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4.0 (3 reviews)
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Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Inside Casa Cecil O'Gorman

Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera

4.3(19 reviews)
0.8 kmSan Ángel

Great surprise after a disappointing cross-town trip to the Museum and home of Frida Kahlo…read more One gets to walk through the entire complex and get up close and personal with Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo memorabilia. The grounds are open without a ticket for sitting around and chatting, but you'll need a ticket to get into the buildings. The location is amazing. I'm not an art expert, but one can get a very good feeling for the creative environment in this quiet Mexico City neighborhood.

Visiting Museo Casa Kahlo on a Sunday morning piqued my interest in learning more about Frida Kahlo…read moreand Diego Riviera's lives as artists, so that same afternoon I headed here--Museo Casa Estudio Diego Riviera y Frida Kahlo--to see where inspirations materialized into physicality. This location comprised of a set of personal working art studios, each with a bespoke structure customized to suit his or her creative outlets. On a cloudy Sunday afternoon around 2pm in January, these former artists' lofts were busy though not uncomfortably crowded. Sunday is their free admission day and the only reason I think the location wasn't more full, was due to a sprinkling rain on and off. While they don't require tickets they ask for visitors to sign a guest book as they enter the premises, after which you're free to roam around. There are three main structures--the studios of each respective artists and another built by a Mexican architect, who I believe as a friend of the couple. They aren't large, each would take maybe 10 minutes to walk thru, the studio of Diego Riviera being the most popular due to the resetting of furniture and decorative elements simulating the setup when he used to create works here. Visitors can go up to the roof too, which is a few stories up, though take care since there are no high side railings and it's a three story drop down. Around the exterior ground floor there are a few larger descriptive plaques on the history and purposes of each building and Diego and Frida's career and personal timeline as well. Inside each building there are smaller signs with the majority in Spanish. It took about 30 minutes to get thru both as I didn't try to translate and read thru many of these. Inside Riviera's studio, it was cool to see some displays of different items Diego collected as inspiration for his art, everything from ceramic serving ware to terracotta artifacts from early native settlements, to paper mache sculptures, paintings and mobiles. Kahlo's studio was used as more of a gallery space featuring a small exhibit on Hungarian photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in Mexico City in the mid 20th century. O'Gorman's building showed some architectural background and small-scale models of these three buildings and a handful of his conceptual and preparatory work for this project in particular. At the end of the day not sure if this location is a "must see" on your first trip, though I appreciated the context it provided for understanding more about these two artists! For more info: https://inba.gob.mx/sitios/recorridos-virtuales/casa-estudio-diego-rivera-frida-kahlo/

Photos
Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Frida Kahlo's studio - exhibit on visual editor and photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in CDMX in the 20th century

Frida Kahlo's studio - exhibit on visual editor and photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in CDMX in the 20th century

Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Info on Casa Cecil O'Gorman - designed by Juan O'Gorman

Info on Casa Cecil O'Gorman - designed by Juan O'Gorman

Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Cactus photo op :)

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Cactus photo op :)

Plaza San Jacinto - Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Plaza San Jacinto

4.4(9 reviews)
0.3 kmSan Ángel
$$$

We didn't make it to the San Ángel neighborhood when we visited Mexico City for the first time in…read more2023, but we visited a couple of weeks ago when we returned to Mexico City. It's a lovely neighborhood - well worth a visit for people visiting the city. One of the reason it's so great? Plaza San Jacinto. The plaza is traditional, with a fountain in the center and paths leading to it from each corner and side of the plaza. With plenty of trees, benches, and people, it's a great place for a walk/stroll or to sit on a bench and listen to music or read or people watch. But the highlight of a visit to Plaza San Jacinto? Every Saturday, it hosts the Bazaar Sábado - a traditional market of hundreds of artists, artisans, and sellers of almost everything you can imagine. We were lucky to be walking through the Plaza around 6pm on a Saturday (the market is from 10am-7pm every Saturday), and it was such a treat. But on every side of the Plaza are gorgeous buildings that house shops, restaurants, and a museum (Museo Casa del Risco), making the Plaza and its surroundings a great place to spend a few hours!

Plaza San Jacinto is just a twenty-minute walk from the Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera y Frida…read moreKahlo and visiting both makes for a great Saturday. The Saturday artist market in the plaza always includes a wealth of talented painters lining the pathways although kitsch and craft has crept in since tourists discovered the market. I still deeply regret not buying a fantastic almost-abstract landscape painting years ago and that stayed in my mind as I strolled through the plaza and the thin stone streets of San Ángel.

Photos
Plaza San Jacinto - Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Plaza San Jacinto - Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Plaza San Jacinto - Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

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Setting up for the Saturday market in Plaza San Jacinto

Museo Frida Kahlo - Entrance

Museo Frida Kahlo

4.3(339 reviews)
3.6 kmCoyoacán

This is a top place to visit and is in the more relaxed area in Coyoacán. You have to buy tickets…read moreahead of time online and weeks or months ahead. There is no ticket booth and we saw people come and ask for same day tickets and they were turned away. The house is a nice place with a garden along with Fridas art and memorabilia. I didn't know much about her other than she was an artist. They explain a lot and I learned that she had a German father. Put this on your list when you visit Mexico City. But your tickets directly from the official website they are much cheaper than the third party tickets.

An excellent, educational, understandably crowded monument to a great talent, cut down too soon. I…read moredidn't know much at all about Frida Kahlo until preparing to visit. Tickets are for timed entry and there are many discounts so purchase ahead. There are 2 buildings (house and museum) as well as a courtyard, cafe and shop. Free, well maintained restrooms (bring a coin to tip). Because of the crowds (10:45a ticket on a Thursday), it's a bit difficult to take in everything that is included in each room. Her Art, (as well as some by others about her), diaries, letters, household and art collection as well as some videos are included and well notated. The second building, labeled as Dresses, contained much more. Definitely recommend. Really stars for content but I think it's oversold.

Photos
Museo Frida Kahlo
Museo Frida Kahlo - Entering the Casa Azul

Entering the Casa Azul

Museo Frida Kahlo

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Huerto Roma Verde

Huerto Roma Verde

4.7(6 reviews)
8.4 kmRoma Sur
$$

This was such an amazing find. We were finishing up our Eat Mexico street food tour, and we had…read morebeen visiting with our tour guide, Sofia. When she heard my husband had been a professional organic farmer and gardener, and our tour was ending just across the street, she sent us here. We were amazed to find this amazing urban collective in the middle of Roma. The giant tower you see in my pictures if made of water bottles. There are numerous yurts, pavilions, fire pits, rain collection systems, gardens, and so so much more throughout the large area. When we were there, in the late afternoon, a group of people were building a large pavilion, a few college age folks presided over a small group of school age children, a preschool age group was just finishing up, and people were beginning to arrive for a composting class. It was amazing to learn a little bit about the story of the place, the area purchased by local residents after it had been turned into a dump after the earthquake in 1985. They restored the area and made it what they wanted, an amazing area in the very heart of CDMX. It was also so cool that we could just wander in, walk around, and no one minded or cared. Everyone seemed to be happy, pleasant, and working toward some cool project. It seemed very utopian and I'm sure that's what they are going for. Thanks for letting us come in and check it out.

Photos
Huerto Roma Verde - Haciendo pan en el horno de leña

Haciendo pan en el horno de leña

Huerto Roma Verde
Huerto Roma Verde - An adorably tiny tea shop.

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An adorably tiny tea shop.

Carpa Geodésica - arts - Updated May 2026

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