"AMS Fairy Tale" is an exhibition initiated and realized by three young artists, which explores fairy tales as a tool for experience, identity, and imagination. Each of them chose a fairy tale that was meaningful to them and tried to bring it to life — to live as its protagonist, allowing this experience to transform into an artistic process. This journey became a creative experiment in which reality and fantasy converge, overlap and challenge the boundaries between fiction and everyday life.

The idea for the exhibition came about in a surprisingly natural way — artists Marija Dzalba, Anna Diklaba, and Aleksandrs Semjonovs received an offer from the "TUR Telpas" team to use the exhibition space in the Tallinas Street quarter. The place immediately made a strong impression – with its industrial charm and spatial mystery, it evoked associations with a fairy-tale environment. Thus, the idea was born – to turn to fairy tales as a creative method and field of interpretation.

Fairy tales are close to all three artists, but each from their own, very personal perspective. They are united by the feeling that a fairy tale is not just a childhood story, but a tool with which to reflect on life, see it from a new angle, and allow oneself to be carried away by chance and surprises. By choosing one fairy tale, each artist began to "live" it – allowing themselves to be led by the story, the themes it reveals and how they can be transformed into a work of art. In this way, each artist discovered their own individual path.


The aim of the exhibition is to share feelings, ideas and visions. It is a personal space where three artists speak about themselves through visual language, while addressing the viewer. This is a moment when they choose to present themselves as artists and as people, allowing the viewer to get to know their thoughts not through direct storytelling, but through images, colors, space, and movement.

The exhibition invites us to rethink our preconceptions about fairy tales as a genre that is simply childish. We want viewers to come with an open mind — not to look for logic or morals, but to allow themselves to be curious. Here, a fairy tale is not a closed plot, but a starting point for imagination, reflection and the opportunity to look at things differently. Just like us, viewers may unexpectedly find themselves in a character, a feeling or a moment of silence between the works.