University of Arizona Museum of Art
Superb collections of American and European art that include old masters, important works of the 20th century, and contemporary art by distinguished and emerging artists. Located on the University of Arizona's campus.
Arizona Indian Art Museums
The Heard Museum (Phoenix) and the Arizona State Museum (Tuscon). Indians made a lot of clay jars to store water. They also made rugs which were used to stay warm in the cold winters.
TUCSON CATALINA FOOTHILLS HACIENDA - 4342 N CAMINO KINO
Tucson Catalina Foothills Hacienda
4342 N. Camino Kino
Tucson, AZ. 85718
- $1,199,000
- Tucson MLS #22000378
- 3,352 sf (2,732 sf main house + 620 sf guest house)
- Tax ID# 108-22-061E
- Built in 1952 - Recently Completely Renovated
- 2.16 acres
- Catalina Foothills Estates #2
- 4 bedrooms/3 Baths
- 3 car garage + carport
Lush, perfectly manicured grounds surround this dramatically updated & remodeled territorial Hacienda compound with abundant indoor/outdoor living. Meander along the nature paths & enjoy the botanical flora adorning the multiple courtyards with fountains & meticulous yard-scape galore with stunning SW landscape specimens.
This Tucson Catalina Foothills Hacienda craftsmanship incorporates ''Old World Charm'' with New World amenitie. This 2+ ac gated, Tucson Catalina Foothills Hacienda estate is situated in the heart of the Catalina Foothills and has sweeping city & Catalina Mountain views. Upgraded with over $1 million in renovations, this Tucson Catalina Foothills Hacienda skillfully added a master suite with his/her closets, concrete floors, a private Zen garden, linear fire place and a dramatic tub/shower. The new 620 sf guest house is extraordinary with a full kitchen and wrap-around deck. Resort-like relaxation at this Tucson Catalina Foothills Hacienda in the saltwater pool. This retreat is ideal for entertaining – there's an outdoor kitchen/BBQ, fireplace and firepit, along with multiple vegetable gardens.
Live a healthy lifestyle. Enjoy nearby Rillito River Walk Loop, cycling trails, birdwatching, hiking, upscale shopping, restaurants, galleries and farmer's market.
For more information, contact TucsonLandHomeRealty.com.
Equal Housing
Painting Bacchus @ Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art
Painting Bacchus with a fire extinguisher before installation at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. 2016 © Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art
Places to see in ( Mesa - USA )
Places to see in ( Mesa - USA )
Mesa is a city just east of Phoenix, in Arizona. Mesa Grande Cultural Park is home to a giant, centuries-old ceremonial mound, and artifacts of the ancient Hohokam people. The Arizona Museum of Natural History exhibits dinosaur skeletons and archaeological finds. The nearby i.d.e.a. Museum offers hands-on artistic and scientific exhibits for kids. Mesa Arts Center presents theater, musicals and contemporary art.
Mesa is the third-largest city in Arizona, after Phoenix and Tucson, and the 36th-largest city in the US. The city is home to 439,041 people as of 2010 according to the Census Bureau. Mesa is home to numerous higher education facilities including the Polytechnic campus of Arizona State University.
Mesa employs a grid system for street numbering that is different from that used in Phoenix and other portions of the metropolitan area. Center Street, running north to south, bisects Mesa into eastern and western halves and serves as the east and west numbering point of origin within Mesa. Streets west of Center St., such as W. University Drive or W. Main St. are considered to be in West Mesa, whereas streets east of Center St., such as E. University or E. Main St., are considered to be in East Mesa Country Club Drive, running north to south and bisecting Mesa into east and west sections, is located 0.5 miles (800 m) west of Center St, and serves as the jurisdictional boundary between Arizona's 5th and 6th congressional districts.
Mesa was founded in January 1878 by Mormon (Latter-day Saint or LDS) pioneers and its population is still roughly one-tenth Mormon. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints operates one of its oldest temples in Mesa (the Mesa Arizona Temple), and the city is a hub for Latter-day Saints residing in the Phoenix Metro area. Mesa is one of the United States' fastest-growing cities, and currently ranks as the 37th-largest. 2006 Census Bureau estimates put the city's population at 460,155. The city has a larger population than better-known United States cities such as Cleveland, Miami, Minneapolis, Saint Louis, or Saint Paul.
