1. Mexico City’s art scene is defined by creativity, community, and adaptability rather than market-driven models
The city’s unique urban structure, combined with its history, architecture, hospitality, and post-Covid energy, has fostered a vibrant ecosystem focused on community-building, experimentation, and enjoyment. Rather than being driven by precarity or pure commerce, many initiatives prioritise collaboration and alternative cultural models.
2. New hybrid and artist-led spaces are reshaping how art is produced, shown, and experienced
From repurposed office buildings and historic sites to artist-run platforms, Mexico City is embracing non–white-cube venues and hybrid roles where artists become cultural managers and organisers. These initiatives emphasise decentralisation, inclusivity, and new audiences, positioning art as something to be experienced and enjoyed, not just acquired.
3. Mexico City’s art scene is a shifting ecology defined by values, heterogeneity, and vocation
Despite strong institutional and geographic centralisation, the strength of Mexico City’s art scene lies in multiplicity: different audiences, fairs, museums, and alternative spaces each play distinct roles within a broader cultural ecosystem.
“When we talk about an art scene, we make the mistake of assuming it’s a thing, but it’s actually a process, an event that shifts and changes.”
4. Museums are evolving from object-based institutions into spaces for research, process, and collective knowledge-making
The role of institutions like MUAC is shifting toward experimentation, interdisciplinarity, and collaboration with broader forms of knowledge production. By prioritising ideas, process-based practices, and residencies over objects alone, museums can respond to today’s political and social uncertainty, positioning art as a critical tool for reimagining the future and creating new possibilities amid crisis.