Exhibitors
At A La Mexicana, we invite exhibitors from all over Mexico to showcase their exceptional projects and products in a dynamic and elevated setting. We celebrate the rich, vibrant culture of Mexican design while connecting it to the global design landscape of today.
Invisible
PATRICIA GOVEA, MEXICO CITY
Patricia Govea is a cross-cultural designer and creative whose work emerges from the intersection of fashion, art, and cultural identity. Her practice is rooted in collaboration with Indigenous Mexican communities—particularly textile artisans—integrating ancestral knowledge with a contemporary aesthetic vision. Through her creations, Govea honors Indigenous heritage and proposes a new language of representation, elegance, and resistance.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Patricia presents a textile installation that combines ceremonial garments, traditional techniques, and signature design. Each piece tells a collective story, reclaiming the dignity of artisanal labor and highlighting the cultural power of Indigenous peoples. The fabrics, embroideries, and silhouettes offer an aesthetic that challenges global production logics and celebrates diversity as a creative force.
KUU, Guadalajara
Arte Kuu is a creative collective based in Guadalajara, Jalisco, dedicated to reinterpreting Wixárika (Huichol) artistry through contemporary jewelry and design. Their work honors the ancestral techniques and cultural heritage of Mexican
indigenous communities, transforming traditional symbols into modern expressions of identity and spirituality.
For A La Mexicana 2025, Arte Kuu presents an immersive installation that celebrates the Wixárika worldview. Through intricate beadwork and symbolic motifs, the pieces narrate stories of origin, territory, and spiritual connection, demonstrating how art serves as a medium of resistance and intergenerational continuity.
ANDREA FLORES HORN, CIUDAD DE MÉXICO
Andrea Flores Horn is a jewelry designer from Mexico City. Her work is distinguished by experimentation with materials such as bronze and tumbaga, and by an aesthetic that blends organic elegance with symbolic references. Inspired by the form and texture of caviar, Andrea creates pieces that inhabit the space between the sculptural and the corporeal, challenging notions of luxury, nature, and desire.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Andrea presents a contemporary jewelry collection in which metal is transformed into living, sensual surfaces. Each piece, conceived as an extension of the body, engages in dialogue with the inner landscape of the wearer: sensuality, memory, and territory coexist in forms that evoke the natural and the precious. Her work builds a bridge between material tradition and contemporary language, highlighting jewelry as a medium of artistic and emotional expression.
y mazic tambien Mazic is a design project that brings together wood, color, and Mexican tradition to create utilitarian objects infused with strong symbolic and aesthetic value. Its practice is grounded in direct collaboration with artisans from different regions of the country, blending traditional knowledge with contemporary design. Through a respectful and sensitive approach, Mazic offers a renewed vision of the everyday object as a bearer of history, identity, and beauty.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Mazic presents a series of functional pieces that fuse techniques such as the textile art of Chiapas, Oaxacan clay, and tropical woods from southern Mexico. Each object is the result of a dialogue between materials, hands, and territories, where design not only shapes form but also amplifies the voices of the artisan communities involved.
MAZIC, MÉXICO
Mazic es un proyecto de diseño que une madera, color y tradición mexicana para dar vida a objetos utilitarios con una fuerte carga simbólica y estética. Su práctica se basa en la colaboración directa con artesanos de distintas regiones del país, integrando saberes tradicionales con diseño contemporáneo. A través de un enfoque respetuoso y sensible, Mazic propone una visión renovada del objeto cotidiano como portador de historia, identidad y belleza.
Para A La Mexicana (2025), Mazic presenta una serie de piezas funcionales que fusionan técnicas como el arte textil de Chiapas, el barro de Oaxaca y las maderas tropicales del sur de México. Cada objeto es resultado de un diálogo entre materiales, manos y territorios, donde el diseño no solo organiza la forma, sino que amplifica las voces de las comunidades artesanas involucradas.
M DE MÉXICO, MEXICO
M de México is a brand that honors and preserves Mexico’s cultural richness through the creation of artisanal garments that celebrate the craftsmanship of local communities. Its approach focuses on the intersection of fashion, tradition, and sustainability, promoting the value of ancestral textile techniques within a contemporary context.
For A La Mexicana (2025), M de México presents a collection of caftans featuring embroidery from Aguacatenango, Chiapas, and traditional pompom details handcrafted by artisan communities from various regions of the country. Each garment is not only a tribute to Mexico’s textile heritage, but also sustainably designed with deep respect for the environment and community-based processes.
CORSO, GUADALAJARA, JALISCO
Corso is a Mexican fine jewelry brand founded by Samuel Casillas, an architect and designer from Guadalajara whose passion for goldsmithing and history led him to study in Italy. Named after the street he lived on in Rome, the brand is known for blending ancestral
techniques with contemporary design, resulting in timeless pieces that celebrate Mexican luxury and craftsmanship.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Corso presents a collection that honors the cultural wealth of Mexico through jewelry crafted from natural materials such as gemstones, pearls, silver, and gold. Each piece tells a unique story, the result of a creative process that begins with a sketch and culminates in a handcrafted work, reflecting dedication and reverence for artisanal traditions.
