'; itemElement.innerHTML = content; return itemElement; } if (suggestion.displayFullResult) { content = '

See full results for {s} 4y6k4h

'; content = content.replace('{s}', '« ' + sanitizer.sanitize(input.value) + ' »'); } else if (suggestion.semQuery) { content = '

Semantic search for {s}

'; content = content.replace('{s}', '« ' + sanitizer.sanitize(input.value) + ' »'); } else { var cleanText = sanitizer.sanitize(suggestion.text) var boldText = cleanText.replace(reg, function (optionText) { return '' + optionText + '' }); var subText = sanitizer.sanitize(suggestion.subText); subText = subText.replace(suggestion.artistName, function (optionText) { return optionText.replace(reg, function (boldText) { return '' + boldText + '' }) }); var cssClass = suggestion.type === 'artist' ? 'img-circle border' : ''; content = '
' + '' + cleanText + '' + '
' + '' + boldText + '' + '' + subText + '' + '
' + '
'; } itemElement.innerHTML = content; return itemElement; }, onSelect: function (element, autocomplete) { document.dispatchEvent(new CustomEvent('am.gtag.search', {'detail': {'term': autocomplete.value}})) savedSearch(sanitizer.sanitize(autocomplete.value), element); }, emptyMsg: 'No results found.', preventSubmit: false, showOnFocus: true, // Required to set the final position of the results // By default result tag is applied at the bottom of the document with fixed style // when we want it in the defined tag ( Styles are also customized ) customize: function (input, inputRect, container, maxHeight) { resultContainer.append($(container)) } }; } function savedSearch(string, element) { if (!element.url) { element.url = url.replace("term", string) } var formData = new FormData(); formData.append('string', string); formData.append('nbResults', nbResults); try { if (navigator.sendBeacon) { navigator.sendBeacon('/en/saved--search/artwork', formData) } else { var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); xhr.open('post', '/en/saved--search/artwork', false); xhr.send(formData); } } catch (e) { } window.location.href = element.url } document.addEventListener('am.gtag.search', function (e) { var term = e.detail.term gtag("event", "search", { search_term: term }); }); }) })();
Artmajeur Online Art Gallery | Magazine Magazine
City Art Trip to Buenos Aires: Tango, Tags and Arty Coffee Cups

City Art Trip to Buenos Aires: Tango, Tags and Arty Coffee Cups 26p3v

Clarisse Russel | Jun 5, 2025 4 minutes read 0 comments
 

Poetic, explosive, and resolutely free, Buenos Aires is a city that doesn't look at itself; it lives. A true open-air stage, it blends the art of living, committed creations, and collective memory in a rhythm all its own.

Plaza del Congreso, Buenos Aires, Argentina © Napoletano via Wikipedia

Buenos Aires isn't something you visit. It's something you breathe , tag , sip , and sometimes deconstruct with collages, wall poetry, and crazy installations in half-disused warehouses. If you thought art was limited to white walls and small-print signs, get your sneakers and your eyes ready: the Argentine capital is an open-air gallery.

Palermo: Welcome to the Street Museum 6581o

Let's start with Palermo , the hipster neighborhood we love to hate but are frantically photographing from the second minute.

Palermo Soho and Palermo Hollywood are not neighborhood names: they are moods .
Between two designer boutiques and a vegan brunch, the walls scream with color. Giant graffiti, political frescoes, pop icons or twists from Argentinian culture: here, art is free, often political, and never consensual.

It's a permanent street museum , where you can seamlessly switch from a manga-style portrait of Frida to giant surrealist compositions. It's also the perfect place to yourself off as a street art expert after a couple of Instagram stories.

Discover our selection on Buenos Aires

Street Art Tour: pedal through the fresco 5e1h56


If you don't want to just wander around with your eyes raised like a mystical tourist, opt for a Street Art Tour . On foot or by bike, with a ionate (and often tattooed) guide, you'll discover the behind-the-scenes of the local urban scene.
The artists have names like Jaz, Pum Pum, or Martin Ron, and their works are as grand as the social contradictions they question.

