Mexico City: visiting Lago Algo, Material Art Fair, Polanco art galleries, & Bosco Sodi's studio...

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Mexico City: visiting Lago Algo, Material Art Fair, Polanco art galleries, & Bosco Sodi's studio...
    This is the final video documenting my most recent trip to Mexico city and it’s jam-packed! I have two other videos from this trip (although you can watch them in any order) which you can access via the links below.
    Mexico City, video 1: • Arriving in Mexico Cit...
    Mexico City, video 2: • Mexico City: the most ...
    Details about everything mentioned can be found below.
    #mexicocity #cdmxart #art
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ARTISTS & EXHIBITS
    Desert Flood, Lago Algo: bit.ly/3ygGPZf
    Material Art Fair: bit.ly/3ZL0AUM
    Tunji Adeniyi-Jones, Morán Morán: bit.ly/3Zprrpw
    Michael Sailstorfer, Proyectos Monclova: bit.ly/3IW8qnp
    Josué Mejía, Proyectos Monclova: bit.ly/3yiDZmO
    PLACES
    Bosque de Chapultepec: bit.ly/3ST23WE
    Lago Algo: bit.ly/3SU5Ens
    Lago Algo Exhibition Reservations: bit.ly/3mqP6r0
    Café Nin : bit.ly/3JoRhEq
    Rosetta: bit.ly/41XtWRD
    Bosco Sodi Studio Reservations: bit.ly/3Jiw9zI
    Casa Wabi: bit.ly/3F4dchQ
    Biblioteca Vasconcelos: bit.ly/3kQXpvU
    WHAT I’M WEARING
    Day 1
    Jeans (Troy Horse wash): bit.ly/417LmdX
    White Tank: bit.ly/3Jr3NmU
    Striped Button-up: bit.ly/3l6v2tw
    Chuck Taylor All-star Classics: bit.ly/3L9Ic3y
    Day 2
    Cashmere T-shirt: bit.ly/3EMtKL2
    Jeans (Troy Horse wash): bit.ly/417LmdX
    Ballet Flats: bit.ly/3YG4TAt
    Trench Coat: bit.ly/3kFDH67
    Bag: bit.ly/3EpXXiF
    Day 3
    Silk-blend T-shirt: bit.ly/3F44NLh
    501 90’s women jean (similar): bit.ly/3SYZxyl
    Leather Slingback Shoes: bit.ly/3J3DmSO
    Bag: bit.ly/3EpXXiF
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    MUSIC
    Imminent Storm, Daniel Kaede: www.epidemicso...
    Covered Bridge, American Legion: www.epidemicso...
    Lost Tales of Catalonia: www.epidemicso...
    Anamnesis, Daniel Kaede: www.epidemicso...
    Changing Tides, Daniel Kaede: www.epidemicso...
    Marigold Spring, Daniel Kaede: www.epidemicso...
    The music in my videos is from Epidemic Sound, a subscription based, royalty free music sharing site
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    WHERE YOU CAN FOLLOW ME
    INSTAGRAM
    / mary_lynn_buchanan
    PINTEREST
    / marylynnbuchananart
    WEBSITE
    www.marylynnbu...
    ------------------------------------­­---------------------------------------­-­------------------
    OTHER VIDEOS YOU MAY LIKE
    Arriving in Mexico City, visiting Zonamaco Art Fair, touring new gallery spaces and more…: • Arriving in Mexico Cit...
    Mexico City: the most beautiful art galleries, my favorite places to eat, shop and more...: • Mexico City: the most ...
    ------------------------------------­­---------------------------------------­-­------------------
    Disclaimer: Some links above may be affiliate links

Комментарии • 35

  • @sesvaoffice8331
    @sesvaoffice8331 Год назад +17

    these videos of mexico are astounding. they reveal mexico to be a culturally sophisticated society with amazing aesthetic awareness . in australia we only ever hear about drug cartel violence and human trafficking and tacos. so thank yo for this enlightenment.

