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#architecture
Renovation
fromwww.archdaily.com
15 hours ago

House of Light Oaxaca / T804 Arquitectura e Interiorismo Estrategico

Casa Luz is an architectural intervention in Oaxaca that emphasizes local context through materiality, light, and craftsmanship.
Renovation
fromwww.archdaily.com
15 hours ago

House of Light Oaxaca / T804 Arquitectura e Interiorismo Estrategico

Casa Luz is an architectural intervention in Oaxaca that emphasizes local context through materiality, light, and craftsmanship.
Travel
fromThe Mazatlan Post
3 days ago

Why Mazatlan Is a Smart Mexico Getaway for Students

Mazatlán offers an affordable, diverse travel experience for students, combining beach enjoyment with cultural exploration.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
3 days ago

Petroglyphs and cave paintings, some more than 4,000 years old, discovered in Mexico

The discovery comes on the heels of other recent discoveries of Mesoamerican and colonial-era sites and artefacts during archaeological salvage work associated with planning a new 232km passenger rail line between Mexico City and Querétaro.
History
fromHyperallergic
6 days ago

Nikyle Begay Resurrects Century-Old Dine Weavings

Nikyle Begay's weaving practice is rooted in heritage, particularly the twill technique used for saddle blankets, showcasing their ability to reconstruct complex woven patterns. This skill has been pivotal in reviving techniques marginalized by the trading-post economy, which favored regional styles over functional, historic designs.
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Navajo Nation: the fight for cultural survival photo essay

Virginia Brown, a 69-year-old elder, recalls her traumatic experience: 'I was forced into a boarding school when I was six years old. They cut off all our long hair and washed our mouths out with soap if they caught us speaking Navajo.'
Social justice
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Behind the scenes in Mexico's largest Stations of the Cross procession, an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity

The Passion of Christ reenactment in Iztapalapa is a significant cultural event, recognized as Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO.
Miami food
fromTravel + Leisure
2 weeks ago

The Remote Beach Town of Puerto Escondido Is Mexico's Best-kept Secret-With Sumptuous Hotels, a Vibrant Art Scene, and Incredible Beaches

Hurricane damage has enhanced the wave conditions at Zicatela Beach, attracting surfers to Puerto Escondido's powerful waves.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
1 week ago

Elevating Earth: Reviving and Advancing an Indigenous Building Material

The Western Deffufa is a significant ancient mud brick building, highlighting the enduring use of earth in construction across Africa.
History
fromBig Think
2 weeks ago

Ghost map: Europe's first glimpse of Tenochtitlan shows a city already destroyed

The 1524 map of Tenochtitlan reflects the cultural clash and hybridization between indigenous and European perspectives after the city's destruction.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 week ago

How a Hopi Potter Named Nampeyo Became a 19th-Century Art Star | Artnet News

Nampeyo significantly influenced Hopi pottery, blending ancient techniques with modern expressions, making her a pivotal figure in the history of ceramics.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
3 weeks ago

Toltec human sacrifice altar found in Mexico

The momoztli altar measures about one meter square and consists of three sections: a base of andesite quarry stone, a second section of larger slabs, and a top section of river stones and basalt.
History
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Mexican art world protests over plan to send Frida Kahlo masterpieces to Spain

The export of a significant Mexican art collection to Spain has caused outrage among cultural professionals in Mexico.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 month ago

Aztec philosophy: How lucky you are to not be in prison right now

Moral luck describes how identical actions result in vastly different moral and legal consequences based on uncontrollable circumstances beyond the actor's intent.
#aztec-archaeology
fromArtnet News
2 weeks ago

The Printmaker Who Became a Hero of Mexican Cultural Identity

Frida Kahlo, during her 1933 trip to New York, created a colorful haven in her hotel room by covering the walls with prints by José Guadalupe Posada, which depicted sensational news and political imagery.
Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

