Showing 1-14 of 14 results
-
Arte Contemporáneo Manuel García
Exhibitions of delightfully avant-garde stuff by Mexican and international artists.
-
Arte de Oaxaca
This sophisticated gallery provides a beautiful setting in which to enjoy a wide range of contemporary Oaxacan art. It includes a room devoted to Rodolfo Morales' work.
-
Bodega Quetzalli
This very large, open space features roughly one artist, usually avant-garde, per month.
-
Centro Fotográfico Álvarez Bravo
The good Centro Fotográfico Álvarez Bravo occupies a space that was very nicely rehabilitated in 2005.
-
Galería Epicentro
Gallery belonging to artist Marco Bustamante and displaying his and others' work.
-
Galería Quetzalli
Oaxaca's leading serious gallery, handling some of the biggest names such as Francisco Toledo and Sergio Hernández.
-
Instituto de Artes Gráficas de Oaxaca
Almost opposite Santo Domingo, in a beautiful colonial house donated by artist Francisco Toledo, the Instituto de Artes Gráficas de Oaxaca offers changing exhibitions of graphic art as well as a superb arts library ( - Mon-Sat).
-
La Curtiduría
A diverse cultural center founded in an old tannery by artist Demián Flores Cortés, La Curtiduría stages and facilitates contemporary art exhibits, classes, community projects and assorted events (including films and live music and dance), and runs an artist-in-residence program. Drop by or look for flyers.
-
Museo Casa de Juárez
One of the few Mexican national heroes with an unsullied reputation, the great reforming president Benito Juárez (1806−72) was born a humble Zapotec villager in Guelatao, 60km northeast of Oaxaca. His parents died when he was three. At the age of 12, young Benito walked to Oaxaca and found work at the house of Antonio Salanueva, a bookbinder. Salanueva saw the boy's potential and decided to help pay for an education he otherwise might not have received.
-
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Oaxaca
Occupying a handsome colonial house built around 1700, the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Oaxaca exhibits contemporary art from Oaxaca, Mexico and around the world.
-
Advertisement
-
Museo de las Culturas de Oaxaca
The beautiful monastery buildings adjoining the Iglesia de Santo Domingo house, the not-to-be-missed Museo de las Culturas de Oaxaca. One of the best regional museums in Mexico, this takes you right through the history and cultures of Oaxaca state up to the present day. Explanatory material is in Spanish, but you can rent good audio guides in English for around $50 . Also here is a good book and souvenir shop.
-
Museo de los Pintores Oaxaqueños
Housed in a spacious two-story downtown building, the Museo de los Pintores Oaxaqueños stages changing exhibitions of work by the state's best artists.
-
Museo Rufino Tamayo
The top-class Museo Rufino Tamayo was donated to Oaxaca by its most famous artist, the Zapotec Rufino Tamayo (1899−1991). In a fine 17th-century building, the collection focuses on the aesthetic qualities of ancient artifacts and traces artistic developments in preconquest times. It has some truly beautiful pieces and is strong on the Preclassic era and lesser-known civilizations such as those of Veracruz and western Mexico.
-
Palacio de Gobierno
On the south side of the Zócalo stands the former Palacio de Gobierno, now being converted into a museum. Its stairway mural by Arturo García Bustos depicts famous Oaxacans and Oaxaca history, including Benito Juárez and his wife, Margarita Maza, José María Morelos, Porfirio Díaz, Vicente Guerrero (being shot at Cuilapan) and Juana Inés de la Cruz, a 17th-century nun and love poet.
Showing 1-14 of 14 results






