In June, the 2026 Fifa World Cup will kick off at Mexico Metropolis’s just lately renovated Estadio Azteca, marking the primary time a stadium has hosted three World Cup opening matches (following these in 1970 and 1986). Matches in Mexico Metropolis, Guadalajara and Monterrey are accompanied by an bold cultural programme, and the capital’s mayor Clara Brugada has introduced that greater than 1,000 murals might be painted throughout town, many impressed by the Mesoamerican ritual ball recreation. The initiative aligns with Brugada’s emphasis on mural artwork, in search of to show town right into a “huge canvas”.
In a December press convention, tradition secretary Claudia Curiel de Icaza mentioned renovations are underway at 12 museums and 46 archaeological websites nationwide, together with Teotihuacan, as a part of preparations for the World Cup, which the tourism ministry (Secretaría de Turismo) count on will carry greater than 5 million guests to the nation. Commemorative exhibitions are scheduled and a brand new Indigenous textile museum, the Museo Textil de los Pueblos Indígenas y Afromexicanos in Mexico Metropolis, will open in Might.
Unbiased museums are stepping into the sport, too. The Museo Jumex will host Soccer & Artwork. A Shared Emotion (28 March-26 July), an exhibition curated by Guillermo Santamarina. New commissions embrace a participatory set up within the museum’s plaza by the Mexican collective Tercerunquinto that includes bleachers constituted of recycled Estadio Azteca seats. Extra cultural programmes are anticipated to help what would be the World Cup’s largest version (co-hosted with Canada and the US), even because it faces controversy over steep ticket costs, logistical challenges and migration limitations within the US.







