Leonora Carrington’s Wondrous Mexico City Home Will Become a Museum Filled With Thousands of Her Personal Belongings

The university in charge of the house shared details about the new museum on the occasion of the late artist’s 104th birthday.

A view inside British-Mexican artist Leonora Carrington's house and studio in Mexico City, on May 24, 2021. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

The Mexico City home and studio of visionary surrealist Leonora Carrington will be turned into a museum.

Details of the project were shared last week by the Autonomous Metropolitan University (UAM), an institution in the capital city that purchased the British Mexican artist’s house from her son in 2017, according to the Art Newspaper. The plan, the school explained, is to leave the home as Carrington did when she died in 2011 at the age of 94—down to every leftover sticky note, cigarette butt, and piece of mail.

The intention is “to preserve the intimate character of the dining room, bedroom, kitchen, and study with the idea of ​​presenting them as closely as they were in the artist’s daily life and in terms of the objects—around 8,600—all are in sight,” Alejandra Osorio Olave, UAM’s cultural director, said in a statement.

Alejandra Osorio, academic and cultural director of the diffusion coordination of the Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAM), shows a sculpture by British-Mexican artist Leonora Carrington at her house and studio in Mexico City, on May 24, 2021. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Alejandra Osorio, academic and cultural director of the diffusion coordination of the Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAM), shows a sculpture by British Mexican artist Leonora Carrington at her house and studio in Mexico City, on May 24, 2021. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Occasioning the announcement was the donation of dozens of Carrington’s works, including 45 sculptures and four drawings, as well as all of her furniture and home goods, to the school. The gift, in the works for several years now, was overseen by the artist’s youngest son, Pablo Weisz Carrington, and formalized last month in celebration of what would have been his mother’s 104th birthday on April 6. Among the artworks donated was Carrington’s sculpture The Palmist (c. 1960), which inspired a creature from Guillermo del Toro’s 2006 film Pan’s Labyrinth.

Olave explained that Carrington’s son sold the house to the university on the condition that it be left largely untouched and converted into a museum.

“We have been working with [Weisz Carrington] for three years on the conceptual project,” Olave said. “He wanted his mother’s legacy to stay in our country and we were the bridge for that to happen.”

View of Leonora Carrington's portrait at her house and studio in Mexico City, on May 24, 2021. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

View of Leonora Carrington’s portrait at her house and studio in Mexico City, on May 24, 2021. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Born in Lancashire, England in 1917, Carrington moved to Paris in 1938 with German artist Max Ernst, whom she had met a year earlier. There, Carrington enmeshed herself in the burgeoning scene of surrealist artists, honing her own dreamy world of anthropomorphized animals and biblical allusions.  

After Ernst was interned in a French prison camp in 1939, Carrington suffered a nervous breakdown. Her parents opted to send her to a sanatorium in South Africa, but on the way, she met up with Mexican poet Renato Leduc and the two fled to New York and, eventually, Mexico, where she would live, on and off, for the next six-plus decades of her life.

The facade of the Leonora Carrington Study House in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

The facade of the Leonora Carrington Study House in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

The Leonora Carrington Study House is expected to open to the public sometime this year. In the interim, fans of the artist can visit a recently launched interactive website dedicated to the ongoing study of her life and work.

See more images of the Leonora Carrington Study House below.

Leonora Carrington's home and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Leonora Carrington’s home and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Leonora Carrington's home and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Leonora Carrington's home and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

View of letters received by British-Mexican artist Leonora Carrington at her house and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.

View of letters received by British-Mexican artist Leonora Carrington at her house and studio in Mexico City. Photo: Claudio Cruz/AFP via Getty Images.


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