TOP 10

Galleries

Galleries

Galleries

TOP 10

Galleries

1

KURIMANZUTTO

Located in San Miguel Chapultepec, Kurimanzutto is one of Mexico City's most influential contemporary art galleries. Founded in 1999 by José Kuri and Mónica Manzutto, it began as a nomadic project that staged exhibitions in unconventional spaces across the city. This spirit of experimentation remains alive today in its industrial-style warehouse, where artists are given freedom to transform the space into immersive environments.

The gallery represents many of Mexico's leading contemporary voices-such as Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, and Dr. Lakra-alongside international artists who share a conceptual and boundary-pushing approach. Exhibitions often blur the line between art and life, making a visit to Kurimanzutto feel less like entering a gallery and more like stepping into a laboratory of ideas.

Beyond its shows, Kurimanzutto has become a cultural hub where artists, collectors, and curious visitors connect. If you want to experience the nerve center of Mexico City's contemporary art scene, this is where to start.


Location: SAN MIGUEL CHAPULTEPEC

2

OMR

In the heart of Roma Norte, OMR has been a cornerstone of Mexico City's contemporary art scene since the 1980s. Housed in a restored neoclassical building, the gallery balances architectural elegance with bold, forward-looking exhibitions. Walking through its high-ceilinged halls, you sense both the weight of history and the energy of constant renewal.

OMR represents a roster of Mexican and international artists known for pushing boundaries across mediums-painting, installation, photography, and video. Figures like Pia Camil, Iván Navarro, and Candida Höfer have found in OMR a platform that bridges local creativity with global conversations.

More than just a space for exhibitions, OMR feels like a dialogue between Mexico's artistic past and its cutting-edge present. For visitors seeking to understand why Mexico City has become a global destination for art, OMR offers one of the clearest answers.


Location: ROMA NORTE

3

OLIVIA FOUNDATION

Housed in a beautifully restored early-20th-century mansion in Roma Norte, Olivia Foundation is a private art space devoted to postwar and contemporary abstraction, with a particular focus on female artists. Founded by collectors Jana and Guillermo González, the foundation brings together works that explore color, materiality, and form across painting, sculpture, and installation.

The house itself was reimagined by renowned architects Alberto Kalach and Carlos Zedillo, who transformed its domestic interiors into luminous galleries while preserving the elegance of the original structure. The result is a setting where art feels both intimate and monumental, offering visitors a rare chance to experience significant works up close.

Olivia Foundation is not a commercial gallery but rather a curatorial project, with exhibitions designed to spark dialogue and reflection. Visits are arranged by appointment, making the experience feel private and tailored-more like entering a collector's home than stepping into a traditional gallery.


Location: ROMA NORTE

4

GALERÍA DE ARTE MEXICANO

Founded in 1935, Galería de Arte Mexicano-better known as GAM-is the oldest gallery of its kind in Mexico and a landmark of the country's art history. From its beginnings, it played a crucial role in giving visibility to the great masters of the 20th century: Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rufino Tamayo, and Frida Kahlo all exhibited here. Walking into GAM is like stepping into the origins of Mexico's gallery scene.

Today, the gallery continues to present a refined program that bridges Mexico's artistic legacy with contemporary practices. Its exhibitions range from established names to mid-career artists who expand the language of painting, sculpture, and mixed media, ensuring that GAM remains relevant nearly a century after its founding.

What sets GAM apart is its sense of continuity: few places in Mexico City allow you to see how the country's art market and cultural discourse evolved from muralism to the present day. It's a space where history and modernity overlap in an elegant, understated setting.


Location: SAN MIGUEL CHAPULTEPEC

5

KöNIG GALERIE

The Berlin-based König Galerie brought its bold, international vision to Mexico City in 2022, choosing a striking modernist building in La Condesa as its home. With concrete walls, soaring ceilings, and dramatic light, the space feels tailor-made for immersive, large-scale installations.

The gallery showcases many of König's celebrated international artists-among them Claudia Comte, Alicja Kwade, and Katharina Grosse-while also opening dialogue with Mexico's own contemporary art scene. Exhibitions here are known for their scale and ambition, often transforming the space into an environment that feels more like architecture than display.

König Galerie México adds a distinctly European perspective to the city's creative landscape. For visitors, it's a chance to see how one of Berlin's most influential galleries adapts its daring curatorial style to the rhythm and energy of Condesa.


