Córdoba Contemporary Art Map: Museums, Artist-Run Spaces, and Exhibitions

Contemporary art in Córdoba splits between two distinct gravitational fields. Nueva Córdoba carries the institutional weight: the Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes Emilio Caraffa, which holds the Fundación Centro de Arte Contemporáneo collection, sits within walking distance of the Palacio Ferreyra (Museo Superior de Bellas Artes Evita) and the Palacio Dionisi, forming a compact circuit of art institutions in Córdoba. The independent and commercial energy gathers instead in Güemes, where the Paseo de las Artes threads galleries, antique dealers and small theatres through nineteenth-century houses. Galería Marchiaro has anchored that neighbourhood since 1974, while a younger commercial layer — Orfila, Tierra arte contemporáneo, Subsuelo, Sasha D. — has thickened galleries in Córdoba.

What defines the scene, though, is its self-organised underside. Casa 13, running without interruption from the Pasaje Revol since 1993, remains the emblem of an artist-run culture fed by the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba's art faculty, which keeps turning out graduates who open project rooms and collective spaces rather than wait for the capital to confer recognition. That habit of a provincial city sustaining its own circuits — fairs such as MAC and the newer Capital Feria, associations like FARO — gives Córdoba a real kinship with Guadalajara, where a university-fed, artist-led scene has likewise built its momentum at a deliberate distance from the national market's centre of gravity.§In Cordoba, the gallery scene is shaped less by scale than by continuity, proximity, and self-organized initiative. The most relevant contemporary art galleries in Cordoba tend to operate between commercial presentation and local scene-building, often supporting artists who move through university networks, independent workshops, and collective projects before entering more formal markets. Guemes remains the clearest point of concentration, where galleries coexist with older cultural infrastructures but increasingly define a more contemporary layer of production and circulation. Spaces such as Galeria Marchiaro provide historical continuity, while Tierra arte contemporaneo and Subsuelo point to a younger field attentive to emerging practices, installation, and experimental formats. Rather than functioning as a secondary echo of Buenos Aires, Cordoba's galleries help sustain contemporary art in Cordoba as an autonomous ecosystem in which curatorial decisions, artist relationships, and regional visibility are negotiated locally. This gives the scene a compact but meaningful density, especially for artists working outside the dominant national market and in dialogue with art institutions in Cordoba.§Cordoba's institutional profile is built around a public museum circuit that gives contemporary art a civic and pedagogical frame rather than a purely market-facing one. The Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes Emilio Caraffa is the clearest anchor, especially through its connection to the Fundacion Centro de Arte Contemporaneo collection, which allows contemporary practices to be read alongside broader provincial art histories without being absorbed by them. Nearby, Palacio Ferreyra and Palacio Dionisi extend this institutional density, although their relevance to current practice depends on how their programs activate dialogue between collection, exhibition, and living artists. Against this public structure, non-profit and artist-run spaces such as Casa 13 introduce a different institutional logic: smaller, less formal, but often more responsive to experimentation, performance, installation, and collective production. Within contemporary art in Cordoba, institutions therefore operate through a tension between public memory and self-organized continuity, sustaining a scene where research, education, local artistic agency, and galleries in Cordoba carry more weight than spectacle or market validation.

You can navigate the city's art scene through the dedicated pages for galleries and art institutions in Córdoba.

Explore Córdoba

A local guide to Córdoba, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Argentine art context.

This Córdoba guide is part of the 1 Cubic Meter global contemporary art mapping project, which documents galleries, institutions, foundations, and independent art spaces through curated city-specific research.

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About 1 Cubic Meter 1 Cubic Meter

1 Cubic Meter is a curated global map of contemporary art venues and exhibitions. It connects galleries, museums, foundations, independent art spaces, and artist-run initiatives across major art cities worldwide.

The platform organizes contemporary art geographically while maintaining a global perspective. Cities are presented as interconnected nodes within an international art ecosystem, enabling institutions and exhibitions to be situated within a broader structural context.

The result is a continuously maintained global map dedicated exclusively to contemporary art.