-
Plaza Dos de Mayo
On
2 May 1976 a young couple climbed on to the statue of Daoíz and Velarde
and performed a striptease in front of a boisterous crowd of youngsters
celebrating on the square. This was one of the first manifestations of
the movida (scene), a period of hedonism, enthusiasm and creative energy. -
Pedro Almodóvar
The controversial Academy Award-winning film director shot his first movie, Pepi, Luci, Bom
in 1980. Iconoclastic and subversive, his bizarre characters –
drugpushing nuns, pill-popping housewives and outrageous transvestites –
shocked a society that was only just emerging from the Franco era and
captured the spirit of the movida on celluloid. -
Ceesepe
This self-taught artist (real name Carlos Sánchez Pérez) was a leading figure of the movida.
He produced posters for several of Almodóvar’s films, as well as book
illustrations, cartoons and record covers. His exhibition, the “Last
Supper”, in the Moriarty Gallery in 1983, brought him to the attention
of a wider public. -
Moriarty Gallery
Lola
Moriarty’s art gallery in Calle Almirante (still going strong) was
enormously influential in promoting the careers of artists and
photographers of the movida. Her husband, Borja Casani, was editor of Luna,
a monthly magazine which published stories by Almodóvar and others. In
1984 Casani hired the entire Hotel Palace for a party attended by
several thousand movidistas.
