El fin de semana en la Ciudad de México está repleto de propuestas que invitan a descubrir, reflexionar y celebrar. Desde aniversarios icónicos como los de Comité de Proyectos y Huerto Roma Verde, hasta exposiciones provocadoras como Tlatelolco <> Kreuzberg y Pequeña Muerte. La ciudad también se transforma en escenario para encuentros únicos como La Comedora Mugrienta, fiestas como Tortilla, y eventos inmersivos como DomoArte en el Planetario del Papalote.

The agenda offers spaces for design, digital art, collective writing and the most alternative expressions, all under the premise of connecting communities and questioning the established. A weekend to let yourself be carried away by creativity in its many forms.

A DECADE OF COMITÉ DE PROYECTOS
Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 18:00
Av. Paseo de la Reforma 393, 5th and 7th floor, Cuauhtémoc

Comité de Proyectos celebrates 10 years of being a benchmark in Mexican design, combining functional beauty, sustainability and respect for the environment. Founded by Andrea Flores and Lucía Soto in 2014, the studio has left a unique mark on the interior and furniture design scene, exploring the nobility of local materials and the richness of craftsmanship.

Among their most iconic projects is the Colima Chair, created for Meroma, which encapsulates the essence of the restaurant and the studio itself: a dialogue between aesthetics, functionality and identity. This ethical and aesthetic commitment has led them to international exhibitions, such as in the Reina Sofía and Franz Mayer museums, consolidating their presence beyond borders.

In 2024, they opened their first showroom in Paseo de la Reforma, a space to experience design at its best, where every detail tells a story. Throughout this decade, Comité de Proyectos has reaffirmed that design is an extension of everyday life and an invitation to human connection.

Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 18:00 (Tel. 56 2445 4210).

WIG ANNIVERSARY
November 30
18:00 - 2:00 am
Barcelona 8, Juárez, Cuauhtémoc

WiG celebrates its first anniversary this November 30 with an evening full of surprises, creativity and community in Mexico City. This space, which combines fashion and cultural expression, has become a dynamic meeting point, beyond being just a store. With eclectic curations of national and international brands and events that mix art, music and design, WiG has set a precedent in the city's alternative scene.

The celebration will include special discounts (15-40%), exclusive launches and the participation of its new natural wine bar, Bebe, along with drinks courtesy of Mezcal Verde and Luz 33 Kombucha. Music will be provided by DJ sets by Cami, Lore Vega and Alana Mey, consolidating its essence as a place of creative convergence.

BOOTLEG AND SAMPLE SALE EE14
December 29th, 30th and 1st
18:00 to 22:00 pm
Floor 14 De la Torre latino

Here you can explore unique pieces from fashion designers, furniture and editorial projects. A space to discover emerging talent, rediscover favorite brands and take something special home.

The opening will be on Friday 29th, from 18:00 to 22:00, with a perfect atmosphere to start the weekend with good proposals and a spectacular view. On Saturday and Sunday, the event will be open from 12:00 to 19:00, giving you the opportunity to calmly enjoy everything it has to offer.

In addition to the selection of products, the experience includes the charm of the balcony and drinks to accompany the tour, making the sample sale not only a shopping visit, but an appointment with design and good taste. Don't miss it, admission is free and the atmosphere is guaranteed, see you there!

ART TO GO AT PATRICIA CONDE GALERIA
November 30
11:00 - 18:00 pm
Gral. Juan Cano #68, San Miguel Chapultepec II Section

If you are a fan of filling your home with art, Patricia Conde Gallery will have this weekend an event where you can discover prints, print proofs, rarities and unique pieces that reflect the creative process and essence of artists such as Cannon Bernáldez, Laura Cohen, Cristina Kahlo, Patricia Lagarde, José Antonio Martínez, Ilán Rabchinskey, Oswaldo Ruiz and Adam Wiseman. A space to learn about their vision through experimental techniques and exclusive proposals.

