Fifty years after the historic installation that Marta Minujín created together with Rubén Santantonín in May 1965 at the Centre of Visual Arts of the Instituto Torcuato Di Tella, the Moderno will house a faithful reconstruction in a 400 metre square space on its first floor.
La Menesunda – which means ‘mixture’ and ‘confusion’ in lunfardo, was a labyrinthine structure that took visitors on a tour through eleven situations set up in a sequence of cubic, polygon, triangular and circular spaces furnished with different materials to generate multi-sensory stimuli.
La Menesunda made the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires a cultural witness to a ground-breaking decade that began in 1955 and culminated in a radical transformation of the aesthetic languages used by artists, modes of circulation and legitimization of products, as well as the ways in which new audiences consumed and absorbed avant garde work. La Menesunda summed up many of the issues and preoccupations addressed by avant garde artists in the early sixties: the voracity of popular culture, experience as an aesthetic medium, the viewer as an active figure, the potential to break with artistic tradition and art as a means of transgressing the limitations imposed by de facto government and military interference in democratic processes.
Today, discussion of La Menesunda is important for an enhanced understanding of the institutional and aesthetic processes that took place in the art scene in the city and for rethinking the political and economic contexts that gave rise to them. The project also sought to contribute to research into a major branch of the sixties avant garde, where pop art and political activism came together as mixture of installation and protest.