From July 6 to August 27, the most important museums of Buenos Aires will become venues of Bienalsur 2025, which, in its tenth anniversary, connects more than 140 venues in 70 cities in 5 continents. We tell you which museums in Buenos Aires will host Bienalsur and the artists coming to CABA this 2025.
Bienalsur 2025 is the International Biennial of Contemporary Art of the South that connects more than 70 cities in five continents. In each edition, artists, curators and institutions from around the world come together to create exhibitions, interventions and experiences where art crosses borders.
Bienalsur 2025: Buenos Aires museums join with unmissable exhibitions
In 2025, five museums in Buenos Aires will host this year’s edition. You will be able to discover the work of international artists for free. The museums that are part of Bienalsur 2025 are the Isaac Fernández Blanco Hispano-American Art Museum, the Luis Perlotti Sculpture Museum, the Eduardo Sívori Plastic Arts Museum, the Enrique Larreta Spanish Art Museum, the Cornelio de Saavedra Historical Museum and the Luis Perlotti Sculpture Museum.

The museums that make up Bienalsur 2025
1. Isaac Fernández Blanco Museum of Hispano-American Art
Persistencias is the exhibition in two chapters that opens on Sunday, July 6 and Wednesday, August 27, respectively. You will discover the works of Clemente Padín, Pablo Reinoso, Juan Sorrentino and the installation by Mene Savasta.
Museum of Sculptures Luis Perlotti
On Thursday, August 14, the Reconstruir un Monumento (Rebuilding a Monument), an exhibition in which the artists Sara Bonomi, Adriana Bustos, Tamara Goldenberg and Sol Quirincich reread the legacy of the artist Lola Mora, will be inaugurated.
3. Eduardo Sívori Museum of Plastic Arts
The exhibition Lenguaviaje: la despoesía de Augusto de Campos invites you to travel through the universe of this Brazilian poet, essayist, translator and critic who has always sought to take poetry further, venturing into the visual, music and video.
4. Enrique Larreta Museum of Spanish Art
Naturalia or the diversity of the world is a return to nature and takes place in the rooms and garden of the Larreta Museum. You will find Valeria Cannata’s photographs of birds, Paula Darriba’s designs and the landscape composed by Alberto Tadiello, based on the sounds of Patagonian mammals.