Toward a Mutable Biennial: A System of Visibility That Does Not Depend on a Single Milestone, but on Multiple Resonances

Essay

Toward a Mutable Biennial: A System of Visibility That Does Not Depend on a Single Milestone, but on Multiple Resonances

by Luis Hampshire

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Reading time

6 min

Since its founding, the Rufino Tamayo Biennial has been a crucial device for tracking the evolution of painting in Mexico. More than a competition, it has functioned as a structure through which to read the tensions, drifts, and continuities of a medium that, far from being exhausted, continues to find new ways to breathe. Its origin responded to the need to defend painting at a historical moment when other languages were beginning to displace it—or at least to place it under suspicion. Today, in an ecosystem where painting has expanded into material, conceptual, communal, and process-based territories, that mission becomes more urgent than ever. The question is no longer whether the biennial is still necessary, but how it must transform in order to accompany the present.

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The Sacred Wonder: “Trece Lunas” by Chelsea Culprit at Plataforma

Review

The Sacred Wonder: “Trece Lunas” by Chelsea Culprit at Plataforma

by Maya Renée Escárcega

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Reading time

10 min

We tend to forget that medieval art was not art. We readily acknowledge that megaliths, cave painting, early ceramics, or Paleolithic figurines were not conceived for aesthetic contemplation; this becomes less evident when considering a sculpture of a saint, a retablo, or a reliquary in a cathedral. Their functions were multiple and diverse, ranging from accompanying social life and exalting the spirit to operating as pedagogical tools. Before the notion of autonomous art—formulated in Europe around the fifteenth century and refined in the salons of the eighteenth—images existed because they were necessary and because they were used.

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The Persistence of Fascism: On "Estética del dominio" at the Museo Anahuacalli

Review

The Persistence of Fascism: On "Estética del dominio" at the Museo Anahuacalli

by M.S. Yániz

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Reading time

5 min

Before entering, the Diego Rivera Anahuacalli Museum requires the visitor to shed all ideological prejudices associated with the white cube and its historical role in the Cold War: as a space of “neutrality” for the aesthetic and political deployment of the United States in its struggle with Europe and the rest of the world. The Anahuacalli functions simultaneously as an anthropology museum, a personal archive, a pyramid of worship, and a popular house for cultural encounters. In a space so heavily coded, temporary exhibitions pose a museographic and critical challenge, since one must not only place new objects alongside the thousands already present, but also imagine space where it seems not to exist. The task is one of organizing by subtraction.

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Medium, Voice, Interface… Relation. On “Notas de voz” by Elsa-Louise Manceaux at Museo Jumex

Review

Medium, Voice, Interface… Relation. On “Notas de voz” by Elsa-Louise Manceaux at Museo Jumex

by Mariel Vela

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Reading time

5 min

My cellphone has stopped functioning at optimal speeds due to the vast accumulation of sentimental information: photographs in multiple styles and framings, voice notes overanalyzing romantic and work situations, videos meant to shorten distances, stickers, and spam. Faced with this excess of materialities, one cannot help but wonder what will become of all our personal files. Notas de Voz [Voice Notes] is an installation by artist Elsa-Louise Manceaux at Museo Jumex that also allows information to pass through. Curated by Marielsa Castro, Rosela del Bosque, and Natalia Vargas, the exhibition consists of three paintings onto which typographies are projected—typographies that function as containers for different kinds of messages and words, as well as translations of the artist’s own voice notes. The intimate dimensions of the work become evident the moment we hear gentle intonations—some urgent—and varied accents circulating through the gallery space.

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"War Won’t Work": a Deactivated Utopia. C.S. Valentin at AGO Projects

Review

Dec 19 2025

"War Won’t Work": a Deactivated Utopia. C.S. Valentin at AGO Projects

by Lia Quezada

Labyrinth / Disco Ball. On Manuela Solano’s "Alien Queen/Paraíso Extraño" at the Museo Tamayo

Review

Dec 13 2025

Labyrinth / Disco Ball. On Manuela Solano’s "Alien Queen/Paraíso Extraño" at the Museo Tamayo

by Bruno Enciso

The Wandering Eye, an Abstract and Alchemical Journey at Ambar Quijano

Review

Dec 7 2025

The Wandering Eye, an Abstract and Alchemical Journey at Ambar Quijano

by Carolina Magis Weinberg

y que le digo y que me dice: Future Archaeology and Neo-Prehistory. Summary of our 3rd talk

Article

Dec 5 2025

y que le digo y que me dice: Future Archaeology and Neo-Prehistory. Summary of our 3rd talk

by Sandra Sánchez & Josephine Dorr

"Una que cubre la palabra que la nombra": Luis Camnitzer at LABOR

Review

Dec 1 2025

"Una que cubre la palabra que la nombra": Luis Camnitzer at LABOR

by Jimena Cervantes

pudor espiritual: Aldo Álvarez Tostado at Casa Cristo

Review

Nov 23 2025

pudor espiritual: Aldo Álvarez Tostado at Casa Cristo

by Gabriel Sánchez-Mejorada

Behaving badly: On Ángela de la Cruz’s 'Bulto' at Travesía Cuatro

Review

Nov 16 2025

Behaving badly: On Ángela de la Cruz’s 'Bulto' at Travesía Cuatro

by Constanza Dozal

Every Bow is Bondage – Every Knot is a Breath: On Beauty from Two Drawings by Renato Valdelamar

Essay

Nov 9 2025

Every Bow is Bondage – Every Knot is a Breath: On Beauty from Two Drawings by Renato Valdelamar

by César Esparragoza

y que le digo y que me dice: Bodies in Resistance. Summary of our 2nd talk

Article

Oct 31 2025

y que le digo y que me dice: Bodies in Resistance. Summary of our 2nd talk

by Sandra Sánchez & Josephine Dorr

Temporal Ventaja: Mauro Giaconi at Arte Abierto

Review

Oct 24 2025

Temporal Ventaja: Mauro Giaconi at Arte Abierto

by Constanza Ontiveros Valdés

Eleven Years of Painting in Mexico City at Galería Karen Huber

Essay

Oct 17 2025

Eleven Years of Painting in Mexico City at Galería Karen Huber

by Sandra Sánchez

Salaverna: Ángel Cammen at Bodega OMR

Review

Oct 10 2025

Salaverna: Ángel Cammen at Bodega OMR

by Diego E. Sánchez

Peninsula sowing: On 'Tierra de pocos. Teatralidades y farsas' at Pequod Co.

Review

Oct 2 2025

Peninsula sowing: On 'Tierra de pocos. Teatralidades y farsas' at Pequod Co.

by Dorothée Dupuis

Many Questions, Few Answers: On manual intuitivo…, curated by PETRA at the Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil

Review

Sep 28 2025

Many Questions, Few Answers: On manual intuitivo…, curated by PETRA at the Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil

by Constanza Dozal

A Ghost Walks in Circles: Tahanny Lee Betancourt at Daniela Elbahara Gallery

Review

Sep 19 2025

A Ghost Walks in Circles: Tahanny Lee Betancourt at Daniela Elbahara Gallery

by Mariana Paniagua

Entropy and Friendship: Luis Muñoz’s Curatorship in ‘Fruit of the Doom’

Review

Sep 14 2025

Entropy and Friendship: Luis Muñoz’s Curatorship in ‘Fruit of the Doom’

by M.S. Yániz