Museo Vivo del Muralismo (Live Museum of Muralism) – Mexico City, Mexico - Atlas Obscura

Museo Vivo del Muralismo (Live Museum of Muralism)

The former headquarters of Mexico's Secretariat of Public Education now houses a muralism museum, including Diego Rivera's first large-scale mural project.  

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The murals covering the walls of Mexico City’s Secretariat of Public Education Main Headquarters have long drawn large crowds, largely because Diego Rivera’s first large-scale mural project is among the artwork exhibited. But unless people take a good look at the nearby information board, they’ll miss all the people hiding within his paintings.

After returning to Mexico from a trip to the Soviet Union in 1927, Rivera was inspired to add a Communist touch to the mural project, which highlights Mexico’s working class and indigenous people. One of the best-known segments shows Frida Kahlo with a masculine haircut, championing a Mexican socialist revolution. But she isn’t the only famous figure to appear in the artwork.

Artist David Alfaro Siqueiros, the controversial Vittorio Vidali, the photographer Tina Modotti, and the Cuban activist Julio Antonio Mella (who was murdered a year after the mural was finished) also appear hidden within the images. You’ll also find Genaro Estrada of the Commercial Commission, the oil company heir Manuel Gorrochotegui, the extravagant actress Gloria Swanson, and the businessmen Henry Ford and John Davison Rockefeller.

One mural depicts a cluster of people called the Los Contemporáneos (The Contemporaries) being looked down upon by members of the working class. The Contemporaries center around the poet Rabindranath Tagore, who sports a funnel on his head. This section is meant to criticize the false wisdom of the elite class.

In another part, the writer Salvador Novo is being kicked by a group of Marxists. He has donkey ears sprouting from his head. A banner above the image reads “whoever wants to eat works.” Novo was so offended by this depiction of him that he wrote a barbed retaliatory poem about Rivera.

The murals on the ground floor are less political because they feature typical Mexican parties. However, there are many more hidden people: the painter Manuel Rodríguez Lozano, the bullfighter Juan Silveti, the cabaret actress Celia Montalván, the model Nahui Ollin, the composer Concha Michel, the journalist Esperanza Bringas, and even the activist Pandurang Sadashiv.

The colonial building that houses this museum was inaugurated as the headquarters of the country’s Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) in 1922. The rest of the 20th century and the start of the 21st century saw the addition of its many murals. During this period it was still mainly an administrative building for the Secretariat, but in 2020, it was announced that it would be converted into a museum celebrating muralism as an art form.

The change included extensive restoration of the existing murals, reduced functions as administrative offices, additional exhibitions, and a shift to function as a museum first and foremost. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, works were greatly delayed and the Museo Vivo del Muralismo (Live Museum of Muralism) was finally opened in September 2024. In this new role, the museum now offers much more than the permanent artworks on its walls, as it also includes exhibitions on the history and techniques of muralism, details about the building itself, and even an interactive space where a mural of a market is recreated down to its smells.

Know Before You Go

Although Rivera's murals are the most sought-after, these are just part of a collection. Additional murals by artists such as Roberto Montenegro, Luis Nishizawa, Federico Canessi, Raul Anguiano, Chávez Morado, Manuel Felguérez, and David Alfaro Siqueiros can also be found here.

Free entry, open Wednesday-Monday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The museum is closed on public holidays.


The nearest Metro station is Tenochtitlán/Zócalo on Line 2 (blue), and the nearest Metrobús station is República de Argentina on Line 4 (orange).

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