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    Museo de Leon Trotsky

    4.2 (37 reviews)
    Closed 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

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    Alexis B.

    We visited the Museo de Leon Trotsky during a day we spent in Coyoacan over a weeklong visit to Mexico City earlier this month. It is a small - but very interesting museum! The museum is located at the home where Leon Trotsky was assassinated in 1940 (they have added a building in the front, where there's a small museum, and then there's the courtyard and house where Trotsky lived behind that building). Leon Trotsky was forced into exile from the Soviet Union in 1929. Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera convinced the Mexican government to give the Trotskys political asylum, and Trotsky and his wife Natalia Sedova moved to Mexico city in 1937. They lived in Frida Kahlo's family home ("La Casa Azul" from January 1937-April 1939 but moved into this house a few blocks away after Trotsky and Rivera had a falling out. Trotsky was assassinated in the home on August 20, 1940. We visited a lot of museums in Mexico City during our week there, but this little museum is unique and special. It was interesting to learn a little Russian history and about the connections between Mexico and Russia at that time in history! (Trotsky survived a raid on his home/assassination attempt earlier in 1940 lead by Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros - whose work we saw all over Mexico City!!!!) If you're in Coyoacan for some Frida Kahlo attractions, don't skip this little museum (it's a bit of Frida history, too, really!). Definitely an interesting stop on our trip!

    Claudia P.

    We can feel history just by stepping outside this museum, imagine Frida visiting her friend here and all of the political conversations Trotsky must have had, if the walls could only talk... A political asylum organization keeps up with this home, with such a beautiful garden, all so we can educate ourselves, not just by reading, but by looking and feeling. Everything is translated in English, it is a must visit place if you are a historical junkie.

    If you were on the wrong side of Stalin you could expect a drastically shortened lifespan.
    Tracey A.

    A curious thing happened while in Mexico City. Serendipitously, each experience I had seemed to build upon others making me better able to appreciate what I was experiencing. As such, I can recommend that you go to the Trotsky Museum only after you've gone to the nearby Frida Kahlo Museum and also after you've listened thoroughly to the English language audio tour that's on offer at Frida Kahlo's. Both museums are easy to cover in one day and this one doesn't take long to tour. The Trotsky Museum is an interesting sideline to the Frida/Diego story. The Mexico City part of that story begins at the Frida Kahlo house and ends here. Another reviewer (Toby H, 5/15) intrigued me with his negative review of the place saying essentially that one could learn more from reviewing the wikipedia page on Trotsky. What I would recommend is that you first, or simultaneously, review wikipedia and whatever else interests you on Trotsky's story then just enjoy this museum for what it is. What is it? It's the home that Trotsky and his wife moved into after spending a couple of years encamped with Frida and Diego. It's the home where the first assassination attempt on Trotsky took place, a machine gunning of the structure that's said to have lasted 20 minutes. And it's the site of the second, successful attempt at his assassination. Aside from the house, it's mostly photos of Trotsky and, like Toby H said, could have been executed better, but knowing even a tidbit of backstory (which can be gleaned, in English, from this museum) helps one best appreciate what it is they're seeing. The story of Trotsky and his exile is interesting, and highly relevant. When the US has a president seemingly enamored of the Russians it's good to keep abreast of their history and what they're capable of. Basically, if someone at the top wants you gone you'd best say your goodbyes for it will surely happen. The Trotsky Museum holds an interesting little place in Mexico's (and Russia's) history.

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    Museo de Leon Trotsky Reviews in Other Languages

    Review Highlights - Museo de Leon Trotsky

    It is about a ten minute walk after checking out Frida's house so just walk down there after.

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    Museo Frida Kahlo - Entrance

    Museo Frida Kahlo

    4.3(341 reviews)
    0.4 kmCoyoacán

    What is there to say that hasn't been said already this is a must-see in CDMX. Refresh your memory…read moreon the life of Frida before your visit, and you will feel and relive her art in her home. I've been here twice, and both times I listened to the Frida soundtrack in 1 ear while touring her home. Frida Kahlo was an amazing, tortured, incredible soul. Her story and art live on in this home. So thankful we get to experience it. Arrive early; they are sticklers with times. Backpacks will be checked in. Get your tickets at least 1 week in advance! Enjoy the markets of Coyoacán!

