Éléments | Visite à pied - Impressionnantes peintures murales du centre historique de Mexico
Visite à pied - Impressionnantes peintures murales du centre historique de Mexico
(253) Avis
Centro Histórico de la Ciudad de México
Informations importantes
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Accessible aux fauteuils roulants
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Les nourrissons et les jeunes enfants peuvent voyager dans une poussette ou un landau
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Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
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Les nourrissons doivent s’asseoir sur les genoux d’un adulte
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Les options de transport sont accessibles aux fauteuils roulants
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Toutes les zones et surfaces sont accessibles aux fauteuils roulants
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Adapté à tous les niveaux de condition physique
Politique d'annulation
Pour un remboursement complet, annulez au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de départ prévue.
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Pour un remboursement complet, vous devez annuler au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience.
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Les délais limites sont basés sur l'heure locale de l'expérience.
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Si vous annulez moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience, le montant que vous avez payé ne sera pas remboursé.
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Cette expérience nécessite un nombre minimum de voyageurs. Si elle est annulée parce que le minimum n'est pas atteint, on vous proposera une autre date/expérience ou un remboursement intégral.
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Toute modification effectuée moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience ne sera pas acceptée.
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This is more than a tour—it’s a journey through the places where Mexico chose to tell its story through art.
After the Mexican Revolution, murals became a powerful tool to unite a country and share its history with everyone, transforming public buildings into open-air history books . On this experience, you’ll follow that story step by step—connecting the birthplace of muralism, its most ambitious projects, and its greatest masterpieces.
What makes this tour different is the narrative: instead of isolated stops, each location builds on the last, revealing how artists like Diego Rivera turned walls into a voice for a nation.
By the end, you won’t just have seen incredible murals—you’ll und...
Points forts
De 1 heure à 3 heures
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
De 1 heure à 3 heures
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Billets d'entrée au musée inclus
Service de guide
Transport
pourboire non inclus
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
Former College of San Ildefonso
Retour
Palacio de Bellas Artes
Visite à pied - Impressionnantes peintures murales du centre historique de Mexico
(253) Avis
Centro Histórico de la Ciudad de México
À propos
This is more than a tour—it’s a journey through the places where Mexico chose to tell its story through art.
After the Mexican Revolution, murals became a powerful tool to unite a country and share its history with everyone, transforming public buildings into open-air history books . On this experience, you’ll follow that story step by step—connecting the birthplace of muralism, its most ambitious projects, and its greatest masterpieces.
What makes this tour different is the narrative: instead of isolated stops, each location builds on the last, revealing how artists like Diego Rivera turned walls into a voice for a nation.
By the end, you won’t just have seen incredible murals—you’ll und...
Where an entire artistic revolution began, the Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso stands as the birthplace of Mexican muralism. Inside the Anfiteatro Simón Bolívar, discover La Creación (1922), the first mural by Diego Rivera, marking the moment art left galleries and took over public space.
Surrounded by works from artists like José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros, this historic building became a creative laboratory where a new vision of Mexico was born—one that told the story of its people, identity, and revolution through monumental walls.
It was here, while Rivera painted, that a young Frida Kahlo first saw him—an encounter that would later shape one of the most iconic relationships in art history.
30 minutes
2
Murales de Diego Rivera en la Secretaria de Educacion Publica
Step into the iconic murals of Diego Rivera at the Secretaría de Educación Pública, one of the most ambitious mural projects in Mexico. Painted between 1923 and 1928, this monumental series spans over 100 panels across three levels, bringing the Patio del Trabajo and Patio de las Fiestas to life.
Rivera, one of the most influential artists of the 20th century and a pioneer of Mexican muralism, used art as a powerful storytelling tool—depicting workers, traditions, and revolutionary ideals to shape a shared national identity. His large-scale murals helped define the mural movement not only in Mexico but worldwide .
As you walk through these courtyards, you won’t just see art—you’ll experience a vivid narrative of Mexico’s history, culture, and people, told on a truly monumental scale.
40 minutes
3
Palais des Beaux-Arts
Home to Mexico’s most iconic masterpieces, the Palacio de Bellas Artes is where art, politics, and history collide. Inaugurated in 1934, this stunning marble palace became the ultimate stage for the country’s greatest muralists—Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros—who transformed its walls into powerful visual narratives.
Inside, discover a unique collection of 17 monumental murals created over more than three decades, each telling a different story of Mexico’s identity. From Rivera’s controversial El hombre controlador del universo—originally censored in New York—to Orozco’s dramatic La Katharsis and Siqueiros’ dynamic La Nueva Democracia, this is not just art—it’s a bold statement of a nation in transformation.
More than a cultural venue, Bellas Artes is the beating heart of Mexican artistic expression—where murals, performances, and exhibitions come together in one unforgettable space.
40 minutes
4
Musée des peintures murales de Diego Rivera
A mural so important, an entire museum was built around it—the Museo Mural Diego Rivera is home to one of Mexico’s most extraordinary artworks. At its heart lies Sueño de una tarde dominical en la Alameda Central (1947), a massive 15-meter-long mural where Diego Rivera brings over 400 years of Mexican history to life through more than 150 iconic characters.
From emperors and revolutionaries to everyday people, this vivid scene blends past and present in a single dreamlike moment set in the Alameda Central. Originally created for the Hotel del Prado, the mural was dramatically rescued after the 1985 earthquake and relocated here—where the building itself was designed to protect it.
More than a museum, this is a time capsule of Mexico—where history, art, and identity converge in one unforgettable masterpiece.