of their country and abroad in recent years. They are López Parra, who will present a series of colour photographs focusing on the monumentality of landscape, but also on its fragility and on its process of transformation and change; Johanna Calle, whose drawings engage in a direct, descriptive and at once very intimate language; and Gabriel Sierra, an artist who makes works out of disparate elements put together to build new and astonishing structures that pose questions about the notion of habitat and about how each individual builds his/her own version of the world from a unique and personal way of organising and controlling it.
EXPANDED BOX
Curated by: Domenico Quaranta, Carolina Grau
Dialogue and an exploration of media art languages is, once again, the main focus at EXPANDED BOX. From a renewed perspective, this programme, specialised in art and new technologies, takes a step further in its mission to reflect a process of unstoppable expansion of art practices towards new formats and contexts. This year, the programme has been divided into two: STANDS, a space set aside for large format installations, curated by the art critic and independent curator Domenico Quaranta; and CINEMA, a monographic section dedicated to video art, selected by the independent curator Carolina Grau. Besides, for the first time at ARCOmadrid, this section includes a series of conversations grouped together under the title of STUDIO.
A total of 15 art projects are on view in the EXPANDED BOX programme, 8 at STANDS, and 7 in CINEMA. For the Italian curator Domenico Quaranta, “more than reflecting the creative exploitation of the medium, these proposals contain a critical examination of the cultural consequences of today’s media and technologies.” The tendencies come from a number of international artists, in turn represented by galleries taking on the challenge involved in fostering a new conception of art.
EXPANDED BOX is a market platform at ARCOmadrid for the exploration of art languages and dynamic discourses proposing new concepts. From the perspective of the notion of expansion, the selected programme “showcases a type of art that looks outside the parameters of contemporary art to art developed on the Net, the art produced in research centres and labs and that has all the potential to change our present-day notion of art. A change of perspective that should not scare collectors or art lovers, because these works are representative of the information society and of the globalised world we all live in,” says Quaranta.
STANDS, multiple format installations
Quaranta’s selection includes eight projects represented by both veteran and young international galleries. Eight pieces that, “in the wide open field of art experimentation, dictate their own rules regardless of prevailing canons, and give rise to a radically altered context that allows them to successfully progress.”
These tendencies are well represented in the selection made by Quaranta, defined by the variety of the projects on display. The exhibition covers a lot of ground, ranging from works using a combination of new technologies and traditional media, to pieces employing new media but with conventional purposes, or works that rediscover the potential of technologies that have virtually fallen into disuse.
The two ends of that diversity are embodied, on one hand by Arrow Wall, an interactive installation by the two-artist collective Pors & Rao, presented at the Indian gallery VADEHRA ART GALLERY. The project responds to the position and movements of the spectators moving throughout the space. For the artists, “it is a naïve abstraction of the complex dynamics of the relations surrounding us and of which we are an integral part.´ When users stand at a certain distance from Arrow Wall, the movements are subtler though nonetheless active. However, when the spectators comes closer, the feeling is that of a fracture of the balance, with the walls starting to move at a greater pace, as if the user acted as a magnet whose magnetic field has an effect on behaviour.
At the other extreme, we find the critical examination of the cultural consequences of present-day media and technologies through the work of the Austrian duo Ubermorgen.com, represented by FABIO PARIS ART GALLERY from Brescia, Italy. Their piece The EKMRZ Trilogy is a complex proposal developed over the last two years, integrating three projects based on a subversion of the interfaces of three giant digital corporations: Google, Amazon and Ebay. Resorting to code, softwar e and to social hacking, t
hey created a network of websites through which they obtained money by hosting ads in Google. The funds were subsequently invested in the acquisition of Google shares as a means to gradually erode the rigid power of the world’s most popular browser. Thus, they managed to steal, page by page, whole books from the Amazon database than were then redistributed without copy license, or to translate for Ebay users music databases from a directory based on a soft porn page. Using two projectors, the booth of the gallery reproduces the impressions and texts gathered in that space.
