Maps
Use the map to explore participating studios and the main venue across the city. Alternative spaces are curated by our local team to help you navigate art week like a pro. Hover over the pins for details.
Nicaragua 23 bis
We have transformed a studio building into our central meeting point. Twenty artists work on site each day, bringing together performances, activations, and public moments across the week.

Twenty five artists work on site each day, actively making and testing new ideas. Most are experimenting with new materials, methods, or directions, inviting visitors to witness work while it is still uncertain and evolving.

The main venue hosts hands-on workshops and live activations throughout the week. Painting and photography workshops are led by Pablo A Medina and Zahra Saleki, with interactive installations by Ann Garza Lau and Joanna Martínez, and performance activations by Julia Barrios de la Mora, Pia Watson, and So Cabrera López.

This is not a white cube. Shoes off, guards down. A space built for hanging out, trying things, and co-creating in real time.
Explore like an art professional
Curated hubs highlight locally known alternative space selected by our team. These spaces sit close to WIP open studios in each area, making it easier to plan your day and move between visits during the week.
The historic center has some of Mexico City's most notable buildings, including the cathedral, public institutions, and the remains of Templo Mayor. Doctores, close by, feels more local and residential, with everyday activity, small workshops, and a few interesting buildings from the mid twentieth century, along with some small cultural spaces.
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Condesa has a very social and international atmosphere, with cafés, restaurants, and places where people meet and spend time. San Miguel Chapultepec is quieter and more residential, but it is home to one of the most important galleries in Latin America, which has attracted other spaces and bookstores around the neighborhood.
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Roma is one of the most active, known, creative areas in the city, with galleries, cafés, vintage shops, and small independent projects set inside old houses and mixed use spaces. La Juárez has grown in visibility in recent years, combining new cultural spaces with early twentieth century architecture and a lively neighborhood feel.
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Santa María la Ribera centers around the Kiosco Morisco, which works as a natural starting point to explore the neighborhood. From there, the area offers traditional restaurants, old cantinas, and a few community and cultural spaces, all within a quiet residential setting that keeps a strong sense of local identity.
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Coyoacán has a clear artistic atmosphere linked to the history of important Mexican artists who lived there. The neighborhood brings together markets, plazas, museums, gardens, and many interesting houses from the nineteenth and mid twentieth centuries. It is farther from the center, but it is a place that invites walking and spending time.
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