    • @danmur2797
      @danmur2797 Год назад

      What you just described is by design. And its played out to great effect. Mexico as New Spain during the colonial period was the most important state in the Americas--culturally, economically (minted the Imperial Spanish global reserve currency with silver largely sourced within Mexico, maintained trade with east Asia and other points for the empire), militarily up into 1800. It in fact helped the American Revolutionaries fend of the British off its southern colonies during the American War of Independence. And Mexico had its first university and printing press a full century before Harvard was founded in the U.S.
      I live in the U.S., but lived in Mexico intermittently. I can tell you what actually happens in Mexico, what I experienced, and what the media there shows is vastly different than what the U.S. covers Mexico as abroad.
      What largely happened was in the 1960s the CIA established funding to pay news media outlets to print stories that portrayed Mexico as "dangerous and chaotic". This was before cartels existed. And this funding was actually factually real. It was uncovered by journalists investigating the CIA. They might in fact still have this ongoing. The U.S. is not the only country to do this though. Nearly all major countries do this. MI6 and the BBC were caught in a scandal doing the same in Eastern Europe--both before the end of the Cold War and after. Particularly with points against Russia (and I'm no fan of Russia)--why the Russians in recent years required foreign journalists to register as foreign agents. Russia is not innocent either though--they do the same through their news services like RT, etc. and why RT was banned from RUclips.
      It seems spycraft and journalism goes hand in hand.
      Britain in recent years picked up on similar trends in journalism covering Mexico, and France as well. Most mainstream news media in fact abroad now only focuses on these issues in Mexico absent everything else cultural or scientific happening in a country of 130 million people and a member of the G20 (largest economies), and OECD industrialized countries.
      It's not to say some of the issues covered by foreign media are not true. But it's the equivalent of focusing on crime and only crime in any one country. As I said Mexico has a large population and is a very large geographic country. It would be like judging Australia in safety, by say focusing on issues in Sydney, while what's happening in Perth is a world apart.
      Take everything in the major media with a grain of salt. Because there are agendas sometimes where there are not supposed to be. Unfortunate but that's the world, or at least a passing world where I hope things will be different in the future.

    • @sesvaoffice8331
      @sesvaoffice8331 Год назад

      Thank you for this information. I've always wanted to travel to Mexico but have been too scared. I need to reconsider. And, more so after recently seeing Linda Rondstad singing La Cigarra with an amazing Mariachi band. @@danmur2797

  • @licorice71
    @licorice71 Год назад +3

    Cdmx ROCKS! THANK YOU

  • @spiritualawareness7736
    @spiritualawareness7736 Год назад +2

    México city is w giant city I remember when i used to live there, along time ago now for what i see is even bigger and better, there's endless things to do in Mexico city from the museums, to the ar geological sites to the nightlife in Mexico city is wow

  • @alphajava761
    @alphajava761 Год назад +3

    Thanks Mary. These spaces have been incredible. I could sit and analyze that wall drawing and the brick piece at the end for hours. I used to travel a lot and my part of my comfort from the chaos of travel was exploring great food. I didn't have time for much else. Mexico's art and gallery spaces were a pleasant surprise here. Safe travels.

  • @AM-yi4dd
    @AM-yi4dd 2 месяца назад

    Wow, thanks great video 👍🏼🇺🇸

  • @maskdaniel
    @maskdaniel Год назад +2

    had to laugh at the trees. And then what...just b/c you can? And that one piece looked so much like an Elizabeth Murray sculpture. A monument to the book or Sol Lewitt. Good for you. The weather looks awesome. TY.

    • @bbgunn917
      @bbgunn917 Год назад

      Heatwave here atm. Even by Mex standards it's hot

  • @artvaultcalif
    @artvaultcalif Год назад +2

    This video was outstanding! Thank you so much for the hard work.

  • @startreker8591
    @startreker8591 Год назад

    Love her smile her voice the way she educates y the way she walk in blue jeans y etc ty❤😂🎉

  • @eenkjet
    @eenkjet 4 месяца назад

    I love the Erte' inspired pieces.

  • @chrisedwick
    @chrisedwick Год назад +1

    thank you, that was fascinating! really enjoyed.

  • @thedesigneral-obaydai-zy1do
    @thedesigneral-obaydai-zy1do Год назад

    An amazing when talking about the artworks in your own viewpoints as a magical touch.