A lot to see in Mesa Arizona such as :
Papago Park
Usery Mountain Regional Park
Golfland Sunsplash
Riparian Preserve at Water Ranch
Mesa Arts Center
Arizona Museum of Natural History
Casino Arizona
Superstition Mountain - Lost Dutchman Museum
Pioneer Park
i.d.e.a. Museum
Fort McDowell Casino
Queen Creek Olive Mill
Mesa Arizona Temple
Freestone Park
Arizona Commemorative Air Force Museum
Riverview Park Kids playground
RED MOUNTAIN PARK
Krazy Air Trampoline Park
Riverview Park
We-Ko-Pa Golf Club
Cosmo Dog Park
Discovery Park
Agritopia
Mount McDowell
Mesa Grande Cultural Park
Desert Trails Bike Park
Countryside Park
Dog Park at Crossroads
Dobson Ranch Park
Hawes Trail System Entrance
Saint Anne Roman Catholic Parish
Escape Rooms Mesa
Gene Autry Park
Horseshoe Park & Equestrian Centre
Jefferson Park
Desert Mountain Park
Skyline Park
Park of Canals
The Barn & Trailside Community Park
Escalante Park
Kleinman Park
Mansel Carter Oasis Park
The Rose Garden At MCC
Quail Run Park
Dobson Ranch Golf Course
Buckhorn Baths Motel & Museum (closed, historical)
Desert Arroyo Park
Esquer Park
Selleh Park
Granite Reef Dam
( Mesa - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Mesa . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Mesa - USA
Join us for more :
Stealing Woman Ochre
On the morning of Nov. 29th, 1985, the day after Thanksgiving, a couple entered the University of Arizona Museum of Art. What happened next rocked the art community and lead to a decades long mystery that has yet to be solved. The story of the theft of an abstract painting of a woman by Willem de Kooning.
Producer/Editor: Mitchell Riley
Photographer: Omar Lopez
Best Museums in the US: Top 25 People's favorite museums in America
People visit museums in the US, leave reviews and rate them. Here are the best museums in the US as voted by the visitors themselves. Enjoy the tour !
Some museums in the US:
Chihuly Garden and Glass Seattle
National Naval Aviation Museum Pensacola
National Gallery of Art Washington DC
Getty_Museum Los Angeles
The National WWII Museum New Orleans
Frick Collection New York
Museum of Fine Arts Boston
uss midway museum san diego
National Museum of the U.S. Air Force Dayton
Detroit Institute of Arts
Musical Instrument Museum Phoenix
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Bentonville
National World War I Museum Kansas City
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Springfield
Newseum Washington DC
Ground Zero Museum Workshop New York
Philadelphia Museum of Art
The Ringling Sarasota
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Washington DC
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Washington DC
Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Tucson
Museum of Science and Industry Chicago
best museums in the us
best museums in usa
best us museums
best museum in the us
museum of natural history
art institute of chicago
field museum
holocaust museum
smithsonian museums
metropolitan museum
art institute
smithsonian museum
museums
museum of contemporary art chicago
art museum
the field museum
discovery museum
museum of natural science
field museum chicago
crocker art museum
museum of contemporary art
museums in nyc
nyc museums
indianapolis museum of art
history museum
science and industry museum
carnegie museum
cleveland art museum
museums in los angeles
peabody museum
museums in chicago
chicago art museum
museum of the rockies
san francisco museums
planetarium chicago
museums in san francisco
art institute of chicago museum
the art institute of chicago
field museum hours
art institute chicago
hands on museum
chicago planetarium
milwaukee museum
chicago museum
the science museum
msi chicago
chicago colleges
art museum chicago
los angeles museums
natural science museum
chicago institute of art
dallas museums
la museums
chicago museum of art
denver museum
museums in boston
denver museum of art
indianapolis art museum
denver museums
san diego museums
chicago science museum
museums in houston
science museum chicago
chicago museum of contemporary art
los angeles museum
the museum of natural history
chicago universities
art institute of chicago hours
art museums in nyc
natural museum of history
pittsburgh museums
museums nyc
houston museum
free museum days chicago
washington museums
columbia university chicago
best museums in the world
chicago art
museums in raleigh nc
las vegas museums
famous museums
art museums
ny museums
museums in las vegas
museums in la
museums in orlando
contemporary art museum chicago
museums in denver
detroit institute of art
phoenix museums
museums in phoenix
dallas museum
museum nyc
science museum nyc
museum chicago
rockwell museum
seattle art institute