Location: CONDESA

6

CASA WABI - SABINO

In the industrial neighborhood of Atlampa, Sabino 336 is the Mexico City headquarters of the Casa Wabi Foundation, created by artist Bosco Sodi. The building was designed by Mexican architect Alberto Kalach, who transformed a raw, concrete-and-brick structure into a striking cultural space. Its spacious interiors and rooftop garden make it one of the city's most distinctive sites for contemporary art.

Unlike a commercial gallery, Sabino 336 functions as a foundation space: exhibitions, workshops, and community programs are central to its mission. Large halls allow for ambitious installations and experimental projects, often featuring collaborations between Mexican and international artists.

What sets Sabino 336 apart is its philosophy. Casa Wabi, true to its origins in Oaxaca, is guided by the idea of dialogue between art and community. In Atlampa, this means bringing world-class exhibitions into a working-class neighborhood, creating encounters that feel both inclusive and transformative.


Location: ATLAMPA

7

AGO PROJECTS

Located in the Juárez neighborhood, AGO Projects blurs the line between art and design. Founded by Rudy Fritsch and Rodman Primack, the gallery has become a key platform for collectible design in Mexico City, presenting furniture, objects, and installations that function as both everyday pieces and works of art.

AGO Projects is celebrated for highlighting Latin American design and placing it in dialogue with global contemporary practices. Many of its exhibitions emerge from collaborations between designers, architects, and artisans, often using wood, stone, and textiles in ways that feel both experimental and rooted in tradition.

The space itself is conceived more like a living environment than a conventional gallery: each exhibition creates a setting where art and design interact, inviting visitors to imagine how these objects might shape real life. For anyone exploring the intersections of craft, design, and contemporary art, AGO Projects is a must.


Location: JUÁREZ

8

PROYECTOS MONCLOVA

Founded in 2005, Proyectos Monclova has become one of Mexico City's most influential contemporary art galleries. Its venue in Polanco provides the scale and flexibility for ambitious exhibitions that bring together both Mexican and international artists.

The gallery represents a wide spectrum of voices-from modern masters like Manuel Felguérez, Ángela Gurría, Helen Escobedo, and Eduardo Terrazas, to contemporary figures such as Gabriel de la Mora, Edgar Orlaineta, and the collective Tercerunquinto. This balance between historical and current practices makes Proyectos Monclova a key space to understand the evolution of Mexican art.

Exhibitions here are recognized for their conceptual depth and visual impact, often bridging different generations and disciplines. A visit offers insight into how Mexico's artistic heritage continues to expand into new and experimental territories.


Location: POLANCO

9

GALERíA HILARIO GALGUERA

Housed in an early-20th-century manor in San Rafael, Galería Hilario Galguera opened in 2006 (founded by Hilario Galguera and Rosa María Ortega) with Damien Hirst's landmark show La muerte de Dios-often cited as Hirst's first exhibition in Latin America. Since then, the gallery has focused on concept-driven, museum-caliber exhibitions that connect Mexico City to a global conversation.

The roster bridges historic and contemporary voices-among them Daniel Buren, Jannis Kounellis, Damien Hirst, Bosco Sodi, Perla Krauze, and Gabriel O'Shea-with shows that favor bold installations and precise curatorial framing. Beyond its San Rafael headquarters, the gallery operates a space in Madrid and runs the experimental platform Cuarto de Máquinas (by appointment). There's also a presentation space in Condesa, underscoring its city-wide footprint.


Location: SAN RAFAEL

10

LAGO ALGO

On the shore of Lago Mayor in Chapultepec's Second Section, LagoAlgo is a hybrid cultural center where contemporary art and gastronomy meet inside a mid-century modern landmark. The building-an iconic hyperbolic-paraboloid structure by architect Alfonso Ramírez Ponce-was thoughtfully revitalized, turning its sweeping concrete shells and lakeside terraces into dramatic galleries and gathering spaces.

Exhibitions unfold as curated ?chapters,? mixing large-scale installations, design presentations, talks, and performance. The program often bridges Mexico's scene with international voices, while the on-site restaurant Lago makes the visit feel like a full-day experience: see an exhibition, then linger by the water over a long lunch or early dinner.

More than a gallery, LagoAlgo functions as a civic living room-an airy, light-filled space that opens the park's modernist heritage to a broad audience and keeps the city's creative pulse front and center.