    (Review based on 3.5 stars)…read more I am so glad that I had done my research about visiting Museo Frida Kahlo prior to coming because you must purchase your tickets online in advance (one to two weeks at least but it is better to purchase earlier if you are able). You will not be able to purchase the day before or the day of online because those tickets would have already sold out. And just as everyone has said, this museum does not sell any tickets at the door. Please note that you will be purchasing timed tickets and you have a short 15 minute window to arrive or you miss your time slot. But if you are after the 15 minute grace period, staff will just put you in the next time slot. I think I am in the minority here with my overall experience of the Museo Frida Kahlo in which I did not like it as much as I had expected. The home and grounds itself is beautiful and I just as I would have imagined visiting an artist's home, it was beautifully and tastefully decorated/ displayed. But placement of items and information boards were not well spread out and so it would bottleneck and get crowded in places. Also people would get really close to me and rub against me or my small purse, which I really was not a fan of (I really value my personal space). Frida Kahlo did live quite a tragic life and she truly was a resilient woman who could have spiraled downward but instead, she channeled her energy into art. But I will say it was rather disappointing that you do not learn much about her life in this museum and would learn more with your own reading online (from a credible source) or from school. In Frida Kahlo's home, I did love the kitchen the most. I loved how it was decorated with these little tiny cups to create a design on the wall and also to spell out both Frida and Diego's name. A building outside of her home is where there is a display of her clothes was actually what I enjoyed the most of this museum. I also preferred the restrooms on this side over the other restrooms closes to the exit of her home. Our visit was fine and am glad I was able to come. But I don't know if I would necessary consider this a must visit if you are visiting Mexico City. It is nice that your purchase of this museum also includes admission to Anahuacalli Museum, Diego's museum but it focuses on his sculptures and not his murals that you may know him more of. And also those tickets for his museum expire in one year. Lastly, after visiting here, consider walking to Mercado Coyoacán, which is about a 10 minute easy walk if you want to grab lunch and do a little browsing and shopping.

    Photos
    Museo Frida Kahlo
    Museo Frida Kahlo - Entering the Casa Azul

    Entering the Casa Azul

    Museo Frida Kahlo

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    Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli

    Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli

    4.8(28 reviews)
    4.2 km

    My husband and I visited the Anahuacalli Museum in the San Pablo de Tepetlapa neighborhood a few…read moreweeks ago when we were back in CDMX for a short vacation. It was our first visit, and I was totally blown away. The Anahuacalli Museum is part museum and part temple. It was conceived of and designed by Diego River (and his friend, architect, and artist Juan O'Gorman) to house his vast collection of pre-Hispanic pieces. The museum opened to the public in 1964 (Rivera died in 1957), and it's still a stunner. The architecture of the museum is really incredible - inspired by Mesoamerican architecture and utilizing incredible Mexican materials, including volcanic stone from the eruption of the Xitle volcano. The interior is incredible too - like no other building I've ever entered: walls of different thicknesses, altars, mosaics, murals, and so much more. The museum is an incredible house for the pre-Hispanic artifacts Rivera collected. They're displayed in beautiful surroundings, behind glass and on shelves and nooks throughout the building. On the second floor of the building - in the "Study" - there are sketches for different murals by Rivera, including a draft of the mural "Man at the Crossroads" - the mural painted by Rivera in NYC in 1932 and destroyed by the orders of Nelson Rockefeller. The museum has a small shop and a cafe, so you can really spend hours here. We didn't have quite that much time, but visiting Anahuacalli was one of the highlights of our recent trip to CDMX. I highly recommend it if you're interested in Mexican art, architecture, history, design...or if you just want a great view of the city from the terrace!

    I'm so glad we made it here! It was nothing like we expected as we wanted to see Diego Rivera's…read moremurals and didn't realize that this was more about an archeological endeavor than a museum with his murals! The best place to see his murals is at the museum of muralisim which was awesome! This was a little bit off the beaten path which was fine!

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    Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli
    Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli
    Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli

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    Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares - Outdoor covered resting areas

    Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares

    4.4(10 reviews)
    0.9 kmCoyoacán

    The National Museum of Popular Culture is a small to mid-sized museum located in Coyoacán district…read morein CDMX, that collects and catalogs, displays, promotes, and preserves traditional and contemporary art pieces, art forms, and handicrafts of varied regions, cultures/ethnicities and social groups within Mexico. The entrance is a little confusing, the front doorway closest to the road only leads to the library/bookshop. Follow the path around the right where one entry to an exhibit is via the building's back entrance and entry to another exhibit is via the building on the back right. When I visited on a Sunday, entrance was free and there was also no one directly stopping visitors to ask for tickets, so I ended up wandering around a couple minutes to find the entrances. While not a huge museum, it was interesting to drop by and check out the current exhibits. There were 3.5 galleries displaying artworks when I visited in January, the half gallery being basically two small rooms with nacimientos (Mexican nativity scene models of varied media and art forms). The larger rooms held works of 1) an art collective focused on traditional and contemporary art forms of the Michoacán region, 2) winning submissions from the 50th edition of the National Folk Art Competition of 2025, which featured all sorts of traditional, contemporary and fusion art forms enriched with Mexican iconography and techniques, 3) "Creators: Dreams and Realities: Indigenous and Afro-descendant Women in the Arts," which shared contemporary works by women in marginalized communities. A lot of creativity and talent in a small space! The museum took about 30 minutes to walk thru, not crowded at all on a Sunday afternoon even considering free admission, actually very quiet and with only a few other visitors. Note for non-Spanish speakers, there are minimal descriptions in English so plan to brush up on your Duolingo or use a translation app. General admission: $21 pesos Free Admission for: - children under 12 years of age, - student, teacher, or INAPAM members with valid ID (ages 60+) Sundays: free admission for the general public For more info: https://mncp.cultura.gob.mx

