Close Menu
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
What's On

How Orbán lost the Hungarian election – POLITICO

April 13, 2026

The forint verdict: How investors are reacting to a landslide Hungarian opposition victory

April 13, 2026

How satellites are driving cooperation beyond the Central Asian region

April 13, 2026

Combined air-rail tickets: How to fly, ride and explore Europe on one booking

April 13, 2026

‘What House Are You From?’: A daughter’s take on her mother’s exile from civil war in Spain

April 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian Europe
Newsletter
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
Home»Culture
Culture

‘What House Are You From?’: A daughter’s take on her mother’s exile from civil war in Spain

By staffApril 13, 20263 Mins Read
‘What House Are You From?’: A daughter’s take on her mother’s exile from civil war in Spain
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Published on
13/04/2026 – 13:11 GMT+2

“What House Are You From?” This is the question posed by the Portuguese-Spanish artist and director Ana Pérez-Quiroga, who gives her name to the documentary that centres on her mother, Angelita.

Taken from Spain to the then Soviet Union as a child, as a refugee from the Spanish Civil War, she ended up leaving one conflict and encountering another: the Second World War.

Estranged from her family and her home country, she only returned to Spain as an adult, trained in medicine, after Stalin’s death. Between the ages of four and 24, she lived in various boarding schools, always in very closed circles with other Spanish children, also war refugees, with lessons in her mother tongue: only later did she learn Russian.

She lived in Kherson, in what is now Ukraine, in Kazakhstan, in a small village in Siberia and finally in Moscow, where she went to university.

Angelita didn’t pass on this traumatic experience to her children, quite the opposite: “My mum is a shy and introverted person. She speaks little about this period, but when she does, she has never, as far back as I can remember, given us the idea that this experience was a trauma. I’ve always felt that it was (for her) an adventure,” Ana Pérez-Quiroga told Euronews.

The passage of time, the relationship between mother and daughter and the feeling of belonging to the various places and cultures that Ana’s mother experienced are themes that are always present in the film.

Angelita and her sister returned to Spain in the 1950s, more than 20 years after leaving the country. Their parents, republicans, were spared Franco’s repression and the wave of shootings during the civil war, although their father spent some time in prison.

She then met her Portuguese husband and moved to the estate in the centre of Portugal where the family has a vineyard.

The grape harvest at the family home serves as a metaphor here with the film mixing past and present.

“The film is about time. That’s why we filmed two harvests, two years of harvests in a row. I’m interested in chronological time. I want you to understand that the film has to do with this idea of time, but there’s also another concept behind it, which is that of fracture. Who do we belong to, in terms of identity?” says Pérez-Quiroga.

She hasn’t forgotten her past as a plastic artist either with the film portraying installations and performances she has made on the theme of her mother’s story. Managing to combine these two facets, she says, was the biggest challenge during editing.

It was a multi-year project that took her to various points in Russia and Ukraine before the large-scale invasion and outbreak of the current war in 2022.

What House Are You From? had its world premiere at the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival last year and will hit the screens of several Portuguese cities on 16 April.

Video editor • Ricardo Figueira

Additional sources • Imagem: Bruno Silva

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

‘Sickening’: Donald Trump plans for ‘Arc de Trump’ blasted online

Video. Two Monet paintings unseen for a century to be auctioned in France

Spectacular find: archaeologists recover 1000 Roman objects from a lake in Switzerland

Kicking back: Spain’s La Liga goes retro for nostalgic football matchday

Win a Picasso for €100: Paris raffle aims to raise millions for Alzheimer’s research

Step right up: A rare piece of the Eiffel Tower is heading to auction

NASA reveals Artemis II crew’s wake-up songs playlist – featuring Chappell Roan and Denzel Curry

Controversial US hip-hop pioneer Afrika Bambaataa dies aged 68

White House slams George Clooney’s acting ability following Iran threats – Clooney responds

Editors Picks

The forint verdict: How investors are reacting to a landslide Hungarian opposition victory

April 13, 2026

How satellites are driving cooperation beyond the Central Asian region

April 13, 2026

Combined air-rail tickets: How to fly, ride and explore Europe on one booking

April 13, 2026

‘What House Are You From?’: A daughter’s take on her mother’s exile from civil war in Spain

April 13, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Europe and world news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Von der Leyen uses Orbán defeat to push for end of veto in EU foreign policy – POLITICO

April 13, 2026

Long COVID could cost up to €115.3bn per year over the next decade, study shows

April 13, 2026

Poland and South Korea upgrade ties to strategic defence partnership deal

April 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Europe. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.