milwaukee museum of art
museum in nyc
museums in miami
museum in los angeles
chicago museum of natural history
museums in austin tx
indianapolis museums
museums in pittsburgh
detroit museums
chicago art galleries
chicago free museum days
la art museum
art museum los angeles
museum in chicago
los angeles art museum
the field museum chicago
chicago natural history museum
chicago museums free days
museums in tampa
museum display
online museum
tourist attractions in usa
art galleries chicago
tourist places in usa
museums los angeles
museums chicago
modern museum
museums in indianapolis
la museum of art
museums in minneapolis
boston museum of art
museums in ny
museum exhibits
usa tourist attractions
art institue
manhattan museums
famous art museums
chicago art museums
museums in california
science and industry museum chicago
la county museum
phoenix museum
childrens museum nyc
museum art
museum in la
museums in san jose
best museums in chicago
chicago science and industry museum
oriental institute chicago
art museums in los angeles
Best museums in the US Video :
Channel :
Check the best hotels in the world :
Mexican Galleries Spotlight: Texas Contemporary Art Fair
In this WAG video, we highlight four Mexican galleries that presented at the Texas Contemporary Art Fair — Galeria Enrique Guerrero, joségarcía ,mx, FIFI projects san pedro and Parallel /// Oaxaca.
Living in the Shadows of the Border @ Modified Arts
Living in the Shadows of the Border is an exhibit that focuses on exposing the harsh realities faced by migrants and their loved ones on a daily basis in the United States today. The show explores contemporary immigration through the photo documentation of Nick Oza, the paintings of Lucinda La Morena Hinojos, and paintings by Mata Ruda. For the past few years, these three artists have publicly dedicated their energies towards spreading truths and raising awareness towards the ongoing migration crisis occurring in the United States. This show is a collection of that work displayed with the intention to show the injustices happening all around us and to provide an intimate space for contemplation and conversation regarding the issues that will hopefully assist in providing a path to change.
Modified Arts show-cases stimulating and assertive artwork in an accessible and open environment. Our monthly exhibitions feature regional, national, and international artists of all media and seek to provide a fresh perspective for both new and established collectors. Exhibitions include contemporary painting, sculpture, works on paper, photography, multi-media, and installation.
Modified Arts is located at 407 E. Roosevelt Rd Phoenix, AZ 85004
TrA walkthrough with Jose Di Gregorio at Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art (iMOCA)
TrA walkthrough with Jose Di Gregorio at Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art (iMOCA)
MARK POMILIO : SYMMETRIES
A new Film by Eric Minh Swenson
Mark Pomilio’s semi-translucent, overlapping, often-symmetrical shapes immediately scream “structure,” and that’s exactly the point. Through simple geometric equations that yield “parent” geometric forms, and a systematic multiplying and folding of those forms, Pomilio creates work that commands your attention as it walks the line between organic forms and human intervention. He pushes this line further with a recurring form; the contour of a house, which evokes the profound changes the family nucleus will undergo as new discoveries in life sciences (like cloning) knit their way into the mainstream.Pomilio currently teaches painting and drawing at Arizona State University. He has exhibited his work extensively across the United States and abroad. His work is included in private collections, as well as the permanent collections of Baylor University, Martin Museum of Art, Waco, TX; Dupont Corporation, Wilmington, DE; University of Arizona, Museum of Art, Tucson, AZ; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
For more info on Eric Minh Swenson visit his website at emsartscene.com. His art films can be seen at
Instagram : @ericminhswenson
Eric Minh Swenson also covers the international art scene and his writings and photo essays can be seen at Huffington Post Arts :
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TMA documentary artist talk Bellas de Noche
TMA is thrilled to host María José Cuevas, director of the award-winning documentary Bellas de Noche. In her talk, which features sensational magazine spreads and excerpts from the film’s archive, Cuevas will discuss the powerful emergence of showgirls in Mexico City during the 1970s and 80s – an era of economic crisis and a growing wave of women’s liberation.