In these contrasting points, what matters is not how the medium is used, but the way in which the works explain to the public how human beings experience the world, how images, narratives, aesthetics and habits spread by the media have an effect on our environment.
In between these two points, we find proposals also providing a critical insight into the social consequences of the use of technology. That is the case of the work by the Spaniard Joan Leandre, one of the pioneers of software art. PROJECT GENTILI, a gallery from Prato, Italy, will exhibit a piece by this artist in which he filters our connection with reality through hyper-real interfaces.
A sound installation by the British collaborative Thomson & Craighead is on exhibit at the booth of the ARC PROJECTS gallery from Sofia, Bulgaria.
Another sound installation shown at EXPANDED BOX comes from Esther Mañas & Arash Moori, represented by GALERÍA MS from Madrid. The installation by the Korean artist Kim Jongku, on display at the booth of ONE AND J. GALLERY from Seoul, Korea, explores the fine line dividing matter and the dematerialisation brought about by the media.
FORTLAAN 17, a gallery from Ghent, Belgium, will present an installation entitled Compass, by the Belgian artist Lawrence Malstaf, a proposal researching into the interactive interface and the human-machine. Finally, the list of projects is completed with a 3D animation piece by the Irish artist John Gerrard, on view at ERNST HILGER CONTEMPORARY from Vienna.
CINEMA, an overview of video art
EXPANDED BOX has an area with screens projecting unique works by young artists from various origins. Represented by galleries with a long track record at the fair, the selection of this space set aide for video art includes “projects by artists influenced and inspired by the language of cinema and its visual codes as well as by the popular culture of television and the music world. Their videos feature daily stories and exceptional, extraordinary events captured by the artist’s camera,” as the curator of this section, Carolina Grau, states.
A regular of the ARCOmadrid’s curatorial team, Grau has chosen seven works. Pieces addressing the global society and a committed engagement with the world’s most pressing issues will be presented by galleries including the Austrian GEORG KARGL, representing the artist Andreas Fogarasi who is bring a new work Public Brands – La France. This video piece shows images of France’s 26 regions, depicting a variety of landscapes and local identities, underscoring the fact that public sector and tourism are following the path of private corporations by attempting to position locations as if they were brands.
Next up, RUTH BENZACAR GALERIA DE ARTE from Argentina is also taking part this year in this section with a piece by Judi Werthein, an artist living between New York and Buenos Aires. From the Big Apple comes MARIAN GOODMAN GALLERY, presenting the most recent video by the Indian artist Amar Kanwar.
This CINEMA selection is completed with work brought by four veteran galleries at ARCOmadrid. From the Netherlands comes MIRTA DEMARE, with a piece by the highly promising Serbian artist Katarina Zdjelar. Next, the gallery from Pamplon a, MOISÉS PÉREZ DE ALBÉNIZ shows a work by the Basque artist Iñaki
Garmendia that will certainly encourage the members of the audience to let themselves go and experience rather than think.
This space devoted to video art will also include a proposal by Nuno Cera, brought by the Portuguese gallery PEDRO CERA. Last but not least, the screens of CINEMA will also project a work by Stefanos Tsivopoulos represented by the Italian PROMETEO GALLERY.
STUDIO, space for reflection
The works on view in EXPANDED BOX will be given a broader framework with the three conferences in the new STUDIO section. Also coordinated by the curator Carolina Grau, the idea behind this new addition is to make ARCOmadrid a free space for the presentation of works and ideas in process. A place at the service of artists which can take the form of a forum, a debate, a dialogue, a monologue, an improvisation or a conference; somewhere to unveil a new ongoing work, a presentation, a film screening or an informal chat.
For its opening edition, STUDIO has programmed the intervention of three film and video makers. The Belgian artist Pierre Bismuth, winner of an Oscar for the original script for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind in 2005, will present Link, a work in progress since 1998. The public will have a chance to get an insight into the development of this work whose basic theme is the concern for continuity and discontinuity.
