October 2025

ART & ARCHITECTURE DERIVES

Designing the Modern Nation: Social Art and Architecture

Viridiana Zavala Rivera

>>
Designing the Modern Nation: Social Art and Architecture

Conversation with Viridiana Zavala Rivera

  • Saturday, October 25, 2025
  • 13:00h
  • At Arte Abierto | 2nd floor ARTZ
  • Free admission

>>
No registration required.

There was a time in Mexico when architecture and social art became pillars of the State’s actions to guarantee access to education and literacy. We go back to the 1940s, when architects and artists actively participated in policies oriented toward the common good and the desired national progress. Modernist architects and printmakers of the era captured Mexican reality in materials and graphics, and their practices shaped schools, educational programs, and literacy projects that sought to transform the country.

Through a review of archives, graphics, and publications, we will articulate a narrative about the implications that architecture and art can have on the configuration of a country and its citizens. An invitation to reflect—from the present—on how space and image have been tools of social construction.

>>

Dr. Viridiana Zavala Rivera
She completed her doctoral and master’s studies in the Postgraduate Program in Art History at UNAM. She is a professor at the Industrial Design Research Center at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and a member of the National System of Researchers (SNII). She is part of international study networks on Material Culture in Latin America, a member of the Object Kingdom Laboratory at CIDI, and the permanent university seminar Art + Science at UNAM. She has been the director of the design, fashion, and art collection MatterMatters, based in Mexico City since 2024.

She has also been a professor of Industrial Design History at the School of Architecture and Design for Latin America and the Caribbean in Panama since 2016, and has conducted research stays at institutions and universities in the US and Germany. She is an active researcher who has participated in various publications, books, colloquia, and conferences, as well as interdisciplinary projects with Latin American universities. Between 2015 and 2017, she was part of the curatorial team of the Museo Jumex in Mexico City. Between 2021 and 2024, she was Head of Documentation and Cultural Archive at Nouvel.

@viryzavalar

Arte Abierto continues with its new public program Derivas de Arte y Arquitectura (Art & Architecture Derives), which seeks to renew our gaze on the architectural legacy of Mexico City. From a series of talks focused on rescuing the parallel stories of emblematic architectural projects and public spaces that have witnessed the variable intersection between art and architecture. In this first stage, the program deals mainly with modern architecture, based on a series of talks given by invited curators, architects, artists and urban planners.

With this program, ways of returning to architecture part of its public, experiential, collective character and close to those of us who inhabit the city are tested, recognizing in it its condition as a living archive. From these talks, circumstances, contexts and anecdotes are revealed that have been part of his sensitive memory and that complement his material memory, a relationship that often escapes documentary narratives and academic accounts.

The objective of the Derives is to generate experiences of spatial rediscovery, which allow us to renew our gaze on the legacy of certain emblematic architectural and artistic works, as well as those that have been forgotten.

The derives will be carried out free of charge on the last Saturday of each month, at 1:00 p.m. with a limited capacity.

Arte Abierto Derives :

February 26: Tania Ragasol / Entorno urbano, cotidianidad y arte: La Torre de los Vientos by Gonzalo Fonseca

March 26 : David Miranda / Del Animal Herido y otros eventos escultóricos dentro de la arquitectura moderna

April 23: Gustavo Lipkau y Xavier Hierro / Integración plástica de los edificios del campus central de CU: sus murales

May 28: Marisol Argüelles / La casa-estudio Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo. Del espacio doméstico a la dimensión de lo público

June 25: Luis Javier de la Torre/ La Ruta de la Amistad MÉXICO68… más allá de 1968

July 30: Aldo Solano/ Architecture for playing in 20th Century Mexico City.

August 27: Christian del Castillo/ Tracing the modern in the architecture of the Historic Center of Mexico City.

September 24: Juan José Kochen/ The Ideal of the Multifamily Apartment cComplex.

October 29: Tania Candiani/ Quantum Prelude. Sound activation by Tania Candiani.

March 25: Ana Garduño/ Cultural Geographies: The invention of museum circuits in 20th century Mexico City.

May 27: Rebeca Barquera/ The Plastic Integration Movement México: More than murals on buildings.

June 17: Julián Arroyo Cetto/ Max Cetto in the beginning of El Pedregal.

July 29: Peter Kriegel/ The eco-aesthetics of El Pedregal and constructive botany in the megacity of Mexico.

August 26: Arturo Rivera García y Roberto Bustamante Castrejón/ Jardines del Pedregal Legacy: Memory and Identity.

