It now looks like this: a documentation room occupies the area where rows of movie theaters once sat; the room bustles with people seeking passport and visas. Where the movie screen once hung is now a small library and a meeting room. Sliding glass doors allow both spaces to be transformed into an art gallery. Essentially, the consulate building will live a double life, both as a place for formal consulate work and an exhibition space.

Himmelfarb now oversees the consulate’s new Mexican Cultural Institute, which is housed on the consulate’s first floor. It is one of only fifteen such offices in Mexican consulates around the world. The institute is already connecting with organizations located in the farthest reaches of the consulate’s coverage, like Anchorage, Alaska.

A quetchquémitl, a traditional folkloric dance garment from the Veracruz Huasteca region in Mexico. The garment is part of the National Costume series and is on display at the Mexican consulate.

Himmelfarb hopes the Institute’s programming will broaden the perspectives of “those who have maybe a friendly view of Mexico, but it’s not nuanced. We want to deepen and engage and really cater to Seattle.”

Says Dondisch: “They might already love mariachis and they might love dancing, but they wanted to know about the contemporary Mexico. That’s what we’re trying to also bring.”

The consulate has also put extra effort in bringing Mexican artists to Seattle. Last June, it partnered with STG to bring Natalia Lafourcade, a singer well-known in Mexico for her folk-inspired series of albums, Musas, and recently popular in the U.S. for singing the Spanish-spoken part of “Remember Me” in Disney’s Coco. She performed at a sold-out show at the Neptune. Next month, the consulate is bringing popular Mexican ‘90s rock band Cafe Tacvba to the Moore Theater. Tickets for the show’s main floor sold out in five hours and the show was completely booked after two days.

Cafe Tacvba’s representative, Kevin Lawrie, wrote in an email that as the band embarks on a U.S. tour, they’ve found a large American audience awaiting them.

“It’s been surprising to see how people have responded to the energy of the band,” Lawrie wrote. Still, he said it shouldn’t be too much of a surprise, as the band sees Seattle as a place that “aids those who take creative risks.” Singing to audiences in a language they might not understand, for example, could be counted as such a risk.

But the state’s Hispanic population has grown quickly in recent years, currently numbering more than 800,000 — 12% of the state’s population. Eighty-percent of that number is people who are of Mexican descent.

Adrián Gómez's ceramic bust, Niño de Oro, which will be on display at the Institute inside the Mexican Consulate in Seattle. (Photo Credit: Adrián Gómez)

“A lot of people don’t realize, all this way North, there’s so many Mexicans,” Dondisch says. “But it’s catching up. People are catching up to it.”

Adrián Gómez’s ceramic exhibition will be the institute's inaugural art show inside the consulate.

His work examines his identity as a Mexican-Guatemalan growing up in Seattle.

“I've always struggled with kind of identifying who I am, what group I fall in,” Gómez says. “I speak Spanish but I also don't look Mexican or Guatemalan” to some, he explains.

The artist hadn’t considered exploring the theme of identity in his art until he attended UW’s sculpture program. Growing up, most of his Latino friends were made at the Spanish-spoken mass he attended at a Seattle church with his family and not in the city or at school.

Himmelfarb hopes the Mexican Cultural Institute can aid artists like Gómez in finding community.

“I’ve found so many very talented artists, emerging or otherwise, who have very powerful voices and they don’t want to be tokenized, they don’t want to be told their art is some exotic thing,” he says. “We can really form a cohort rather than just be a platform.” ​​​​