Eija-Liisa Ahtila, a media artist, will show her work to the public though not her single channels films, which are only screened at film festivals. The films and multiscreen installations by this Finnish artist subvert the lineal discourse in search of narratives on multiple levels. Ahtila’s working methods take the video closer to film, especially in the use of filming techniques and vocabulary borrowed from cinematography.
Finally, STUDIO is hosting the Spanish filmmaker Jaime Rosales, who has directed, among others, the films La soledad and Las horas del día. He will speak on the various alternatives for distribution for audiovisual works, based on his own experience with Tiro en la cabeza which was premiered simultaneously in cinemas, at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía and in a virtual cinema on Internet.
The new vision of art proposed by EXPANDED BOX does not consist of exotica, but rather of thought-provoking artworks heralding an interesting dialogue with other creations, languages and supports shown at the fair, with the clear intention of expanding the boundaries of art.
BEEP/Data Logic, the chain of computer and consumer electronic shops, is sponsoring this space and the 4th ARCO-BEEP Electronic Art Prize which is awarded to a new technology work on view at the fair.
PANORAMA: INDIA at ARCOmadrid_2009
The International Contemporary Art Fair, ARCOmadrid, renews its commitment to the Asian continent as Guest Country and organises its 28th edition, to be staged between 11th and 16th February 2009, featuring the participation of 270 galleries from 31 countries.
Panorama: India at ARCOmadrid_2009 will be the faithful reflection of the boom of an artistic emerging market, focused in New Delhi and Mumbai, as well as interesting centres and galleries in other cities such as Bangalore or Kolkata. Thus, the following galleries of international prestige will attend the fair from Mumbai: BODHI ART, CHATTERJEE&LAL, THE GUILD, SAKSHI GALLERY, CHEMOULD PRESCOT, PROJECT 88 y MIRCHANDANI & STEINRUECKE. The New Delhi-based galleries VADHERA GALLERY, PHOTOINK, NATURE MORTE, NEW DELHI and ESPACE will also be present. The selection will be completed by two peripheral galleries, namely GALLERY SKE from Bangalore and KASHI ART GALLERY, which is based in Cochin, Kerala. These participants will endow the fair with an extremely interesting sense of diversity.
A programme made up of thirteen galleries and more than 50 artists, to be completed with a selection of Indian contemporary artists under the guidance of the curator Bose Krishnamachari. All of them are represented by these galleries as well as by three new spaces: Bombay Art Gallery, Art Musings and Threshold, whose aim is to show the thriving creative nature of a market, characterised by its diversity and dynamism. This panorama will be complemented by a series of exhibitions, film cycles, concerts and activities linked to Indian art, which will be organised by the curator and visual artist Shaheen Merali to be presented at the leading museums and art centres in Madrid.
Collectors and buyers form all over the world will be able to appreciate the works by main contemporary Indian artists such as Atul Dodiya, Chintan Upadhyhay, Subodh Gupta, M. F. Husain, Tyeb Mehta, Rashid Rana, Shilpa Gupta or Ganesh Pyne. Alongside these names, younger figures such as Riyas Komu, Anandajit Ray, Chintan Upadhyay or the painter and video-artist Manjunath Kamath. A unique opportunity to get to know one of the most promising environments for contemporary art in the twenty-first century, hand in hand with ARCOmadrid.
Professional visit 2 days Wednesday 11 & Thursday 12, from noon to 9 pm
General public Friday 13, Saturday 14, Sunday 15, from noon to 9 pm Monday 16, from noon to 6 pm
Feria de Madrid
Parque Ferial Juan Carlos I - Madrid
General Admission
Friday 13, Saturday 14, Domingo 15 or Monday 16 32.00 € (VAT included)
General Admission + Official Catalogue 66.00 € (VAT included)
Students
Friday 13, Saturday 14, Domingo 15 or Monday 16 21.00 € (VAT included)
Student Admission + Official Catalogue 50.00 € (VAT included)