Overview
- The remaining three nuclei opened to the public at the Museo Arqueológico Nacional, the Museo Nacional Thyssen‑Bornemisza and the Instituto Cervantes, completing the Madrid presentation.
- Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares, speaking at the inauguration, recognized the pain and injustice suffered by Indigenous peoples during the colonial period.
- The exhibition is organized by the Government of Mexico through the Secretaría de Cultura and the INPI in collaboration with the Instituto Cervantes and Spanish partner institutions.
- Curators foreground Indigenous women’s roles in divine, human, funerary and textile spheres, with Diego Prieto Hernández describing them as bearers of knowledge and medicine.
- Organizers state the project will continue in Spain until March 2026 across four cultural venues, with one additional site yet to be announced.