7 Under-the-Radar Shows to See During CDMX Art Week 2025


It’s the first week of February. In Mexico that means Mexico City Art Week is once again upon us. This year, the ever-expanding, week-plus of openings and events surrounding Latin America’s heavyweight constellation of fairs—Zona Maco, Material, and Salón Acme—promises to offer an antidote to the dark start to 2025, courtesy of Mexico City’s famed art scene. Nevertheless, recent news will mean the revelry will be ensconced in uncertainty. With Mexico’s new president Claudia Sheinbaum promising to continue her predecessor’s Morena political vision, and radical change promised by Donald Trump, inaugurated for his second term less than a month ago, questions around what this political clash will mean for Mexico and Mexico’s art landscape abound. It adds up to an informal macro theme of paradox. What happens when an immovable object means an unstoppable force?

With Sheinbaum’s assumption to office this past October comes a new Secretary of Culture, and a new round of art museum leaders, who have already been announced. It’s too soon to see how these new directors and curators will shift the programming and purview of the country’s top national museums, but despite the fresh ideas that this changing of the guard might bring, the culture ministry had its budget reduced by a whopping 27.8 percent.

Then there’s the art market, which in Mexico historically experiences a sales lag at the start of every new administration as local collectors often wait for new laws to be enacted and government contracts to be funded. Sheinbaum, who has inherited one of the largest government deficits since the 1980s, has promised to continue the previous administration’s austerity measures, which have impacted the country’s wealthiest. The outlook is further fogged with Trump’s deportations, which policy and economics leaders warn could negatively impact Mexico’s economy, further contributing to a potential sales slowdown. Add to this that 2024 saw a wave of galleries in CDMX closing shop.

Against this backdrop, perhaps the best antidote is to see art as a form of resistance, supporting the weirdo artists and small-scale dealers working against geopolitical and market headwinds to keep Mexico City’s scene vibrant. This moment then can be an opportunity to conspire and work together. (Artist Rachel Finkelstein’s mutual aid collective GringoTax.MX, for example, offers advice on how to visit and live in Mexico as a foreigner in ways that aren’t extractive.) To that end, here are some of the best under-the-radar shows, performances, and goings-on that will be on view during Mexico City Art Week.



Source link

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles