The exhibition, which will be open to the public free of charge until August 30, brings together the work of five creators from different generations. Through a selection of pieces integrating techniques such as oil, engraving, textiles, and digital processes, the show proposes a dialogue on how the past is reconstructed from the present.
The central concept of the exhibition, curated by Karmele Rodríguez Larragain, is based on the idea of memory as a living stratum. The works on display use textures, colors, and diverse materials to represent the uncertain interval between stimulus and response, suggesting that memory is a continuous reconstruction rather than an intact recovery of what was experienced.
The intergenerational proposal allows visitors to observe how abstraction, landscape, and sensitive research serve as common threads for artists with varied backgrounds. The exhibition invites visitors to reflect on material traces and the fragility of what remains versus what fades away.




