Exhibiting in a public space offers a valuable opportunity to integrate artistic practice into everyday environments, creating points of encounter between art, architecture and diverse audiences. In this context, the exhibition corridor of Madrid Airport Terminal T2 was transformed into a cultural space accessible to thousands of travelers daily, extending artistic experience beyond conventional exhibition venues.
Titled Women and Digital Art, the exhibition brought together 30 large-format works combining digital illustration, digital collage and acrylic painting, accompanied by animated versions and augmented reality. Presented from October 3 to November 3, 2022, the project explored how digital and physical media can coexist within a public, high-transit setting, integrating art into daily life and movement.
At the core of the project was the integration of physical canvases with digital tools and immersive technologies, using augmented reality and multimedia elements as narrative and interpretative layers. These technologies expanded the artworks beyond their physical format, encouraging interaction and offering additional contextual and educational content.
Through this approach, each work functioned as a multilayered medium for visual communication, reinforcing the role of digital technologies in redefining how art is accessed, interpreted and experienced in public and institutional contexts. The exhibition demonstrated how immersive and interactive formats can support cultural dissemination, audience engagement and new models of exhibition design within contemporary art practice.
The exhibition focuses on the Arab female figure, paying homage to the artist’s mother.