A Mariachi school persists, and thrives, amidst an immigration crackdown

It makes me feel proud, simply because of the specific time we're in right now. It definitely takes a lot of courage for kids my age to represent their culture. Anthony Benitez, an 18-year-old violin student born in the United States to Mexican immigrants, expressed how the academy provides a meaningful outlet for cultural expression amid punitive immigration enforcement affecting Latino and immigrant families across the country.
NYC music
Madrid food
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

There's more to Mexican spirits than tequila

Mexican agave spirits including tequila, mezcal, sotol, and raicilla have expanded dramatically in UK availability and quality, with tequila becoming the fastest-growing spirit and forecast to grow 10% annually until 2030.
fromFortune
1 month ago

America's drinking habits are destroying Mexico's environment: 'It will take a long time for the ecosystem to recover' | Fortune

We were taught when to harvest agave, how to care for the soil, and how much we could ask of the forest. Today, that small-scale tradition exists alongside a global boom that has transformed mezcal into a major industry dominated by international brands. As mezcal has spread to bars around the world, so has its footprint on the land.
Silicon Valley food
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 weeks ago

Frida, Diego, and Raphael

The largest-ever Raphael exhibition in the U.S. opened at The Met, showcasing 170 works over eight years.
#mexican-bread-culture
Madrid food
fromcooking.nytimes.com
1 month ago

In Mexico, Bread Is the Heart of Daily Life

Mexico maintains a centuries-old baking culture with 60,000 panaderias providing fresh bread as a daily standard, not a luxury, deeply embedded in economic, social, and cultural life.
fromElite Traveler
1 month ago

Singular Archive is Serious About Agave and Artwork

Singular Archive is a cultural custodian safeguarding the world's rarest liquids. This is not a spirits brand, but an artistic endeavor in which the liquid is a part of the work itself.
Venture
Madrid food
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

20 Best Things to Do in Oaxaca, Mexico-From Savoring Mole and Mezcal to Exploring Indigenous Art

Oaxaca offers Indigenous heritage, world-class cuisine featuring mole and mezcal, colonial architecture, traditional crafts, and legendary street food experiences.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Where did magic mushrooms come from? Scientists just got closer to an answer

Scientists discovered Psilocybe ochraceocentrata, a new magic mushroom species in Africa that shared a common ancestor with Psilocybe cubensis approximately 1.5 million years ago.
Travel
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

This Butterfly Reserve In Mexico Preserves an Important Species-and Indigenous Culture

Eastern Monarch butterflies migrate 3,000 miles annually to Mexico's UNESCO reserve, where tourism supports local communities and forest conservation against illegal logging and deforestation.
Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

The new life of hand-painted signs in Mexico

Sign painting in Mexico City has surged in popularity following the removal of street signs, leading to increased interest and new opportunities for artists.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

Ornate 1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb discovered in Mexico

"At Monte Albán alone, more than 200 tombs of varying size and decoration reflect social, political and economic differences among the ancient Zapotecs," Javier Urcid, an anthropology professor at Brandeis University in Massachusetts, tells The Art Newspaper. "Built beneath residences, tombs were reused over generations-with additional burials and occasional changes to offerings or decoration. The inscribed genealogies verified membership in family lineages."
Science
US news
fromFuncheap
2 months ago

2026 Azteca Mexica New Year Festival in San Jose (March 13-15)

Calpulli Tonalehqueh hosts the nation’s largest Azteca Mexica New Year: a free, family-friendly, three-day celebration with 500+ dancers and 150+ vendor booths.
National Football League
fromFuncheap
2 months ago

2026 Azteca Mexica New Year Festival in San Jose (March 13-15)

Largest U.S. Azteca Mexica New Year: free, family-friendly three-day celebration March 13–15, 2026, in San Jose with 500+ dancers and 15,000 attendees.
Music
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

In the Mexican state of Oaxaca, a music school keeps children away from violence

The Santa Cecilia School of Musical Initiation transformed a garbage-filled community in Oaxaca into a cultural hub offering music education and university opportunities through sustained community effort.
Madrid food
fromTasting Table
1 month ago