  • @kathleenwalsh4843
    @kathleenwalsh4843 Год назад

    I am in love with Mexico City now. Thanks for sharing you beautiful videos of this incredible place, art and commentary.

  • @chantalrochon3566
    @chantalrochon3566 Год назад

    Blowen away by this visual art visit. Merci! Du fond du cœur ♥️

  • @alanclayton9277
    @alanclayton9277 Год назад +1

    Well Mexico City has really shone in these videos and beautifully filmed as well. That library was insane. The long format recently has allowed for comprehensive showcasing of the art but also for giving us a sense of place.
    I think people might be more thoughtful when you're trying to film though, walking in front of you, putting their feet in shot
    How inconsiderate 😏.

  • @TD-qi2rw
    @TD-qi2rw Год назад +1

    Great work, as always !! See if you can find online..... the current sculpture that is shown on the outside deck of the Art Institute of Chicago. The Modern wing outside deck. It's so beautiful , you would love it and the installation. I haven't seen better....so poignant.

  • @RomanVaughan-Williams
    @RomanVaughan-Williams Год назад +2

    Would be interesting to see some more artists studio visits ?!

  • @phillblake6829
    @phillblake6829 Год назад

    The trees 😂 almost as bad as the denim tunnel 😂 it’s amazing what passes as creativity in modern times

  • @spiritualawareness7736
    @spiritualawareness7736 Год назад

    Chapultepec Park is giant y remendar that my dad and mom used to take us in Sunday and we always were in a different part of the park

  • @phillblake6829
    @phillblake6829 Год назад

    I love this channel.

  • @williampaquet6573
    @williampaquet6573 Год назад

    There's a wealth of great contemporary realism today, though sadly few galleries showcase it. You should explore some of it.

  • @MichaelRyanMoss
    @MichaelRyanMoss 11 месяцев назад

    10:16 It's the Pyroraptor from Jurassic World: Dominion.

  • @spiritualawareness7736
    @spiritualawareness7736 Год назад +1

    In Mexico is very easy to make friends there's all the different social groups in Mexico city from the Intellectual groups, bars, places, to LGBT groups all kind of people

  • @MsCaleb79
    @MsCaleb79 Год назад

    I remember one artist in Mexico. He made posters and advertized a free metallica concert, and thousends of people came, but there was no concert. They all became angry and disapointed, and rioted. Now its banned to put up fake posters like that.

  • @mementomatrix
    @mementomatrix Год назад +1

    busca a Avelina Lesper

  • @ホルスの目
    @ホルスの目 Год назад +2

    HAHAHAHA

  • @salomaomachado340
    @salomaomachado340 Год назад

    Muito bom. Salomão Lidolfo may neme, quero informa-la de meu trabalho. Qual seu zap business. Brasil, escultor. Sou seu seguidor.

  • @ricardobenavides4114
    @ricardobenavides4114 Год назад

    Mexican art super complex and super modern. Thats why they dont have contemporary recognized artists! It is like If they want to say to the world that they want to belong to a certain artistic circle! And they are ignoring their originality and identity.

    • @danmur2797
      @danmur2797 Год назад

      Mexico is not ignoring anything. Mexico has been a country of artists for hundreds of years. And it is a cultural blend of both new world and old world originality. It has some of the most stunning cathedrals in the world, going back hundreds of years, and artwork, musical composition, etc. that rivals any major European country. The problem is that it's little known outside Mexico. In part because while Europe peaked with these in the 1800s and early 1900s, Mexico was beset by nearly a century of wars and foreign interventions from the U.S. and France--twice each, after their independence in the 1800s.
      So contemporary Mexican art has simply followed the trajectory that any other European/western country has.
      That's why there is an abundance of this.
      It's not ignoring anything, it's just a natural progression from where it's already been.

  • @steveb1ish
    @steveb1ish Год назад +2

    Michael Sailstorfer reminds me of herb brushes i make to baste a steak, pork chop etc...

  • @spiritualawareness7736
    @spiritualawareness7736 Год назад

    I really can't understand art and i belive that people neither underhand it only pretend to understand but in reality art is subjective