Skip to content

The National Museum of Mexican Art proudly hosts O+ Clinic!

It’s O+fficial!

The National Museum of Mexican Art is proudly hosting the O+ Clinic! 

Location    1852 W. 19th Street, Chicago, IL

Artist’s and Musicians can expect to be seen by a wide variety of health care professionals, be apart of group sessions, learn about various forms of health and wellness from a variety of speakers, receive resources to products and services, screenings and more!

Wellness Volunteers! You will be able to share your gifts, resources, and expertise with the creative community within the most prominent museums for Mexican art and culture in the United States.

The Clinic hours:

Saturday, September 5th from 10-6pm 

&

Sunday, September 6th from 10-5pm

Wellness ExpO+ 

On September 6th, the O+ Festival will be concentrated within the Clinic in the museum for all participants (not open to the general public) with programming that includes: speakers, healthy exhibitors, gong meditation and music, workshops and healthy food!

Make those connections!

About the National Museum of Mexican Art

Today, the National Museum of Mexican Art stands out as one of the most prominent first-voice institutions for Mexican art and culture in the United States. We are home to one of the country’s largest Mexican art collections, including more than 7,000 seminal pieces from ancient Mexico to the present.

As the only Latino museum accredited by American Alliance of Museums, we recognize our unique responsibility to present exhibitions of artistic and cultural value and to deliver high-quality education that demonstrates the breadth and depth of Mexican art, culture and history.

Twenty of our exhibitions have traveled across the United States and six have traveled to Mexico.  Landmark exhibitions that have traveled include The Art of the Other Mexico (1992),Maria Izquierdo (1996), The African Presence in Mexico (2006), and Frida’s Contemporaries:Women Artists of Modern Mexico (2007). (Learn more about past exhibitions.)

The National Museum of Mexican Art also hosts cultural programs — including symposia, theater, dance, music, authors and performance companies — that share the rich diversity of the Mexican culture. Our annual Sor Juana Festival  honors the accomplishments of Mexican women with women’s performances.

As a nonprofit institution, the NMMA is funded by donations and grants. Learn how you can support the National Museum of Mexican Art.