Location: BOSQUE DE CHAPULTEPEC

1

KURIMANZUTTO

Located in San Miguel Chapultepec, Kurimanzutto is one of Mexico City's most influential contemporary art galleries. Founded in 1999 by José Kuri and Mónica Manzutto, it began as a nomadic project that staged exhibitions in unconventional spaces across the city. This spirit of experimentation remains alive today in its industrial-style warehouse, where artists are given freedom to transform the space into immersive environments.

The gallery represents many of Mexico's leading contemporary voices-such as Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, and Dr. Lakra-alongside international artists who share a conceptual and boundary-pushing approach. Exhibitions often blur the line between art and life, making a visit to Kurimanzutto feel less like entering a gallery and more like stepping into a laboratory of ideas.

Beyond its shows, Kurimanzutto has become a cultural hub where artists, collectors, and curious visitors connect. If you want to experience the nerve center of Mexico City's contemporary art scene, this is where to start.


Location: SAN MIGUEL CHAPULTEPEC

2

OMR

In the heart of Roma Norte, OMR has been a cornerstone of Mexico City's contemporary art scene since the 1980s. Housed in a restored neoclassical building, the gallery balances architectural elegance with bold, forward-looking exhibitions. Walking through its high-ceilinged halls, you sense both the weight of history and the energy of constant renewal.

OMR represents a roster of Mexican and international artists known for pushing boundaries across mediums-painting, installation, photography, and video. Figures like Pia Camil, Iván Navarro, and Candida Höfer have found in OMR a platform that bridges local creativity with global conversations.

More than just a space for exhibitions, OMR feels like a dialogue between Mexico's artistic past and its cutting-edge present. For visitors seeking to understand why Mexico City has become a global destination for art, OMR offers one of the clearest answers.


Location: ROMA NORTE

3

OLIVIA FOUNDATION

Housed in a beautifully restored early-20th-century mansion in Roma Norte, Olivia Foundation is a private art space devoted to postwar and contemporary abstraction, with a particular focus on female artists. Founded by collectors Jana and Guillermo González, the foundation brings together works that explore color, materiality, and form across painting, sculpture, and installation.

The house itself was reimagined by renowned architects Alberto Kalach and Carlos Zedillo, who transformed its domestic interiors into luminous galleries while preserving the elegance of the original structure. The result is a setting where art feels both intimate and monumental, offering visitors a rare chance to experience significant works up close.

Olivia Foundation is not a commercial gallery but rather a curatorial project, with exhibitions designed to spark dialogue and reflection. Visits are arranged by appointment, making the experience feel private and tailored-more like entering a collector's home than stepping into a traditional gallery.


Location: ROMA NORTE

4

GALERÍA DE ARTE MEXICANO

Founded in 1935, Galería de Arte Mexicano-better known as GAM-is the oldest gallery of its kind in Mexico and a landmark of the country's art history. From its beginnings, it played a crucial role in giving visibility to the great masters of the 20th century: Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rufino Tamayo, and Frida Kahlo all exhibited here. Walking into GAM is like stepping into the origins of Mexico's gallery scene.

Today, the gallery continues to present a refined program that bridges Mexico's artistic legacy with contemporary practices. Its exhibitions range from established names to mid-career artists who expand the language of painting, sculpture, and mixed media, ensuring that GAM remains relevant nearly a century after its founding.

What sets GAM apart is its sense of continuity: few places in Mexico City allow you to see how the country's art market and cultural discourse evolved from muralism to the present day. It's a space where history and modernity overlap in an elegant, understated setting.


Location: SAN MIGUEL CHAPULTEPEC

5

KöNIG GALERIE

The Berlin-based König Galerie brought its bold, international vision to Mexico City in 2022, choosing a striking modernist building in La Condesa as its home. With concrete walls, soaring ceilings, and dramatic light, the space feels tailor-made for immersive, large-scale installations.

The gallery showcases many of König's celebrated international artists-among them Claudia Comte, Alicja Kwade, and Katharina Grosse-while also opening dialogue with Mexico's own contemporary art scene. Exhibitions here are known for their scale and ambition, often transforming the space into an environment that feels more like architecture than display.

König Galerie México adds a distinctly European perspective to the city's creative landscape. For visitors, it's a chance to see how one of Berlin's most influential galleries adapts its daring curatorial style to the rhythm and energy of Condesa.