This Artist Talk is part of Tucson Cine Mexico 2017, taking place March 22 – 26. The United States’ longest-running festival of contemporary Mexican film, Tucson Cine Mexico is a signature program of the University of Arizona’s Hanson Film Institute.
Phoenix Art Museum.wmv
A Sunday afternoon at the Phoenix Art Museum in Phoenix, Arizona
Phoenix Art Museum
As the largest visual arts museum in the southwest United States, The Phoenix Art Museum sports a comprehensive collection of over 18,000 works of contemporary, fashion, and modern art pieces.
Artist: God is an Astronaut
Song: A Deafening Distance
Detail from #SPEECHACTS Exhibition
Detail from Speech/Acts Exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Top Tourist Attractions in Tempe - Travel Arizona
Top Tourist Attractions and Beautiful Places in Tempe - Travel Arizona:
Mill Avenue District, Arizona State University, SEA LIFE Aquarium, LEGOLAND Discovery Center Arizona, Arizona Mills, Hayden Butte Preserve, Tempe Diablo Stadium, ASU Gammage Auditorium, Tempe Marketplace, Tempe Center for the Arts, Big Surf Waterpark, Sun Devil Stadium, Arizona Historical Society Museum, Tempe Historical Museum, Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe Beach Park
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TMA documentary artist talk Bellas de Noche
TMA is thrilled to host María José Cuevas, director of the award-winning documentary Bellas de Noche. In her talk, which features sensational magazine spreads and excerpts from the film’s archive, Cuevas will discuss the powerful emergence of showgirls in Mexico City during the 1970s and 80s – an era of economic crisis and a growing wave of women’s liberation.
This Artist Talk is part of Tucson Cine Mexico 2017, taking place March 22 – 26. The United States’ longest-running festival of contemporary Mexican film, Tucson Cine Mexico is a signature program of the University of Arizona’s Hanson Film Institute.
Wonner Paul 保羅華納 (1920-2008) Neo-Expressionism Contemporary Realism American
tonykwk39@gmail.com
Paul John Wonner 保羅華納 (April 24, 1920 – April 23, 2008) was an American artist who was born in Tucson, Arizona. He received a B.A. in 1952, an M.A. in 1953, and an M.L.S. in 1955―all from the University of California, Berkeley. He rose to prominence in the 1950s as an abstract expressionist associated with the Bay Area Figurative Movement, along with his partner, Theophilus Brown (1919-2012), whom he met in 1952 while attending graduate school. In 1956, Wonner started painting a series of dreamlike male bathers and boys with bouquets. In 1962, he began teaching at the University of California, Los Angeles. By the end of the 1960s, he had abandoned his loose figurative style and focused exclusively on still lifes in a hyperrealist style. Wonner died April 23, 2008 in San Francisco, California.
Paul Wonner 保羅華納 is best known for his still-life paintings done in an abstract expressionist style.
The Cantor Arts Center (Stanford University, California); the Crocker Art Museum, (Sacramento, California); the Davis Art Center, (Davis, California); the Honolulu Museum of Art, Honolulu, Hawaii; the Hunter Museum of American Art, (Chattanooga, Tennessee); the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, (Kansas City, Missouri); the Kresge Art Museum, (Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan); the Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, (San Antonio, Texas); the Oakland Museum of California, (Oakland, California); the Philbrook Museum of Art, (Tulsa, Oklahoma); the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California; the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, (Santa Barbara, California); the Sheldon Museum of Art (Lincoln, Nebraska); the Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C.); and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York City) are among the public collections holding work by Paul Wonner.
Paul Wonner 保羅華納is best known for his Abstract Expressionist still life paintings. Much of his work focuses on small objects, jars, pitchers, fruit, etc. or on specific figures that dominate the space. He was interested in art as a youth and his parents hired a tutor to help him with his drawing during high school.