The Biggest Myth About Mexican Food You Need To Unlearn - Tasting Table

Mexican cuisine is unfairly labeled unhealthy due to confusion between authentic regional Mexican food and Tex-Mex adaptations that use processed ingredients and deep-frying.
Online Community Development
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 year ago

Powwows: Celebrating the culture and community of Indigenous people

The Dix Park Inter-Tribal Powwow brings together Indigenous communities from North Carolina's eight state and federally recognized tribes for cultural celebration, competition dancing, and traditional music.
#danza-azteca
SF music
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

The joyous, decorated Aztec dancers of San Jose

Danza Azteca communities in the Bay Area preserve ancestral dance traditions through spiritual and cultural ceremonies, with multiple active groups collaborating to uplift indigenous heritage.
fromCN Traveller
2 months ago

This underrated Mexican city's artisans have transformed their home into a shopaholic's paradise

Traveller check into hotels for easy access to historical Mayan sites and the cenotes beyond, with ambles through colourful squares and late, balmy nights digesting feasts over tequila tipples. Between cultural excursions and natural wonders, however, there's much to be said for the artisans in these parts. From crafted perfumes to handmade chocolates, these are the gifts and trinkets to make space for in your luggage.
Food & drink
Arts
fromArtforum
1 month ago

A Hard Sell: on Mexican art in the age of austerity

Mexico's Fourth Transformation government has drastically cut arts funding and framed contemporary art as elitist, forcing private initiatives to sustain public cultural institutions.
Film
fromQueerty
2 months ago

Cowboys who ride cowboys: Jaripeo explores the hidden queer desires of Mexico's rodeo scene - Queerty

Efraín Mojica returns to rural Penjamillo to examine queer desire and identity emerging within jaripeo rodeo culture and Mexican cowboy-style masculinity.
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Shell-shocked and tense: inside the Mexican tourist town where El Mencho' made his last stand

Mexican drug lord El Mencho was killed during a military operation at a luxury resort in Jalisco state, supported by CIA intelligence and US drone surveillance.
Fashion & style
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

An Insider's Guide to Merida, the Yucatan's Most Enchanting City

Carlos Huber of Arquiste creates evocative fragrances inspired by historical scenes, his Mérida villa, and Yucatán culture.
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

The underground odyssey that led archaeologists to a Zapotec burial site

Looting revealed a hidden Zapotec Tomb of the Owl near La Cantera, which took six years to locate and links to the ancient Zapotec civilization.
fromKqed
2 months ago

Maidu Tribe Returns to Its Roots of Ancestral Fire | KQED

The Maidu tribe of Butte County-Berry Creek, Mechoopda, Mooretown, Enterprise and Konkow Valley, come together to conduct CAL-TREX prescribed burn training to relearn how to put helpful fire back on their native lands that have been devastated by recent catastrophic wildfires. Organizers say the training camp is designed to help restore fire-scarred lands and people. While other Northern California tribes have been reintroducing cultural fire for decades,
California
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

You Can Soon Visit Clase Azul's First-ever Cultural House in Mexico City-Here's What to Expect

Spirits brand Clase Azul México will soon open a brand-new home in the city's Polanco area on Feb. 17, offering guided tastings, rotating art installations, private events, and more. The new address, dubbed "Casa de Los Leones," or House of the Lions, was built in a historic mansion where original elements like stained glassed windows were preserved, juxtaposed with contemporary design.
Travel
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

rootstudio's oaxaca bus stops feature cut metal panels inspired by local histories

RootStudio proposes an alternative, where the waiting period becomes a spatial condition worthy of design attention. Each intervention is organized around a continuous roof supported by a rhythmic structural frame. The canopy provides shade and shelter from rain while defining a perimeter for waiting without enclosing it. The architecture reads as a measured gesture within an intense urban setting.
Miscellaneous
fromTasting Table
2 months ago

