In Tenerife, a "Window" has been opened for an exhibition of a single painting right on the street.

In Tenerife, a "Window" has been opened for an exhibition of a single painting right on the street.

Source: Diario de Avisos

A mini-gallery called "Window" has opened in Tenerife, where one painting will be exhibited each month, launching the celebration of the centenary of the local fine arts circle.

In the city of Tenerife, a new and interesting feature has appeared for art lovers! The local art club has opened "The Window" – a mini-space for exhibiting a single painting. Now, anyone passing by the club building on the bustling Castillo Street will be able to see an original work of art right from the street.

The opening was attended by various dignitaries: Fernando Alamo, the first artist whose work is exhibited there, the club's president Pepe Valladares, the curator of the anniversary project Octavio Zaya, a representative of the Government of the Canary Islands Cristóbal de la Rosa, and the Councilor for Culture of the city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Santiago Díaz.

This project is just part of a large program dedicated to the club's centenary, which will be celebrated from September 2025 to July 2026. It started with the work of Fernando Alamo, a well-known artist from Tenerife who received the Canary Islands Prize for Fine Arts back in 2014.

Currently, the club has as many as three exhibitions running. In addition to "The Window", you can see "Knots and Intertwining 1/5" with works by Teresa Arozena, Martín and Sicilia, Meneiba Lemes, and Andrea Allgaier, as well as "Sechium Edule con Agüita Guisada" by Idaeira del Castillo. They are open to visitors until November 14, from Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 to 13:00 and from 17:00 to 20:00. And "The Window" will feature new works by different artists every month.

The first work exhibited by Fernando Alamo is called "Dominguez Garden", and it will be on display until November 3. The artist says that for years he collected various notes, clippings, recipes, photographs, books, magazines, newspaper articles, postcards, catalogs – everything that came to mind while working in the studio. "In this chaotic stream of thoughts," he says, "various ideas appear, sometimes unrelated, and sometimes perfectly combined, like a well-oiled mechanism."