We recommend the BA Street Art agency, a benchmark in the genre, which will show you Buenos Aires through the eyes of a graffiti artist.

Art and coffee: where to dip your medialunas in a little avant-garde 3a145s

After strolling along the colorful sidewalks, it's time to immerse yourself in the arty cafes , where we talk about aesthetics while sipping a flat white with a hint of melancholy.

  • Felisa Espacio Cultural (Almagro): bookstore, bar, exhibition space, and mini-micro-theater stage. Drink organic mate while remaking the world with performers.

  • Lattente (Palermo): a temple of specialty coffee, often occupied by laptop-toting graphic designers. A great place to meet artists taking a creative break.

  • La Flor de Barracas : a hidden gem, part café, part exhibition space. Visit for its intimate concerts and often activist exhibitions.

Bonus track: art that breaks the mold 4fx4v

Want to go beyond galleries? Let yourself drift toward spaces where the art is experimental, immersive, or just downright bizarre (and therefore precious):

  • Espacio Pla : at the crossroads of digital art, retrofuturism, and algorithmic poetry. Yes, it exists.

  • UV Estudios : an underground gallery where exhibitions are temporary, and often temporary in a good way : raw, lively, risky.

  • La Usina del Arte (La Boca): a former power plant converted into a temple of contemporary art. Industrial conversion has never looked so beautiful.

Artists to discover 1o64o

The icons (you absolutely must know) 2s6w4n

Xul Solar (1887–1963) 4n6r3g

Mystic, inventor of languages, visionary painter. A bit like the Argentinian Blake. His world is esoteric, symbolist, offbeat, and brilliantly crazy.
📍 Museo Xul Solar in the Retiro district, a little-known gem.

Leon Ferrari (1920–2013) 6w481y

A master of political collage and provocation, he confronted the Church, dictatorship, and the Vietnam War. A committed, explosive work that urgently needs to be rediscovered.
📍 MALBA and MNBA own several of his pieces.

The contemporary who slaps 11253y

Marta Minujin 2s2qg

The high priestess of Argentine pop art. Performances, monumental installations (like her Parthenon of forbidden books ), exuberance and irony.
Always active, always flamboyant.

Nora Iniesta 456d4z

Visual artist who explores memory, Argentine identity, and the relationship with childhood and homeland. Her work blends textiles, objects, and popular symbols.

Julio Le Parc 5y3k3v

Okay, he lives in , but he was born in Argentina, and his influence looms large over all of Latin American optical art. Immersive installations, plays of light and perception.

Martin Ron 674d29

One of the most famous muralists in the world. His frescoes are hyperrealistic , often committed, with disproportionate dimensions.
To see in Palermo or Villa Urquiza.

Pum Pum 103x3p

Her colorful, childhood-inspired, kawaii style often conceals a political message. She is one of the few major female street artists in Buenos Aires.

Jaz (Franco Fasoli) e653j

Former graffiti artist turned international muralist. His style is raw, expressionist, half-man, half-animal, with a primitive energy.

Marcos Lopez 3b332u

Photographer, visual artist, and jack-of-all-trades. His Pop Latino series is a cult classic: ironic and colorful scenes, half kitsch, half tragic.
A critical and funny look at Argentine society.

Charly Nijensohn 2d235t

Video, installation, performance. He explores the extreme zones of the body and space (Patagonia, Atacama Desert, etc.) with an almost apocalyptic aesthetic.

Tomas Saraceno (born in Argentina, based in Berlin) 5m596i

His works connect art, science, and ecology. Spiders, floating clouds, suspended structures… The future, a poetic and cosmic version.

Discover our selection of Argentinian artists

In summary: 1o113c

Buenos Aires is not a museum. It's a permanent artistic residency, a life-size work in progress.
Here, art wanders , provokes , laughs and sips a cortado on the terrace .
And you? Are you ready to trade in your subway map for an imaginary can of spray paint?

Related Collections
View More Articles
 

ArtMajeur

Receive our newsletter for art lovers and collectors
Iris
Iris, your AI guide
Loading...