A six-day art exhibit held in a long-dilapidated urban landmark has created a distinctly Tel Avivian experience, melding artworks and architecture in a historic building.
The exhibit, titled âHaMivneâ or âThe Structure,â is open from December 24 to 29 in a raw, industrial interior of Shalom Meir Tower, parts of which have stood empty for the last decade, after former commercial tenants left.
The pop-up show is free, with registration required through its website and availability limited. The site is open from 4 p.m. or 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. each night.
Shalom Meir Tower, usually known simply as Shalom Tower, was Israelâs first skyscraper, completed in 1965, and for decades was the tallest building in the Middle East. It was named after the father of the builders, Mordechai, Moshe and Binyamin Meir of the Meir Brothers construction company.
The concept for the temporary exhibit came from the Mivne real estate group, which now owns this section of the tower.
Get The Times of Israel’s Daily Edition
by email and never miss our top stories
By signing up, you agree to the terms
âItâs their building, itâs theirs to flaunt, and they put this idea together,â said Ariel Kotzer, a trained architect who is the art director of the exhibit.

Visitors looking at Maya Zackâs artwork from the pop-up exhibit HaMivne through December 29, 2025. (Jessica Steinberg/Times of Israel)
The 34-floor building, sitting on the corner of Herzl and Ahad Haâam Streets, is at a central location in Tel Aviv that harkens to the cityâs earliest roots, as Shalom Tower connected nearby Neve Tzedek, the first neighborhood built outside Jaffa, to the rest of the expanding city.
The buildingâs wall-to-ceiling windows on the first floor create an instant connection between the exhibit and the Tel Aviv street, said Kotzer.
Each one of the three floors used for the exhibit is empty of interior walls, offering 800 meters (2,625 feet) of space for the artworks, many of which fill their allotted space.
âI wanted pieces that clicked into the place and the architecture and became part of it and vice versa,â said Kotzer, who views the exhibit as a kind of biennale, the large-scale exhibits held every two years, most famously in Venice.
It was Kotzer and curator and art collector Sivan Sebbag Zelensky, who selected the 20 participating artists â some well-known, others less so â setting their 21 artworks up on the first three floors of the tower, with each artist giving expression to the term âstructure.â

Soly Bornstein Wolffâs work from the pop-up exhibit HaMivne through December 29, 2025. (Jessica Steinberg/Times of Israel)
There is Soly Bornstein Wolffâs construction site sculpture, made from scraps of wood gathered from Tel Aviv carpentry shops, and Idit Kupefskyâs âAlta Acqua,â a glittering castle of colored plastic shapes that reflects a kaleidoscope of shades on the wall.
Visitors can don 3D glasses to view Maya Zackâs video art installations, and also gather in one long gallery to watch identical figures move in and out of immense cement barriers in Ronen Sharabaniâs âCheckpointâ video, which eerily blends into the raw cement walls of the gallery.

Ronen Sharabaniâs âCheckpointâ video from pop-up exhibit HaMivne through December 29, 2025. (Jessica Steinberg/Times of Israel)
There are other videos as well, including Deri Sharonâs âTemporary Space,â a quietly humorous AI-assisted video in which a swimmer dives into what appears to be a pool of water inside a construction site dumpster, and video artist Meirav Heimanâs work âFine,â a four-minute film of a family of four sitting down to what appears to be a Shabbat dinner only to have an unknown disaster from above transform the tranquil moment into complete chaos.
Heiman told The Times of Israel when the video was first released that it suggested the terror and fear of the October 7 attacks.
The trauma experienced by Israeli society since October 7 is present in different works in âThe Structure,â said Kotzer. Still, itâs a more subjective encounter, reliant on every visitorâs viewpoint of each work.
âYou canât live within this time and space and not have [October 7] affect you,â he said. âBut when you meet a piece of art, itâs a meeting of you and that piece. Different people come in and see it, and they may see something I donât.â
Kotzer is hopeful that âThe Structureâ will remain open for at least a few more days beyond the current schedule, given the publicâs interest and Mivneâs generosity in sponsoring the event.
âI think we need as much culture as we can get,â said Kotzer. âAnd there are plenty of empty spaces out there, not just in Tel Aviv.â
Is The Times of Israel important to you?
If so, we have a year-end request.Â
Every day during the past two years of war and rising global antisemitism, our journalists kept you abreast of the most important developments that merit your attention. Millions of people rely on ToI for fact-based coverage of Israel and the Jewish world.Â
We care about Israel – and we know you do too. So as 2025 draws to a close, we have an ask: show your appreciation for our work by joining The Times of Israel Community, an exclusive group for readers like you who appreciate and financially support our work.Â
Already a member? Sign in to stop seeing this
You appreciate our journalism
You clearly find our careful reporting valuable, in a time when facts are often distorted and news coverage often lacks context.
Your support is essential to continue our work. We want to continue delivering the professional journalism you value, even as the demands on our newsroom have grown dramatically since October 7.
So today, please consider joining our reader support group, The Times of Israel Community. For as little as $6 a month you’ll become our partners while enjoying The Times of Israel AD-FREE, as well as accessing exclusive content available only to Times of Israel Community members.
Thank you,
David Horovitz, Founding Editor of The Times of Israel
Already a member? Sign in to stop seeing this