Step Aside Taco Bell, This Dish Is The Real Mexican Pizza - Tasting Table

The Mexican Pizza has been a Taco Bell fan favorite since it was first introduced to the menu back in 1985 - though it went by a different name back then, the Pizzazz Pizza. In its current form at the fast food chain, this dish consists of two layers of crisp flour tortillas with refried beans and seasoned ground beef sandwiched in the middle, and "Mexican Pizza Sauce," melted cheese, and diced tomatoes on top.
Food & drink
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Mass graves in Concordia cast a pall over Mexico's famous Mazatlan carnival

At the entrance to La Clementina, a housing development in the municipality of Concordia, in the Mexican state of Sinaloa, there are five funeral wreaths and 12 votive candles. It is a floral offering in memory of the miners who were kidnapped at the end of January. The bodies of Jose Angel Hernandez Velez, Ignacio Aurelio Salazar Flores, Jose Manuel Castaneda Hernandez, Jose Antonio Jimenez, and Jesus Antonio de la O, all employees of the Canadian mining company Vizsla Silver, have been identified, while the whereabouts of five others remain unknown.
World news
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
2 months ago

1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb found in southern Mexico

A 1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb with exceptionally preserved murals, reliefs, and ritual iconography was unearthed in Oaxaca, offering new insights into Zapotec ancestor worship and hierarchy.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

cast in red-pigmented concrete, la cacaotera museum celebrates cacao heritage in mexico

The project was undertaken by the collaborative team of Laboratorio Regional de Arquitectura, Taller | Mauricio Rocha, and Samuele Xompero after the demolition of the building that once housed the National Union of Cacao Producers, and which had suffered severe structural damage. The building's architecture incorporates the formal memory of its predecessor, but with a new program dedicated to showcasing the transformation of cacao into chocolate.
Miscellaneous
Travel
fromwww.cntraveler.com
2 months ago

The 9 Best Cities in Mexico: CDMX, Guadalajara, and Beyond

Mexico's cities are global cultural hubs offering diverse music lineups, centuries-old cuisine and traditions, major events, and rich museum and arts calendars.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Lost tomb of mysterious 'cloud people' unearthed after 1,400 years

Archaeologists in Mexico have uncovered a 1,400-year-old tomb in the Central Valleys of Oaxaca that had been lost to history. The stone structure, built by the Zapotec culture, known as Be'ena'a, or 'The Cloud People', is adorned with sculptures, murals and carved symbols that suggest ritual significance. The Zapotec believed their ancestors descended from the clouds and that, in death, their souls returned to the heavens as spirits.
World news
#mexico-city
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago
Travel

Mexico City was ranked the world's most culturally rich destination, thanks to its museums, galleries, and iconic institutions like Casa Azul.

fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago
Travel

Mexico City was ranked the world's most culturally rich destination, thanks to its museums, galleries, and iconic institutions like Casa Azul.

Food & drink
fromElite Traveler
1 month ago

I Spent a Week Tasting Tequila in Mexico - And Rated These Bars

Mexico offers diverse agave spirits beyond tequila including mezcal, raicilla, bacanora, and sotol, with specialized bars providing expert guidance for exploration.
Food & drink
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

The Biz Beat: San Jose Mexican bakery offers Oaxacan delights - San Jose Spotlight

Dulcinea Panadería Oaxaqueña in San Jose offers over 100 varieties of Oaxacan cookies, pastries, breads and cakes, growing from a food truck to a bakery.
Travel
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago

My family's favorite vacation spot is a gorgeous strip of beach towns on Mexico's coast. It has something for everyone.