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    Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares - Nacimiento (nativity scene)

    Nacimiento (nativity scene)

    Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares
    Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares - Entrance to library only, entrance to museum portion is thru the back of this building and also in the building to the right behind this one

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    Entrance to library only, entrance to museum portion is thru the back of this building and also in the building to the right behind this one

    Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Inside Casa Cecil O'Gorman

    Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera

    4.3(19 reviews)
    4.1 kmSan Ángel

    Visiting Museo Casa Kahlo on a Sunday morning piqued my interest in learning more about Frida Kahlo…read moreand Diego Riviera's lives as artists, so that same afternoon I headed here--Museo Casa Estudio Diego Riviera y Frida Kahlo--to see where inspirations materialized into physicality. This location comprised of a set of personal working art studios, each with a bespoke structure customized to suit his or her creative outlets. On a cloudy Sunday afternoon around 2pm in January, these former artists' lofts were busy though not uncomfortably crowded. Sunday is their free admission day and the only reason I think the location wasn't more full, was due to a sprinkling rain on and off. While they don't require tickets they ask for visitors to sign a guest book as they enter the premises, after which you're free to roam around. There are three main structures--the studios of each respective artists and another built by a Mexican architect, who I believe as a friend of the couple. They aren't large, each would take maybe 10 minutes to walk thru, the studio of Diego Riviera being the most popular due to the resetting of furniture and decorative elements simulating the setup when he used to create works here. Visitors can go up to the roof too, which is a few stories up, though take care since there are no high side railings and it's a three story drop down. Around the exterior ground floor there are a few larger descriptive plaques on the history and purposes of each building and Diego and Frida's career and personal timeline as well. Inside each building there are smaller signs with the majority in Spanish. It took about 30 minutes to get thru both as I didn't try to translate and read thru many of these. Inside Riviera's studio, it was cool to see some displays of different items Diego collected as inspiration for his art, everything from ceramic serving ware to terracotta artifacts from early native settlements, to paper mache sculptures, paintings and mobiles. Kahlo's studio was used as more of a gallery space featuring a small exhibit on Hungarian photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in Mexico City in the mid 20th century. O'Gorman's building showed some architectural background and small-scale models of these three buildings and a handful of his conceptual and preparatory work for this project in particular. At the end of the day not sure if this location is a "must see" on your first trip, though I appreciated the context it provided for understanding more about these two artists! For more info: https://inba.gob.mx/sitios/recorridos-virtuales/casa-estudio-diego-rivera-frida-kahlo/

    On our first visit to Mexico City in 2023, we visited the Frida Kahlo Museum (Casa Azul) in…read moreCoyoacán. On our visit a few weeks ago, we visited the Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo in San Ángel. The experiences are very different, but I really enjoyed our recent visit to the Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo. The three houses on the property were design by Mexican Juan O'Gorman completed by 1932 (when O'Gorman was only 27). Two of them, connected by bridge, were designed by O'Gorman for his friend Diego Rivera and his then wife Frida Kahlo. These projects are an example of O'Gorman's politics (he was a committed socialist) and how those politics affected his designs (the homes are minimalist and highly functional, while still having inspiring design). Frida and Diego moved into the houses in 1934. When Frida's father died, she moved back into the house in Coyoacán, but Rivera lived in his house in San Ángel until his death in 1957. When you visit, you can walk into all three buildings (the third of which is the smallest, designed for O'Gorman's father, but never used by him). Many of the rooms of the homes are used for exhibits with information about O'Goman, Rivera, Kahlo, and other artists, but Diego's house has preserved his studio in much he way it was when he lived in the home. (If you've seen the movie Frida, you'll recognize the home for a very memorable scene - based on real facts.) While I didn't find this museum nearly as crowded as the Coyoacán museum (which, for me, was almost unpleasantly crowded), but has lots of tight spaces and you might wait a bit to make it into an area of one of the houses you want to see. We visited with a guided tour (booked through Viator), but you absolutely don't need to do this. I liked visiting with a guide, because we got a lot of information and context about the house without having to get up close to things to read - helpful in a crowded space. If you're a fan of Diego, of Frida, of O'Gorman, of art history, of architecture..., the Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera y Frida Kahlo is well worth a visit. Because San Ángel is gorgeous, make an afternoon of it and spend a few hours exploring other areas and attractions in the neighborhood!

    Photos
    Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Frida Kahlo's studio - exhibit on visual editor and photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in CDMX in the 20th century

    Frida Kahlo's studio - exhibit on visual editor and photographer Kati Horna's work documenting life in CDMX in the 20th century

    Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Info on Casa Cecil O'Gorman - designed by Juan O'Gorman

    Info on Casa Cecil O'Gorman - designed by Juan O'Gorman

    Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera - Cactus photo op :)

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    Cactus photo op :)

    Museo de Leon Trotsky - museums - Updated June 2026

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