CARALARGA, MEXICO CITY
Caralarga is a textile design and production studio based in Mexico City. Their work moves
fluidly between textile design, jewelry, and artisanal craft, exploring the transformation of raw materials such as cotton and recycled horn. Through close collaborations with artisans, Caralarga creates pieces that reflect a deep respect for nature and the value of traditional techniques.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Caralarga presents a series of large-format pieces that highlight the natural beauty of cotton, inviting viewers to reflect on sustainability and the artisanal process. Some works serve as decorative elements, while others delve into symbolic and ritual dimensions.
The series is accompanied by documentation of the creation process, emphasizing the importance of community and collective labor.
DANIELA BUSTOS MAYA, MÉRIDA, YUCATÁN
Daniela Bustos Maya is an artist and designer from Mérida, Yucatán. Her practice unfolds between contemporary art and textile work, incorporating traditional techniques, repurposed materials, and objects imbued with memory. Through a multidisciplinary approach, she explores themes such as identity, the symbolic value of materials, and the relationship between the everyday and the historical.
For A La Mexicana (2025), Daniela presents a series of textile pieces and altered objects that reflect on the body, ornamentation, and material heritage. Using antique Mexican coins, handmade embroidery, and collected materials, the artist creates compositions that reframe ideas of luxury, history, and cultural rootedness through a feminist and decolonial lens.
Her work engages with collective memory and artisanal gestures, opening questions about time, belonging, and transformation. The installation is complemented by visual records and archival objects that invite the audience into the poetics of the intimate and inherited.
Oriana Rodriguez, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Oriana Rodríguez presents a textile-based installation that explores the body as archive. Interweaving handwoven fabrics, natural dyes, and symbolic embroidery, her work reflects on the cycles of womanhood, land, and ritual. It is an intimate dialogue between past and present, where each thread speaks of resistance, resilience, and the quiet power of making by hand.
Macario Jiménez, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Macario Jiménez presents a sculptural fashion installation that captures the interplay between movement and stillness. Delicate fabrics—cut on the bias, hand-finished, and suspended in space—invite viewers into a dreamlike landscape where light, body, and material coalesce. His work speaks to a vision of Mexican elegance that is both modern and rooted in a legacy of craftsmanship and poetic design.
Maruca Novelo, Puerto Vallarta
Maruca Novelo is a Mexican fashion designer whose work embodies the vibrant spirit of Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco. Drawing inspiration from the coastal landscapes and rich cultural heritage of her hometown, she creates garments that blend traditional craftsmanship with contemporary design. Her collections are known for their flowing silhouettes, natural fabrics, and intricate details, reflecting a commitment to sustainability and artisanal techniques.
For A La Mexicana 2025, Maruca Novelo presents a collection that celebrates the essence of coastal Mexico. Through breezy textiles, handwoven accents, and a palette inspired by the sea and sun, her pieces evoke a sense of place and identity. Each design tells a story of heritage and innovation, honoring the past while embracing the future of Mexican fashion.
Carolina Crowley
For A La Mexicana 2025, Carolina Crowley presents a collection that celebrates the fusion of cultures and the artistry of hand-tooled leather. Each handbag showcases intricate craftsmanship, reflecting a commitment to quality and a passion for storytelling through design. Her work not only honors the skills of Mexican artisans but also redefines luxury by emphasizing authenticity, sustainability, and cultural connection.
Mowi, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Mowi presents a collection that explores the intersection of tradition and innovation. Through clean lines, natural fabrics, and subtle embellishments, the pieces embody a modern interpretation of Mexican identity. Each garment tells a story of heritage and forward-thinking design.
Pasionarte, Hermosillo, Sonora
For A La Mexicana 2025, Pasionarte showcases a collection of hats that pay homage to Mexican traditions while embracing modern fashion trends. Each piece is meticulously crafted, reflecting the brand’s dedication to preserving cultural heritage through wearable art.
Kocheua Arte, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Kocheua Arte presents an installation that highlights the richness of indigenous artistry. Through a fusion of traditional motifs and modern aesthetics, the pieces invite viewers to engage with Mexico’s diverse cultural landscape.
Dutzi, Valladolid, Yucatán
For A La Mexicana 2025, Dutzi presents a collection of eco-friendly bags that embody the brand’s ethos of sustainability and craftsmanship. Each piece tells a story of transformation, turning discarded materials into stylish, functional accessories that honor both the planet and the people who craft them.
Ensamble Artesano, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Ensamble Artesano showcases a curated selection of handcrafted pieces that celebrate the diversity and richness of Mexican artisanal traditions. The collection serves as a testament to the resilience and creativity of artisans, preserving cultural heritage through collaborative design and innovation.
Arial 12, Mexico City
For A La Mexicana 2025, Arial 12 presents a collection that embodies the fusion of tradition and modernity. Through innovative designs and artisanal techniques, the pieces offer a fresh perspective on Mexican fashion, celebrating the country’s rich cultural tapestry.