Galaxy Gallery in Oak Bluffs, a nonprofit cooperative showing artwork by Islanders, is holding one final exhibition this weekend at 99 Dukes County avenue, its home since 2016.

Galaxy traditionally closes for the off-season, but this year the co-operative will be clearing out completely due to a shift in its rental agreement, from a six-month lease, from May to October, to an annual one.

“We’ll be looking for another space that will be able to accommodate our mission, which is to support Island artists,” said Holly Alaimo, executive director of the Martha’s Vineyard Center for the Visual Arts, which runs the seasonal gallery.

The building is owned by Valerie Francis, who also manages the Knowhere Art Gallery on Dukes County avenue and Center of Knowhere on Circuit avenue.

Holly Alaimo, executive director of the Martha's Vineyard Center for the Visual Arts. — Ray Ewing

Ms. Francis replied to an interview request from the Gazette with an e-mailed statement that she was proud to have rented to the arts group over the past eight years.

“Our agreement was thoughtfully aligned with the organization’s nonprofit, part-time business model, and its financial realities, enabling the MVCVA to continue its mission,” she wrote.

Founded in 1990, the Martha’s Vineyard Center for the Visual Arts has changed locations several times, bouncing between Featherstone Farm in Oak Bluffs (now Featherstone Center for the Arts), the Mansion House in Vineyard Haven, what is now the Newes from America pub in Edgartown and assorted empty storefronts before settling down on Dukes County avenue, now designated the Oak Bluffs Arts District.

The co-operative even was its own landlord for a few years, after purchasing the old firehouse at 99 Dukes County avenue in the mid-1990s.

“We had shows there, we had lectures, we had show and tells, we had interviews with artists,” Ms. Alaimo recalled.

Susan Stovall by her work. — Ray Ewing

In 2010, the organization sold the Firehouse Gallery for $168,000 to artists Alison Shaw and Sue Dawson, who run the Alison Shaw Gallery there.

“We took that money and we invested it so we could give grants to artists,” Ms. Alaimo said.

If the Martha’s Vineyard Center for the Visual Arts can’t find a new gallery space for the 2025 season, Ms. Alaimo said, the group will still be working to show Island art.

“Maybe we’ll do pop-ups. Maybe I’ll just do festivals, like our art strolls that we’ve been organizing now for six years,” she said.

Galaxy Gallery’s last group show of the year, with sales to benefit Habitat for Humanity, runs Friday through Monday from noon to 6 p.m.

Artist Bill Buckley. — Ray Ewing

An artists’ reception Saturday starts at 4 p.m., and on Monday the gallery hosts an artists’ yard sale of paints, brushes and other supplies from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. More information about Galaxy Gallery and the Martha’s Vineyard Center for the Visual Arts is posted at galaxygallerymv.org.

Editors note: the article has been updated to reflect the accuracy of the change in time period of the rental agreement, rather than an rent increase.