XXIV Flamenco Biennial
Make me signs with your eyes is a statement from two women whose gaze is a manifesto of strength and truth..
Aurora Vargas embodies grace and singing born at home. your voice, deep and with a pinch of history, does not interpret flamenco: she is flamenco. Each quejío springs from an ancient memory, full of purity and that tear that only lives in those who have embraced singing as a way of life. Aurora does not adorn: dice. Does not act: feel. His singing is wound and celebration.
Juana Amaya responds with her body. Your dance, firm and captivating, born from the earth: of feet that hit history and a body that burns in every movement. In it lives a temperament that does not allow concessions, a wild elegance and a force that connects the ancestral with the contemporary without losing a drop of truth.
In their eyes the spectacle takes on its deepest meaning, alluding to that invisible language they share: a communication without words, made of complicity, of ancient codes, of instinct and elf. A truth that is not pronounced, his eyes order, summon and unleash; they look at each other and everything happens, are recognized and understood from a common language and heritage.
This show is a meeting of femininity, claw, tear, impudence and discretion; of purity and ancient pain that, on stage, turns into beauty. This is how they talk: inartificial, without license, with an intensity that pierces the viewer's soul.
Friday 25 September 2026 – Lope de Vega Theater: 20:00 hours




Sevilla
Málaga
Jaen
Huelva
Granada
Córdoba
A tourist and cultural vision of flamenco
The Guitar, last to join.
The history of flamenco with respect to its geographical distribution
The present and future of the genre. The Fourth Golden Key of Singing.
The festivals
Revaluation of flamenco. Third Golden Key of Singing
The Flamenco Opera
Flamenco in Madrid. The Pavón Cup. Second Golden Key of Singing
The contest that took place in 1922 in Granada
The great creators. The Golden Age. The Singing Cafes
Evolution. Hermetic Stage. First singers
Origin of the word “flamenco”
First written references
Musical background