Instituto Allende

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  • Don Domingo Gomez de la Canal, a very wealthy Spaniard, arrived in New Spain at the end of the 17th century. His firstborn son, Manuel Tomas, Count of la Canal, Knight of the Royal Order of Calatrava, was born in México City in 1701 and while still a young man decided to make San Miguel his home. He and his wife built houses, convents, roads and churches. Their primary residence was the large building on the northwest corner of the Jardin that is now Banamex (with the huge carved doors on Canal Street). The building that is now called the Instituto Allende (and much of the land that surrounds it, which is now used for other purposes) was their “summer home,” originally built in 1734. In 1951, Enrique Fernández, former governor of the State of Guanajuato, became the owner of the building and he collaborated with American expat Stirling Dickinson and Felipe Cossío del Pomar to move the Bellas Artes school of art to this location. The school became one the most important factors in the renewal of San Miguel, drawing people from around the world. The building is now home to a handful of art galleries and two restaurants. There is a small family chapel, and a mural painted by David Leonardas in 1999 titled “Ignacio Allende and the History of Mexico.” For a better idea of the vastness of the Canal’s former estate, visit the small language school next door to the Instituto Allende (go behind the lobby and up a small set of stairs and you’ll see the vast grounds that once were all part of the Canal estate).

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