In 2012, Jorge de la Garza and Rafael Prieto opened Casa Bosques to bring indie art and culture titles from around the world to Mexico City. Compared to today, the city’s population of expats, tourists, and homegrown creative talents was nascent—so much so that the bookstore was the first of its kind there. As its population has globalized and evolved, Mexico City has emerged as the country’s contemporary art and design capital, as well as its most liberated city vis-à-vis queer expression. “There’s a different attitude,” de la Garza says. “People come from all over the country to Mexico City, which is similar to what happened in New York. It’s very natural to see people holding hands, kissing, showing gay pride.”
Like New York, Mexico City’s young people have pushed the envelope of progress, especially as it relates to queer identity and outness, says de la Garza. “From the youth, there’s this [attitude] of being ‘out’ and even trying to make people uncomfortable, because we’re in this day and age and they should be free to do that. It wasn’t my generation, but it’s something that you see now, and it’s very normalized.” De la Garza, who makes time to man the Casa Bosques flagship and popup and curate the book selection, has responded by working in a selection of titles that spotlight the Mexican queer and creative talents who originate from or call the city home. A handful of examples could be found on a recent walkthrough: a calendar and photography book, Animas, from Gustavo Garcia-Villa; a Luis Barragán monograph designed by Estudio Herrera; and No Mames, a photographic chronicle of young talents shaping contemporary Mexican culture as captured by Mayan Toledano.