Under-the-radar Oaxacan Coast beach towns offer friendly locals, fewer crowds, family-friendly beaches, fresh seafood, and a relaxed alternative to hypertourism in Tulum and Sayulita.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Apocalypse no: how almost everything we thought we knew about the Maya is wrong

Classic Maya lowlands likely supported up to 16 million people during AD 600–900, implying unprecedented population density, complex agriculture, and advanced urban organization.
fromTasting Table
2 months ago

Where To Find (And Taste) The World's Largest Tequila Collection - Tasting Table

Tequila has spent a long time in the shadows of the spirits world. Unfairly stereotyped as a drink reserved for college bars and wild nights, its recent renaissance and the emergence of many popular tequila brands have shown the world that it's worth celebrating after all. And nowhere is this celebration more on display than at Ixi'im, a restaurant that claims to have the largest collection of tequila in the world - 3,435 bottles, to be exact.
Food & drink
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Andrea Martinez Baracs, historian: Indigenous allies saved the Spanish on the Night of Sorrows'

Tlaxcalans allied with the Spanish as strategic partners, maintaining autonomy and leveraging local knowledge to oppose the Triple Alliance during conquest.
fromFuncheap
2 months ago

2026 Azteca Mexica New Year Festival in San Jose (March 13-15)

Join us for the 28th Annual Mexica New Year, March 13-15, 2026 for a weekend filled with Native traditional dancers, a sunrise ceremony, arts & crafts market and delicious food. Our gathering brings together over 500 Aztec Dancers from throughout the US and Mexico, 7 Northern California Native tribes including our local Muwekma Ohlone tribe of the SF Bay Area and other Native tribes from the US and Mexico.
Arts
History
fromMedievalists.net
2 months ago

New Online Course: The Americas during the Middle Ages - Medievalists.net

An online six-week course examines indigenous peoples of North America and Mesoamerica (500–1500 CE), emphasizing diverse peoples, environments, lifestyles, and pre-contact historical trends.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

A small Africa in Colombia': the palenqueras of Cartagena

Cartagena's palenqueras symbolize the enduring, commodified legacy of enslavement, mixing cultural resilience with tourist-driven exploitation.
fromNature
1 month ago

How infighting led the Maya civilization to catastrophic collapse

Before the 1970s, ancient Maya history was impenetrable. The civilization's grand ceremonial buildings and striking art, created in parts of Mesoamerica during the Classic Maya period (ad 150-900) had tantalized foreign visitors since the arrival of Spanish conquistadors in the sixteenth century. But no one, including several million twentieth-century speakers of Maya languages, could read the ancient Maya hieroglyphs.
History
fromColossal
1 month ago

Inside the Sacred Valley Ceramics Studio Referencing Ancient Peruvian Practices

It is not about reproducing the past but about engaging in dialogue with it. We apply the same level of care and rigor to all pieces. Many of our utilitarian pieces have a strong sculptural quality, and several of the more artistic works originate from everyday forms and functions. We do not establish rigid boundaries between these categories; all are part of the same vision.
Arts
Arts
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Secrets of Indigenous Art

Modern European and American modernists drew heavily from Indigenous arts, while museums long framed Indigenous adoption of Western forms as a loss of authenticity.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

Arizona museum hosts world hoop dance championship

Last February, master of ceremonies Dennis Bowen (a Seneca elder) welcomed the reigning champion into the 2025 World Championship Hoop Dance Contest arena at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona. Thousands of spectators joined them to watch more than 100 dancers compete across the two-day event. Bowen announced Josiah Enriquez's (Pueblo of Pojoaque, Navajo, Isleta) accomplishments as a top place finisher several years running in the teen division and as the surprise winner in an unprecedented tiebreaking round in the adult division the year before.
Arts
Arts
fromArtnet News
2 months ago

Graciela Iturbide on Risking It All For Life Behind the Camera

Graciela Iturbide's fifty-year black-and-white photography offers a lyrical, mythic vision of Mexico, producing iconic images like La Señora de las Iguanas and international acclaim.
Arts
fromBig Think
2 months ago

The last masters: The international effort to preserve an ancient craft

Intangible cultural heritage like traditional Damascus steelmaking can vanish when supporting material and social conditions disappear, prompting international safeguarding efforts.
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