There are many paintings in the museum by artists who are not as well known outside of Mexico. However, I have been to so many art exhibits down here that many of the names have become familiar to me. And perhaps, if you have been reading my blog long enough, they might be familiar to you too.
A Retired Teacher in Mexico City
CDMX
Sunday, March 8, 2026
More from the Museum of Modern Art
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Mexican Masters
The last time I was at the Museum of Modern Art in Mexico City, I was quite upset. Most of the museum's galleries were being used for temporary exhibits. There was just one small space for a dozen or two paintings from their permanent collection. I thought that any tourist coming to the museum to see the richness of Mexican art would have been sorely disappointed.
When I went to the museum last week to see the Gelman exhibit (see my previous two entries), I found that a much larger portion of their permanent collection was on display. It's probably a fraction of their holdings. (Most museums have only a portion of their collections on exhibit.) However, it definitely gives visitors a much better overview of 20th century Mexican art, especially with the Gelman collection to supplement it.
The so-called "Big Three" of Mexican muralism... David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera, and José Clemente Orozco... were well represented with smaller format works.
Friday, March 6, 2026
More from the Gelman Exhibit
Here are more paintings from the Gelman collection now on display at Mexico City's Museum of Modern Art...
Thursday, March 5, 2026
An Important Exhibit
What is arguably the most important art exhibit of the year has opened at Mexico City's Museum of Modern Art... works from the Gelman Santander Collection. Jacques Gelman was a wealthy Russian who fled the country during the October Revolution of 1917. He worked as a photographer and movie distributor. He was in Mexico when World War II broke out and found himself stranded there. He stayed and began a successful career as a producer of Mexican films.
Gelman and his wife Natasha were avid art collectors, and during their years in Mexico they became friends with many of the most important Mexican painters. After their deaths their European collection was donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and their Mexican art, one of the most important private collections in the world, ended up with the Santander Foundation in Spain. Now the artwork has come home for a show which will run until May 26th.
For anyone with an interest in Frida Kahlo, this exhibit is a "must". Oddly enough, there is very little of Kahlo's work on display in Mexico City. At this show I saw more of her paintings than I had ever seen before.