DOMOARTE
November 30
Functions: 19:20 | 20:20 | 21:20 | 22:20
Planetario del Papalote, Museo del Niño

This Saturday, November 30, DomoArte, the traveling festival of digital art in fulldome format in Latin America, arrives in Mexico City, transforming the Planetarium of the Papalote Museo del Niño into a unique space for sensory exploration. Inspired by pioneers such as SAT in Montreal and Mutek Mx, DomoArte offers a new way to experience digital art at 360°, inviting viewers to immerse themselves in visual and sound narratives that transcend traditional forms of exhibition. 

Created by Jeremy Oury and Michelle Falcon with the support of Institut Français and IFAL, DomoArte seeks to consolidate itself as a platform for cultural and artistic exchange between France and Latin America. It will also be part of the Novembre Numérique label as DomoArte is part of an initiative that seeks to expand the frontiers of digital art in Mexico, offering a program that highlights internationally renowned artists and emerging promises. With works by artists such as CNDSD & Iván Abreu, Bruno Ribeiro, F3 Studio, Ztaa, and BuenaTarde and Jeremy Oury, the festival proposes an immersive journey through diverse practices and styles within contemporary digital art.

Admission: $100 MXN
Tickets available at: domoarte.boletia.com

SOLOVINO X CEVICHI BICHI
November 30
12:00 - 17:00 pm

Saturday of eating delicious ceviche courtesy of Ceviche Bichi, a piece of Los Mochis in Mexico City by Chef Jesus Armando Velderrain Carrillo, while enjoying a selection of wines by La Bacante at one of our favorite places of the moment, Solovino. The patron's jrs. will be in charge of the turns and the meal will turn into a party. 

EL DÍA QUE MORÍ EN TUS BRAZOS
29, 30 and 1 December
18:00 pm
Jesús Terán 38A, Tabacalera, CDMX

The work of Roja Romo "BrujoLatino.com" in this, his first solo exhibition in Mexico City, questions and expresses the aesthetics and subjectivities that exist within the Latin bis3xua1 p0rn0gr4fia, created mainly in the United States.

Through explicit images created in detail and superimpositions of different symbols, the artist raises awareness in depth about the sensitivity and identity of the bodies configured from these dynamics of exchange s3xua1.

Roja Romo lives and works in Mexico City. She was born in San Francisco de los Romo, Aguascalientes, Mexico in 2002. She studied Visual Arts at the Bachillerato en Arte y Humanidades "José Guadalupe Posada". Her work focuses on the study of symbols, as well as the mechanisms of power and structural violence that cross racialized dissident bodies in the peripheries of the interior of the Mexican Republic. This study is carried out through the compilation and creation of her own images of the diverse identities that inhabit the working class neighborhoods in the western part of the country.

PEQUEÑA MUERTE, COLLECTIVE EXHIBITION
November 30th and December 1st
10:00 - 2:00am
Tonalá 66, Roma Norte

Immerse yourself in a unique artistic experience that explores eroticism from multiple perspectives and disciplines. "LITTLE DEATH" is a group exhibition that brings together projects that challenge moral and social norms, inviting reflection and dialogue on intimacy and fantasy.

For two days, artists from different areas will present works that invite exploration and contemplation, offering the public a space to approach an eroticism that transcends conventions.

BIOMA
30 de noviembre
Plaza Carlos J Finlay 5, int. 301, Cuauhtémoc

This year-end, Roxana G. Villegas, known as Roxo, presents bioma, a unique exhibition that marks her first show at Nixxxon, the alternative space that promotes artistic and cultural projects.

Originally from Mexico City and a graduate in Art and Design from UNAM, Roxo has consolidated her style through drawing, ceramics and editorial design, exhibiting her work in various spaces and fairs nationwide. Bioma promises to explore connections between art and nature, using her characteristic approach to take us on a sensory journey.

The exhibition will be open to the public at Nixxxon, turning its space into a meeting point for contemporary art and experimentation.

WHO WRITES THE HISTORY OF OUR PLACES, OUR OBJECTS, OUR ENCOUNTERS?
From November 27th
Antiguo Colegio de la Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco

En el 60 aniversario de la UH Tlatelolco, la artista Laura Valencia Lozada presenta Tlatelolco <> Kreuzberg, un proyecto de arte participativo que conecta las memorias de mujeres de Tlatelolco y Kreuzberg, Berlín.

