• INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo
    INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo
  • INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
    INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
  • INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
    INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
  • INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
    INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
  • INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo
    INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo
  • INAH-DMC//Melitón Tapia
    INAH-DMC//Melitón Tapia
  • INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
    INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
  • INAH-Museo de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
    INAH-Museo de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
The San Nicolás Obispo College, built for Vasco de Quiroga and opened in 1540, displays the wonderful handcrafts of Michoacan which include: pottery, copper, stone and wooden crafts, lacquerware from Uruapan and Quiroga, Patzcuaro-style guilding, backstrap weaving, treadle loom weaving and embroidery.
About the museum
The building which houses the Museum of Popular Arts and Industries of Patzcuaro is a historic monument, mainly from the eighteenth century. The building is on a single level and its spaces are organized around two large patios. The first of these is square with a beautiful garden and four wide porticoes separated by round arches and stonework pillars. The walls are made from thick adobe, as is typical of the region, the roof is gabled with rafters creating a solid wooden structure for the tiles. There is a roof terrace supported on tejamanil (thin boards). The walls are smoothed and painted white.

The building has undergone many significant transformations. Vasco de Quiroga, the first bishop of Michoacan, commissioned the original San Nicolás Obispo College on this site. Even though it dates back to the sixteenth century, there are only a few walls left standing from the original building. The building’s current configuration has been shaped by its subsequent use as a girls’ school, private residence, military headquarters and agrarian meeting center.

The Museum of Popular Arts and Industries in Patzcuaro was founded in 1938 by a decree of President Lázaro Cárdenas in order to reassert the economic and aesthetic value of Purepecha crafts. Since then, this eighteenth-century building with 11 rooms has been an exhibition space. It became part of the INAH museum network in 1942.

For the last 70 years the building has been the showcase for local Purepecha handcrafts. Its permanent and temporary exhibitions have displayed an evolving craft production recognized for its variety, quality and aesthetics within Mexico and abroad. A tour of the museum provides information on the women and men involved in production, their needs and choices, their daily tasks and the behind the scenes organization of each of the region's handcrafts.

Under INAH’s custody the museum has incorporated acquisitions of the Institute as well as donations from the craft makers. Renovation work in the 1970s brought in showcases made by the carpenters of Patzcuaro, and uncovered part of the yacata (circular-plan temple) in the rear patio, also providing the site with a rich collection of pottery from various towns across the Purepecha region. In December 2010 the museum reopened its doors after new maintenance work to the building and the renewal of the exhibitions, now given an ethnographic slant to provide information not only on the artistic aspect of the crafts but also information on the way of life and organization of the towns where they are produced. Thanks to the curatorial guidance of Dr. Aída Castilleja González, a researcher from the Michoacan INAH Center in association with Catalina Rodríguez Lazcano, curator of the World of the Purepecha Gallery of the National Museum of Anthropology, the museum has been able to offer a tour of the different working methods of the Purepecha people of Michoacan.

The museum’s historical building represents nearly 50 of the region’s towns, subdivided into four areas: La Sierra (mountains), La Laguna (lake), La Ciénaga (marshes) and La Cañada de los Once Pueblos (valley of the 11 villages). The curators offer a glimpse into the different working methods and trades of these ethnic groups. The aim is to show work as a dynamic factor in the life of society, which gives the inhabitants a sense of identity. Ancient ways of working from pre-Hispanic times are shown, followed by new systems and trades incorporated during the viceregal period. Hence the displays cover activities such as: hunting, gathering, fishing, farming, food preparation, pottery, copper work, stone and wood work, lacquerware of Uruapan and Quiroga and the Patzcuaro-style gilding, as well as building techniques, clothing (backstrap weaving, treadle loom weaving and embroidery) and music.
January 1938
December 2010
An expert point of view
Catalina Aurora Rodríguez Lazcano
Catalina Aurora Rodríguez Lazcano
Museo Nacional de Antropología
Practical information
Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to 17:00 hrs.

$75.00 pesos

  • Extra fee for video cameras
  • Sundays free for Mexican citizens
  • Free entrance for Mexicans under 13 years old
  • Free entrance for Mexican students and teachers
  • Free entry for seniors
  • pensioners and retirees with ID
  • No Smoking
  • No entry with food
Arciga s/n, esquina Alcantarilla,
Zona Centro, C.P. 61600,
Pátzcuaro, Michoacán, México.

It is located in the center of the city of Patzcuaro, one block from the Plaza Vasco de Quiroga. Entering the city by the Morelia-Patzcuaro road, continue along Lázaro Cárdenas avenue, which leads to the junction of Ahumada, Lloreda and Buenavista streets (a point known as Siete Esquinas or seven corners), from there take Buenavista street, which leads to Arciga street, continue along the latter, to the east the Basilica de Nuestra Señora de la Salud can be seen. Continuing down that same street, the museum is less than 50 meters to the south.


Services
  • Guardarropa
  • Sanitarios
  • Visitas guiadas
GUIDE
Guía
  • +52 (434) 342 1029
  • This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • FACEBOOK
Directory
Titular
Patricia Terán Escobar
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
+52 (434) 342 1029
2010
12208
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Banda de Sevina
Colección del museo
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
12239
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
12230
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
13645
2016
13637
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Pátzcuaro... Ayer
Exposición Temporal
2015
2015
13635
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Las plumas y el viento
Exposición Temporal
2015
2015
13522
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
Museo Local de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
136_final.pdf
125_A_000
125_A_001
INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
Central garden
125_A_002
INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
Central garden
125_A_003
INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
Museum facade
125_A_04
INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo
125_A_004
INAH-DMC//Melitón Tapia
Museum passageway
125A_005
INAH-DMC/Melitón Tapia
Museum facade
125_A_006
INAH-Museo de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro
19.5137428,-101.606822
Texto © CONACULTA.INAH.Museo de Artes e Industrias Populares de Pátzcuaro CNME Imágenes © CONACULTA.INAH.Dirección de Medios © CONACULTA.INAH.Fototeca CNME.Gliserio Castañeda
Centro INAH Michoacán
24
B
INAH-Mediateca/Teresa Galindo

LEGAL NOTICE

The contents of this website belong to the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México, and may be downloaded and shared without alterations, provided that the author is acknowledged and if is not for commercial purposes.

Footer MediatecaINAH

Guardar
Lugares INAH

Idioma