Wonner was born in Tucson, Arizona in 1920, and after his early art education set out for California in 1937. He settled in Oakland where he attended the California College of Arts and Crafts. His art school experience provided Wonner with basic drawing and painting techniques. He graduated from CCAC in 1941 and was soon drafted into the United States Army. During his service, stationed in San Antonio, Texas, he continued his pursuit of art and even set up a small local studio.
He was discharged in 1946 and immediately headed for New York City to continue his artistic career. During the Abstract Expressionist movement in the 1940s Wonner worked as a commercial artist in New York City. To satisfy his interest in art he studied at the Art Students League and attended lectures at Robert Motherwells studio where he was exposed to other artists, critics and writers. He returned to California in 1950 to attend the University of California, Berkeley. At UC Berkeley he was influenced by the elements of Cubism.
In 1957 he joined a group of eleven other artists for an exhibition called Contemporary Bay Area Figurative Painting, at the Oakland Museum. He established a studio in San Francisco in 1960 where he continued to focus on his developing figurative style. During the 1960s his paintings dealt with individual objects arranged in a setting. He accepted a teaching position at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in 1968 and went on to teach in various locations in the Los Angeles area. He settled in San Francisco in 1976 where he continued to work as an Abstract Realist, creating his still lives.
Paul Wonner died on Wednesday, April 23, 2008 on the eve of his 88th birthday in San Francisco.
Marjorie Strider 馬喬里·斯特里德 (1934-2014) Pop Art American
tonykwk39@gmail.com
Marjorie Virginia Strider (January 26, 1931 – August 27, 2014) was an American painter, sculptor and performance artist best known for her three-dimensional paintings and site-specific soft sculpture installations.
Born in 1931 in Guthrie, Oklahoma,Strider studied art at the Kansas City Art Institute before moving to New York City in the early 1960s. Strider's three-dimensional paintings of beach girls with "built out" curves were prominently featured in the Pace Gallery's 1964 "International Girlie Show" alongside other "pin-up"-inspired Pop art by Rosalyn Drexler, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, and Tom Wesselman. Her comically pornographic Woman with Radish was made into the banner image for the show, one of the first successful exhibitions of the then-new gallery. Her bold figural work from this era aimed to subvert sexist images of women in popular culture by turning objectified female bodies into menacing forms that literally got "in your face." Strider had two subsequent solo exhibitions at the Pace Gallery in 1965 and 1966 where she continued to show her voluminous paintings of bikini-clad girls as well as 3-D renderings of vegetables, fruits, flowers, clouds and other natural phenomena.
Strider became a core member of the 1960s avant-garde. She performed in Happenings organized by Allan Kaprow, Claes Oldenburg and others. In 1969 she organized with Hannah Weiner and John Perreault the first Street Work, an informal public art event. Twenty artists participated including Vito Acconci, Gregory Battcock and Arakawa. Strider's contribution was thirty empty picture frames which she hung in random locations in Midtown Manhattan in the hopes of getting pedestrians to look at their environment differently.Strider married Michael Kirby, a contemporary artist and writer who published the first book on Happenings in 1965.
Around this time Strider made chocolate casts of Patty Oldenburg's breasts for Claes's birthday (a plaster version was later acquired by Sol LeWitt).Perhaps it was her intimate friendship with the Oldenburgs that led Strider to redirect her artistic focus from hard sculptural paintings to soft sculpture in the 1970s. She made site-specific installations of unbridled polyurethane foam that tumbled out of windows (Building Work 1976, PS1) or oozed down a spiral staircase (Blue Sky 1976, Clocktower Gallery). At times her renegade pours incorporated domestic objects (brooms, groceries, teapots), while others remained totally amorphous.These works are similar in style and intent to Lynda Benglis' floor paintings and soft sculptures of the same era.
From 1982 to 1985, a retrospective of her work toured museums and universities across the United States. Venues included: SculptureCenter, New York; Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina; Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska; Museum of Art, University of Arizona, Tucson; and the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas. In the 1990s, she began to make paintings with tactile surfaces that were more Abstract Expressionist than Pop. In 2009 she revisited her original girlie theme, painting new examples which she exhibited at the Bridge Gallery, New York.
