Galería OMR

Coordinates: 19°25′09″N 99°09′38″W / 19.4190583°N 99.1606797°W / 19.4190583; -99.1606797
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
OMR
Galería OMR is located in Mexico City
Galería OMR
Location within Mexico City
Established1983 (1983)
LocationCórdoba 100, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México, Mexico
Coordinates19°25′09″N 99°09′38″W / 19.4190583°N 99.1606797°W / 19.4190583; -99.1606797
TypeContemporary art gallery
FounderPatricia Ortiz Monasterio and Jaime Riestra
ArchitectMateo Riestra, José Arnaud-Bello and Max von Werz
OwnerCristobal Riestra
Websiteomr.art

OMR is a contemporary art gallery located in Mexico City.

History

OMR was founded in 1983 by Patricia Ortiz Monasterio and Jaime Riestra.

The Observer wrote in August 2019 that OMR is "one of the city’s longest-running and largest blue-chip galleries" and noted that the majority of their buyers are "foreign collectors."[3]

The gallery represents emerging and established contemporary artists, including Mexican artists Pia Camil and José Dávila, Swiss artist Claudia Comte, German artist Candida Höfer and the Danish artist group SUPERFLEX, among others. Since its beginning, OMR has been a major influence on the arts in Mexico, showing avant-garde artists that have now become some of the referential points of the Mexican art scene.[4] Over the past four decades, OMR has presented more than 400 exhibitions and participated in numerous international art fairs, including Frieze Los Angeles,[5] Zona MACO (Mexico)[6] Art Basel (Switzerland) and Art Basel Miami Beach (USA).

In 2022, OMR co-founded the cultural center LagoAlgo. Housed in a historic modernist building in the Chapultepec Park (Mexico City's green lung), LagoAlgo is a free and public cultural destination, which aims to foster encounters between contemporary art, gastronomy and architecture.[7] The exhibition program is under the creative direction of Jérôme Sans.

References

  1. ^ Cunningham, Eleanor (20 June 2013). "Embracing The Cultural Revolution At 10 Mexican Art Galleries". Culture Trip. Retrieved 2020-01-26..
  2. ^ CDMX, Secretaría de Turismo de. "La Roma, the bohemian district · Top experiences". cdmxtravel.com. Retrieved 2020-01-26..
  3. ^ "Mexico's Art Dealers Shift Strategy to Cope With an Austere New Presidency and US Tensions". Observer. 2019-08-20. Retrieved 2020-01-26..
  4. ^ Wade, Steph (2021-04-14). "Galería OMR · Mexico City, Mexico". IGNANT. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  5. ^ "Mexico's Art Dealers Shift Strategy to Cope With an Austere New Presidency and US Tensions". Observer. 2019-08-20. Retrieved 2020-01-26.,
  6. ^ "Dos galerías chilenas en feria Zona Maco 2016", Artishock, Chile, 2 February 2016. Retrieved on 23 June 2016.,
  7. ^ Rinaldi, Ray Mark. "A Mexico City Design Landmark, Reborn as Something Else". New York Times. Retrieved November 6, 2023.

External links