Festival Moujuïc 2023
Castell de Montjuïc Carretera de Montjuïc 66, 08038 Barcelona

The Moujuïc Festival reaches its third edition this year to bring dance and movement to new audiences. Montjuïc Castle will host a wide program that includes shows selected expressly to achieve the goal of making dance accessible to everyone as well as residencies, process openings, a workshop for young people and space for mediation.
The diversity of the Castle's spaces will be the setting for the majority of the program, which will open on Saturday, May 20 with the piece Fight by the Basque company LaSala, on the terrace of the pati d'armes. Afterwards, the action moves to the hornwork, with Aperitivo by Los Informallls, then returns to the terrace with Joan Català and his Pelat. The day will close with the Metaplec, a choral improvisation in which artists from different trajectories (Glòria Ros, David Climent, Marina Pravkina, Adriano Galante and Hoss Benítez) will coincide in the previous days to prepare a closing to the height, and in dialogue with the public.
Sunday, May 21 starts with a morning session, which will take place between Maña", from Cia. Manolo Alcántara, and the piece Moving! by María Ferrer, a collaboration with the Sortidor Civic Center with the participation of young people who have just arrived in Poble-sec, which emphasizes the duality of the community.
The performances have been selected in a collaboration between the Castle of Montjuïc and the Graner Creation Factory, with the intention of showcasing artistic and stylistic diversity. The festival brings the discipline of dance to those audiences that have not yet accessed it, through a mediation team that will be available throughout the festival and that will accompany each of the proposals so that everyone can enjoy them. All the shows are adapted to the surroundings of the Castle, in a dialogue between dance, architecture and heritage.
For more events check our online events calendar.
Info

Montjuic Castle photo by Domenico Convertini (CC BY-SA 2.0) via Flickr.