Art Basel unveils gallery line‑up and key highlights for its 2025 Miami Beach edition
- The 2025 edition of Art Basel Miami Beach will welcome 285 premier galleries from 44 countries and territories across the Americas, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa—reasserting its position as the leading international art fair in the Americas.
- More than two-thirds of participating galleries operate spaces in the Americas, with a deep presence in the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean, underscoring the fair's unmatched engagement with the region's vibrant art scenes.
- Further expanding the fair's national footprint, galleries from New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Dallas, Philadelphia, and Greater Miami join a global roster of major blue-chip, established, and emerging exhibitors from the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, South Korea, Hong Kong, mainland China, Japan, and beyond.
- The show will activate Greater Miami with a week of museum-quality presentations, dynamic public programming, and institutional and partner collaborations of the highest caliber—convening artists, galleries, collectors, institutions, thought leaders from across the creative industries, and the broader public.
- Marking a major new chapter, Art Basel Awards—the first global honors celebrating excellence across the contemporary art industry—will debut in Miami Beach. The 2025 Gold Medalists will be revealed during the Official Night of the Art Basel Awards on December 4, presented in partnership with BOSS.
- Art Basel, whose Global Lead Partner is UBS, will take place from December 5–7, 2025, with VIP Preview Days on December 3 and 4, at the Miami Beach Convention Center (MBCC).
Art Basel is pleased to announce the exhibitor list for its 2025 edition in Miami Beach, featuring 285 premier galleries—including 41 making their debut. Representing 44 countries and territories, the fair remains a vital platform for discovering exceptional works by Modern masters, postwar icons, leading contemporary practitioners, and emergent voices.
This year’s edition will foreground the most urgent artistic currents shaping the American scene today, with a particular focus on Latinx, Indigenous, and diasporic positions. Reflecting Miami Beach’s unique position at the crossroads of North and South America, the fair offers a panoramic view of the region’s creative influence within a global context.
Bridget Finn, Director, Art Basel Miami Beach, said: "The strength and caliber of this year’s exhibitors reaffirms Art Basel Miami Beach’s centrality within the global art ecosystem. This edition reflects the vitality of artistic production across the Americas—which continues to shape contemporary art practice, patronage, and discourse worldwide—and the fair's role as a critical gateway for introducing pioneering international artists and perspectives to the American market. It is bold, rigorous, and attuned to the moment."
Highlights by Region
Latin America and the Caribbean
Participating galleries this year hail from Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Guatemala, Peru, and Uruguay. Returning stalwarts in the region such as Raquel Arnaud (São Paulo), Galería Isabel Aninat (Vitacura), Ruth Benzacar Galería de Arte (Buenos Aires), OMR (Mexico City), and Galería Sur (Punta del Este) will present their acclaimed programs.
A rising generation of exhibitors that have swiftly gained recognition within their local contexts further expands the region’s representation. El Apartamento—the first homegrown Cuban gallery to join the fair, with exhibition spaces in Havana and Madrid—makes its debut, alongside Crisis (Lima); Lodos (Mexico City); Galeria Mapa (São Paulo); Galeria Elvira Moreno (Bogotá); Parallel Oaxaca (Oaxaca); Pasto Galería (Buenos Aires); Proyecto Nasal (Mexico City, Guayaquil); W—galería (Buenos Aires, Garzón); and Zielinsky (Barcelona, São Paulo).
United States and Regional Diversity
This year’s edition welcomes a new wave of rising galleries from New York City's downtown scene, joining established Chelsea powerhouses and international mega-dealers including Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, David Zwirner, Pace Gallery, and Paula Cooper Gallery. First-time participants from the city include David Peter Francis, Candice Madey, Margot Samel, Theta, Kate Werble Gallery, and YveYang. Alexander Gray Associates returns for the first time since 2016.
In addition, the West Coast scene is represented more expansively at Art Basel Miami Beach, with nearly 50 exhibitors operating spaces across California. San Francisco’s Rebecca Camacho Presents and Catharine Clark Gallery, along with Los Angeles-based Diane Rosenstein Gallery and The Pit, join longstanding exhibitors such as Berggruen Gallery, David Kordansky Gallery, Gemini G.E.L., Regen Projects, Roberts Projects, and Vielmetter Los Angeles.
The fair continues to broaden its reach beyond coastal art hubs. From Dallas, Erin Cluley Gallery joins for the first time, while Locks Gallery (Philadelphia) returns after nearly two decades. Chicago maintains a strong showing with Document, GRAY, moniquemeloche, and Patron.
Underscoring Art Basel's deep, mutually generative relationship with South Florida's cultural community, the fair welcomes back Central Fine—now expanding with a second space in Salta, Argentina and relocating its principal gallery to Miami’s Design District—alongside Piero Atchugarry (Miami, Garzón); David Castillo (Miami); Gavlak (West Palm Beach); Fredric Snitzer (Miami); and Acquavella Galleries (New York, Palm Beach). They are joined by debut exhibitors Nina Johnson (Miami) and Voloshyn Gallery (Kyiv, Miami Beach), the latter introducing the first-ever Ukrainian gallery presence at the fair.
International Presence
The fair continues to draw top-tier galleries from Europe, Asia, and Africa, with nearly 100 exhibitors with principal locations in these regions returning—and a notable representation from the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, South Korea, Hong Kong, mainland China, and Japan.
Major blue-chip and secondary market dealers including Cardi Gallery (Milan, London); Galerie Karsten Greve (Paris, St. Moritz, Cologne); and Vedovi Gallery (Brussels) return, alongside US fixtures such as Edward Tyler Nahem (New York); Helly Nahmad Gallery (New York); Van de Weghe (New York); Yares Art (New York, Beverly Hills, Santa Fe); and Tibor de Nagy (New York), which celebrates its 75th anniversary this year.
Also returning are pioneering international galleries with influential contemporary programs, such as Edel Assanti (London); Gallery Baton (Seoul); galerie frank elbaz (Paris); Nanzuka (Tokyo, Shanghai); and Galerie Thomas Schulte (Berlin).
Several galleries with cross-continental footprints and programs that notably attend to artistic production in the Americas also return, including Galleria Continua (San Gimignano, Beijing, Les Moulins, Havana, Rome, São Paulo, Paris, Dubai); mor charpentier (Paris, Bogotá); and Galerie Nordenhake (Berlin, Mexico City, Stockholm).
Exhibition Sectors
Art Basel Miami Beach is structured across several exhibition sectors, including:
- Galleries, the fair’s main sector, in which leading Modern, postwar, and contemporary art dealers present the full breadth of their program
- Nova, for galleries presenting works created within the last three years by up to three artists
- Positions, for young galleries showcasing ambitious solo presentations by emerging artists
- Survey, dedicated to galleries highlighting artistic practices of historical relevance
The first major highlights from Galleries, Nova, Positions, and Survey are now available in the Exhibitor Highlights Supplement, located on page 8 of the full press release.
Details on other sectors and additional gallery programming will be announced in the coming months.