The exhibition, SILO / Semillera de Memorias Tlatelolcas, celebrates oral histories and their power to resignify spaces marked by social movements and historical milestones, through posters that narrate encounters and resistances between both communities.

LA COMEDORA MUGRIENTA
November 29
19:00 - 21:00 pm
Pedro de alba 232, Iztazíhuatl

The independent publisher Hairy Cow Publications, also known as Hairy Cow Press, presents its first publication: The Filthy Eater. This launch will be an open mic gathering to explore writing and creative possibilities from the dirty, the lustful, the grotesque and the slimy.

The project questions aesthetic and ethical norms from a collective perspective, seeking alternative narratives that fissure traditional structures. Through contributions from artists such as Keta Zepeda, Diva Saliva, Brenda Martínez de Ávila and many more, La comedora mugrienta reimagines relationships with our bodily ailments as starting points for new political and critical perspectives.

Vaca Peluda Publications is a project of Denisse Vega de Santiago that bets on experimental forms of writing and collective pedagogies, generating spaces to unlearn and rediscover ways to tell stories.

NOT-SO-QUICK GUIDE FOR YOUR ARTISTIC NEUROTIC.
November 28
19:00 pm

Neuróticos artísticos is a space to address the emotional, labor and identity issues of artistic practice and this Thursday they will present the collaborative publication, Guía NO tan Rápida para tu Neurótico Artístico, between different artists along with the mini-printing press at Casa Tomada. During the presentation they will read the 14 steps for your artistic neurotic that were written collectively between artists such as Carolina Berrocall, Santiago Muedano, Elisa Malo and more.

TORTILLA
November 28
21:00 pm
Chilpancingo 148, Roma Sur

Tortilla is a party dedicated to celebrating and bringing together femmes, butches, studs, high femmes, and trans and non-binary dykes. A space to explore, connect and dance, created from and for identities that inhabit and defy the margins. A night to exist freely and be part of a diverse and vibrant community.

XII ANNIVERSARY OF THE ROMA VERDE HERB
November 28
18:00 pm

El Huerto Roma Verde celebrates 12 years as a space for biosocial resilience and regeneration in the heart of Mexico City. This community laboratory, dedicated to the common good, collaboration and regenerative action, invites you to be part of its anniversary this Thursday, November 28, starting at 6:00 pm.

The evening promises to be a special celebration that highlights the collective work of a community committed to change. The event is supported by Mezcal Amarás and pre-registration is required. A gathering to reflect, connect and celebrate 12 years of transformation and hope.

RGB BY MARBLE STONES
November 30
Local 5 Pikashop : Eje Central 12

Jorge Flores is a graphic designer who is revolutionizing Mexican fashion with his brand Marble Stones. His creative process stems from a keen observation of urban landscapes, fusing textures, images and characters from digital culture, resulting in a bold and challenging visual language. 

In the CDMX, his proposal is one of the most avant-garde, where each design reflects an experience that portrays the real world and the virtual world and this Saturday, November 30, he will present his latest collection and the last pop up of the year.

FOOD MACHINES: LABORATORY OF INADVERTED GEOGRAPHY
Until February 15
Projector I Av. Ing. Basiliso Romo Anguiano 175, Colonia Industrial

Through three vectors of research, "Máquinas Alimentarias" analyzes the past and present of Mexico's relationship with food, to speculate on the role of technology and politics in future agri-food models, and how architecture and culture contribute to their transformation. Focusing on the landscapes and architectures that feed the country, it explores an intricate amalgam of artisanal and industrial processes, where hyper-local production takes place amidst the standardization of the global market; as well as the maintenance of pre-Hispanic agro-architectures, through colonial territorial transformations and community tenure models that endure between official and self-regulated economies.


This exhibition is not about food, but about a laboratory that combines the systemic, political and ecological implications of the architectural substrate that makes its existence possible.