Location: CONDESA

6

CASA WABI - SABINO

In the industrial neighborhood of Atlampa, Sabino 336 is the Mexico City headquarters of the Casa Wabi Foundation, created by artist Bosco Sodi. The building was designed by Mexican architect Alberto Kalach, who transformed a raw, concrete-and-brick structure into a striking cultural space. Its spacious interiors and rooftop garden make it one of the city's most distinctive sites for contemporary art.

Unlike a commercial gallery, Sabino 336 functions as a foundation space: exhibitions, workshops, and community programs are central to its mission. Large halls allow for ambitious installations and experimental projects, often featuring collaborations between Mexican and international artists.

What sets Sabino 336 apart is its philosophy. Casa Wabi, true to its origins in Oaxaca, is guided by the idea of dialogue between art and community. In Atlampa, this means bringing world-class exhibitions into a working-class neighborhood, creating encounters that feel both inclusive and transformative.


Location: ATLAMPA

7

AGO PROJECTS

Located in the Juárez neighborhood, AGO Projects blurs the line between art and design. Founded by Rudy Fritsch and Rodman Primack, the gallery has become a key platform for collectible design in Mexico City, presenting furniture, objects, and installations that function as both everyday pieces and works of art.

AGO Projects is celebrated for highlighting Latin American design and placing it in dialogue with global contemporary practices. Many of its exhibitions emerge from collaborations between designers, architects, and artisans, often using wood, stone, and textiles in ways that feel both experimental and rooted in tradition.

The space itself is conceived more like a living environment than a conventional gallery: each exhibition creates a setting where art and design interact, inviting visitors to imagine how these objects might shape real life. For anyone exploring the intersections of craft, design, and contemporary art, AGO Projects is a must.


Location: JUÁREZ

8

PROYECTOS MONCLOVA

Founded in 2005, Proyectos Monclova has become one of Mexico City's most influential contemporary art galleries. Its venue in Polanco provides the scale and flexibility for ambitious exhibitions that bring together both Mexican and international artists.

The gallery represents a wide spectrum of voices-from modern masters like Manuel Felguérez, Ángela Gurría, Helen Escobedo, and Eduardo Terrazas, to contemporary figures such as Gabriel de la Mora, Edgar Orlaineta, and the collective Tercerunquinto. This balance between historical and current practices makes Proyectos Monclova a key space to understand the evolution of Mexican art.

Exhibitions here are recognized for their conceptual depth and visual impact, often bridging different generations and disciplines. A visit offers insight into how Mexico's artistic heritage continues to expand into new and experimental territories.


Location: POLANCO

9

GALERíA HILARIO GALGUERA

Housed in an early-20th-century manor in San Rafael, Galería Hilario Galguera opened in 2006 (founded by Hilario Galguera and Rosa María Ortega) with Damien Hirst's landmark show La muerte de Dios-often cited as Hirst's first exhibition in Latin America. Since then, the gallery has focused on concept-driven, museum-caliber exhibitions that connect Mexico City to a global conversation.

The roster bridges historic and contemporary voices-among them Daniel Buren, Jannis Kounellis, Damien Hirst, Bosco Sodi, Perla Krauze, and Gabriel O'Shea-with shows that favor bold installations and precise curatorial framing. Beyond its San Rafael headquarters, the gallery operates a space in Madrid and runs the experimental platform Cuarto de Máquinas (by appointment). There's also a presentation space in Condesa, underscoring its city-wide footprint.


Location: SAN RAFAEL

10

LAGO ALGO

On the shore of Lago Mayor in Chapultepec's Second Section, LagoAlgo is a hybrid cultural center where contemporary art and gastronomy meet inside a mid-century modern landmark. The building-an iconic hyperbolic-paraboloid structure by architect Alfonso Ramírez Ponce-was thoughtfully revitalized, turning its sweeping concrete shells and lakeside terraces into dramatic galleries and gathering spaces.

Exhibitions unfold as curated ?chapters,? mixing large-scale installations, design presentations, talks, and performance. The program often bridges Mexico's scene with international voices, while the on-site restaurant Lago makes the visit feel like a full-day experience: see an exhibition, then linger by the water over a long lunch or early dinner.

More than a gallery, LagoAlgo functions as a civic living room-an airy, light-filled space that opens the park's modernist heritage to a broad audience and keeps the city's creative pulse front and center.


Location: BOSQUE DE CHAPULTEPEC