September 30: Tonatiuh Martínez/ The garden as an extension of nature.

October 21: Lorena Botello/ Clara Porset’s Design: Between Tradition and Modernity.

March 23: Alejandro Ochoa Vega y Francisco Haroldo Alfaro Salazar/ Cinemas in Mexico in the 20th Century: Distant Spaces in Memory.

April 20: Rodrigo Torres Ramos / Pictorial Functionalism: The proposal for plastic integration of Mario Pani and Carlos Mérida.

June 22: María Bustamante Harfush / Public work and collective housing by Abraham Zabludovsky.

July 27: Veka Duncan / El Art Déco en México. La nacionalización de la modernidad.

August 31: Balam Bartolomé / Visiones del Altépetl caído: Un relato de Tlatelolco desde el arte.

October 19: José Ignacio Lanzagorta / The sixties and the christening of the Zona Rosa.

November 23: Eder Castillo & Arturo Ortiz Struck / GuggenSITO beyond the unfolding cube. Public art and interactivity.

March 29: Ximena Apisdorf / Architecture and museum: The transformation of the Centro Cultural Arte Contemporáneo

April 26: Lorena Botello / A Museum Designed for a Modern Art Collection

May 31: Carlos Rodríguez / Nonoalco in the Cinema, Shadow of Modernity

June 21: Erik Carranza / The cells that no longer explode: in search of an absent bust (that of JFK) and its relationship with GoSk8Day (June 21) in the Jardín Balbuena neighborhood

July 26: Rocío Martínez Barrera / Vladimir Kaspé: Architecture as a whole

August 23: Elisa Drago Quaglia / The Madman Pallares: A Futurist in Mexico

September 27: Uriel Vides Bautista / Vibrant and Provocative San Juan de Letrán

October 25: Viridiana Zavala Rivera / Designing the Modern Nation: Social Art and Architecture

Arquicinema: Mexico City through film

4 talks · 4 movies · 4 expert voices

Arte Abierto, in collaboration with FundarqMx, presents a new edition of Arquicinema, a meeting place for film and architecture, this time entitled “Mexico City through Film.”

Over four special sessions, this program offers interdisciplinary lectures that explore how architecture influences cinematic narrative and how, in turn, cinema becomes a tool for observing and understanding the urban, social, and landscape environment of Mexico City.

Through the analysis of selected scenes from key films—from Luis Buñuel’s classics to the contemporary vision of Alfonso Cuarón—specialists in architecture, urban history, and visual culture will invite us to reflect on how the city’s built spaces are also narrative, symbolic, and emotional spaces.

This series seeks to open an interdisciplinary dialogue and generate a space for exchange on the role of architecture in the cinematic representation of the city.

Arquicinema: Mexico City Through Film proposes looking at cinema through the lens of architecture and vice versa, as a way to explore the connections between built space, urban identity, and the narratives that define us.

>>

OCT.09+OCT.16+OCT.23+NOV.06.2025

5:00 PM
Free admission
Arte Abierto | 2nd floor, ARTZ

>>

PROGRAM

OCT.09.2025 – Architect María Bustamante Harfush
Los olvidados (Luis Buñuel, 1950)
A critical reading of invisible urban heritage and marginalized peripheries.

OCT.16.2025 – Architect Luis Andrés Palafox
El castillo de la pureza (Arturo Ripstein, 1973)
An architectural and emotional reading of confinement: the home as a symbolic prison and reflection of patriarchal power.

OCT.23.2025 – Arantza Briffault
Mariana, Mariana (Alberto Isaac, 1987)
The architecture of childhood, intimate memory, and everyday life in the city.

NOV.06.2025 – Rodrigo Hidalgo
Roma (Alfonso Cuarón, 2018)
The modern urban landscape as a testament to class, memory, and social transformation.

>>

FUNDARQMX (Fomento Universal para la Difusión Arquitectónica de México A.C.) is an organization dedicated for over a decade to disseminating the value of Mexican architecture and urban planning among diverse audiences through a variety of media, projects, and cultural activities. Its work has been recognized with the 2019 Medal of Arts awarded by the Congress of Mexico City for its outstanding work in support of national architecture.
Primarily integrated of young people committed to architectural culture, FUNDARQMX focuses on the dissemination, documentation, and conservation of architectural and urban heritage. Its activities include events, tours, exhibitions, talks, publications, and the use of digital tools to bring architectural knowledge to society in an accessible and rigorous manner.
www.fundarqmx.org
@fundarqmx