
ALBERTO ARDID. There is a place
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Curated by: Miguel Fernández-Cid y Pilar Souto Soto
“There is a place similar to this one: a parallel reality that takes the form of a relatively close fiction. Hay un lugar [There is a Place] is an exhibition project that brings together works situated between sculpture and installation, structured around the idea of an apparent triumph of evil over good, while still allowing for a trace of hope.
The exhibition is conceived as a narrative and interconnected whole, in which each work stands on its own, while also establishing relationships with the others and with the space they occupy.”
Alberto Ardid
GENERAL INFORMATION / DOCUMENTATION / ACTIVITIES
School Programmes
In collaboration with “la Caixa” Foundation
From 12 May
Schedule: Tuesday to Friday, 10:00–11:30 and 11:30–13:00
By prior appointment: Tel. +34 986 113 900 ext. 200 / ext. 308/ comunicacion@marcovigo.com
Programmes for Associations, Community Groups, and Groups with Specific Needs
In collaboration with “la Caixa” Foundation
From 12 May
Schedule: Flexible, depending on needs and availability
By prior appointment: Tel. +34 986 113 900 ext. 200 / ext. 308/ comunicacion@marcovigo.com
Children’s Workshops
In collaboration with “la Caixa” Foundation
From 8 May
Schedule: Saturdays, 11:00–12:30 (ages 3–6) and 12:30–14:00 (ages 7–12)
Advance registration required / recepcion@marcovigo.com
Information and guided tours
Gallery staff are available for queries and information about the exhibition, additionally tours are available: every day at 18.00. ‘À la carte’ visits for groups, for reservations please call: Tel. +34 986 113900 / +34 986 113908.
Artists
ALBERTO ARDID DE CABO
Alberto Ardid de Cabo (Vigo, Spain, 1986) works on the production of pieces and installations that can be situated between perception and materiality, bringing together different elements that, in turn, may represent opposing ideas. To this end, he frequently employs construction materials and visual references which, when combined and decontextualised, generate multiple meanings and strong contrasts. In many of his works, he also incorporates abstract pictorial interventions that are combined with other clearly recognisable elements, with references to history and mass culture from a Galician and yet a universal perspective.
He holds a degree in Fine Arts from the University of Barcelona (2010), a Master’s degree in Teacher Training specialising in Drawing from the University of Vigo (2013), and is currently pursuing a PhD in Fine Arts at the same university.
His work has been featured in solo exhibitions such as Patria Unifamiliar (Galería Trinta, Santiago de Compostela, 2025); Cuidado com o cão (Espacio Sirvent, Vigo, 2024); Del lat. Factura (Galería Arniches, Madrid, 2024); 00:00 (Sala Apo’strophe, Vigo, 2020); Gravidade (Espazo Cubo, Vigo, 2019).
Since 2008, he has taken part in numerous group exhibitions, including, among the most recent: XIV Premio Auditorio de Galicia (Santiago de Compostela, 2025); Territorio Contemporánea. Colección Abanca (Santiago de Compostela, 2025); Grazas pola súa visita (Sala Manuel Moldes, Pontevedra, 2025); Two Spanish Artists in Europe (European Court of Auditors, Luxembourg, 2024); Algo que brilla (Bienal, Fundación Sales, Vigo, 2024); Pregar a pintura (Museo de Pontevedra, 2024); O que hai (Fundación Laxeiro, Vigo, 2023); Hecho en casa. Video Arte doméstico actual en España (Centro Condeduque, Madrid, 2023); Arniches se escribe con V de Vigo (Galería Arniches, Madrid, 2023).
An artist engaged in residencies and conferences, Ardid's work is featured in numerous publications and catalogues, and he has received awards and distinctions in competitions such as the Premio Bienal de Arte del Morrazo. XXIV BAM Beca de estudios artísticos (Cangas do Morrazo, 2022); 2nd Prize, XVI Certamen de Artes Plásticas (Diputación de Ourense, 2021); Acquisition Award, XVII Certamen de Arte Isaac Díaz Pardo (Diputación de A Coruña, 2021); Plástika 19. Museo del Mar de Galicia (Vigo, 2019); as well as more recent acquisitions by Casa de Indias. Feria UVNT (Madrid, 2024); and Colección MICA (Vigo, 2025).
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Curatorial text
Pasolini said that it only takes a millimetric shift of the point from which one views the world to see a different one. Alberto Ardid (Vigo, 1986) puts this into practice, but without even shifting his eyes: he observes reality and questions it not for its appearance but for what it represents, suggests, and conceals. He seeks out suitable materials and offers his commentary in images that are purposeful, yet always open to interpretation.
In Hay un lugar, he transforms the inner courtyards of the MARCO Museum into outdoor spaces. In one of them, he displays Lugar, an installation that revolves around the notion of private property, in its Galician version — colored shapes (paintings, carpets) imitate plots of land or estates, with stone frames delimiting their boundaries. All together it forms a landscape, in which we start to discern details and intentions: the protecting glass pieces on the top of the wall that first greets the visitor have been replaced by fragments of Sargadelos pottery; the yellow shapes, denoting the land of the estates, are being stalked by gray ones; a watchful bow looms over us from a nearby balcony and is already claiming its first victims...
Private property encroaches on public space in the first gallery, where services—education, food, energy, leisure—have been bunched together. Everything seems interconnected, but one should pause to contemplate each work, because an attentive observer will notice a less peaceful, but equally real, side and no small number of surprises, such as blackboards transformed into targets, paintings that have been vacuum-sealed like fresh food, or a lit candle defying the museum's fire alarm.
Throughout the galleries, we witness a succession of paradoxes, of deliberate confrontations: bronze nests, which are actually Asian hornet nests; COVID dust transformed into a relic; paintings displayed like mass-produced industrial goods...
Like a story being told in sequences, the second courtyard offers up a warm, familiar image at first glance, with a palleiro(hayloft) and allusions to a landscape and a sun (Universe). But the stage being set soon comes under discussion as we discover other possible interpretations — the landscape is actually a banner, a shot is fired from the palleiro. Some actions are more intimate, like the temptation hidden in the cleaning closet, or the machine that insistently begs the viewer to unplug it.
In the second gallery, the opposite effect tends to be at work — felling a tree can be ecologically beneficial act, if that tree is a eucalyptus; broken materials are humorously reassembled; Ionic ornaments customize an industrial support, while masterpieces find an almost unvisited place for themselves. We walk amidst the refuse, but some hope remains.
Reality returns in the panopticon, envisaged as a crossroads where the aftermath of an accident and the memento of a bouquet of chrysanthemums, are evidence of a gesture that sparks empathy.
The above is not a narrative, nor an explanation. It is an invitation to visit with curiosity, to be open to different interpretations, as Alberto Ardid never designs works to be closed.
Miguel Fernández-Cid and Pilar Souto Soto, curators of the exhibition