Marjorie Strider died at her home in Saugerties, New York, on August 27, 2014.
馬喬里·弗吉尼亞·斯特里德(1931年1月26日 - 2014年8月27日)是為她的立體畫和特定地點,軟雕塑裝置最著名的美國畫家,雕塑家和表演藝術家。
1931年生於格思裡,俄克拉何馬州,黽學藝術在堪薩斯城藝術學院搬到紐約市在60年代初之前。行客與“打造出”曲線突出特色在佩斯畫廊1964年的“國際娘娘腔展”與其他的“迷人的”沙灘女孩三維立體畫由羅莎琳·德雷克斯勒,李奇登斯坦,安迪·沃霍爾,和Tom靈感的波普藝術Wesselman。她與蘿蔔滑稽色情女子被製作成的演出,然後新畫廊的第一次成功的展覽之一的旗幟形象。從這個時代的目的是通過轉向物化女性的身體成字面了來勢洶洶的形式顛覆女性在流行文化中性別歧視的圖像她大膽的人物形象作品“你的臉。”行客曾在佩斯畫廊隨後的兩個個展於1965年和1966年,她繼續展現她的比基尼女孩浩繁的繪畫,以及蔬菜,水果,花卉,雲等自然現象的3-D效果。
行客成為20世紀60年代前衛的核心成員。她由阿倫·卡普羅,克拉斯奧爾登堡等人組織進行精彩。 1969年,她組織了漢娜·韋納和約翰·佩羅第一街工作,一個非正式的公共藝術活動。二十位的藝術家參加,包括維托阿肯錫,格雷戈里Battcock和荒川。行客的貢獻是她掛在得到行人的希望寄託在曼哈頓中城的隨機位置來看看他們的環境differently.Strider結婚邁克爾·柯比,當代藝術家和作家誰在1965年發表了精彩的第一本書30空相框。
大約在這個時候黽由侯佩岑奧爾登堡的乳房的巧克力的類型轉換克拉斯的生日(石膏版本後來被索爾·勒維特收購)。也許這是她的親密友誼與Oldenburgs導致行客她的藝術焦點從硬雕塑繪畫軟雕塑重定向在20世紀70年代。她做了肆無忌憚的聚氨酯泡沫的特定地點裝置是擠爆了窗口(建設工作1976年,PS1)或滲出下來螺旋形樓梯(藍天1976年,鐘塔圖庫)。有時她的叛徒盆滿缽滿納入國內的對象(掃帚,雜貨,茶壺),而其他完全保持amorphous.These作品的風格和意圖林達·本格利斯'地板繪畫和同一時代的軟雕塑相似。
從1982年到1985年,她的作品回顧展參觀美國各地的博物館和大學。場館包括:雕塑中心,紐約;藝術,查爾斯頓,南卡羅來納州吉布斯博物館;喬斯林藝術博物館,內布拉斯加州奧馬哈;藝術,亞利桑那大學博物館;和麥克內藝術博物館,聖安東尼奧,德克薩斯州。在20世紀90年代,她開始與更抽象表現比流行觸覺表面畫。 2009年,她重新審視她原來的娘娘腔主題,畫她陳列在橋畫廊,紐約新的例子。
馬喬裡大步死在她的家在索格蒂斯,紐約,2014年8月27日。
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TUCSON Museum of art outside
TMA documentary artist talk Bellas de Noche
TMA is thrilled to host María José Cuevas, director of the award-winning documentary Bellas de Noche. In her talk, which features sensational magazine spreads and excerpts from the film’s archive, Cuevas will discuss the powerful emergence of showgirls in Mexico City during the 1970s and 80s – an era of economic crisis and a growing wave of women’s liberation.
This Artist Talk is part of Tucson Cine Mexico 2017, taking place March 22 – 26. The United States’ longest-running festival of contemporary Mexican film, Tucson Cine Mexico is a signature program of the University of Arizona’s Hanson Film Institute.