Art Basel has released the exhibitor list for its Paris edition, confirming the fair’s return to the Grand Palais from 23 to 25 October 2026, with preview days on 21 and 22 October and an invitation-only Avant-Première opening on 21 October reserved for the fair’s most exclusive tier of collectors and guests. The announcement comes as the art world prepares for the flagship Swiss fair in Basel, a reminder that the international fair calendar offers no meaningful pause between editions.
This will be the first Art Basel Paris led by Karim Crippa, who previously served as the fair’s head of communications before stepping into the director role. His appointment signals a degree of internal continuity at a moment when the fair is consolidating its position as one of Europe’s most significant commercial art events, a status it has steadily built over its four previous Grand Palais editions since the historic venue’s reopening.
More than 200 galleries from 41 countries will participate, with 181 taking part in the main Galeries section, a modest increase from the 177 that appeared there last year. The newcomers to that section include Luxembourg and Co, represented across London and New York; Sikkema Malloy Jenkins from New York; the recently formed Pace Di Donna Schrader Galleries; and Tina Kim Gallery, which exhibited in the fair’s Premise section last year and now joins the main gallery presentations. Among the Berlin arrivals are Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, ChertLüdde, Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler and Lars Friedrich. At the same time, Gianni Manhattan and Croy Nielsen bring Viennese representation, and Reena Spaulings Fine Art joins from New York.
Several galleries that participated last year are absent from this edition. Andrew Edlin Gallery, dépendance, Madragoa, Lia Rumma, Jan Mot, Kiang Malingue and Balice Hertling are among those not returning. Some absences reflect broader market pressures. Air de Paris declared bankruptcy earlier this month, and Blum closed its doors last year after operating across Los Angeles and Tokyo. These departures sit within the broader context of a gallery market navigating sustained mid-tier financial difficulties, even as the major fair circuit continues to report healthy activity at the upper end.
A notable development this year is the record number of galleries choosing to exhibit jointly. Twelve galleries have formed collaborative pairings for the fair, among them London’s Nicoletti and Seventeen, Jeffrey Deitch alongside Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, Tina Kim with Tokyo’s Take Ninagawa, and Petrine with Lars Friedrich. Crippa has described joint booths as a genuine fixture of the Paris fair, noting that while practical considerations often initiate the arrangement, the most successful collaborations build a curatorial dialogue that produces something more layered than either gallery could achieve alone at a fair where presentation quality is scrutinised as closely as the works themselves, framing joint booths as opportunities rather than compromises.
Art Basel Paris opens to the public on 23 October 2026.
Galeries
1 Mira Madrid / 2 Mira Archiv (Madrid), 303 Gallery (New York), 47 Canal (New York), A Gentil Carioca (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo), Miguel Abreu Gallery (New York), Acquavella Galleries (New York, Palm Beach), Galerie Allen (Paris), Christian Andersen (Copenhagen), Andréhn-Schiptjenko (Stockholm, Paris), Antenna Space (Shanghai, Hong Kong), Applicat-Prazan (Paris), The Approach (London), Art : Concept (Paris), Alfonso Artiaco (Naples), Athr Gallery (Jeddah, Ad Diriyah, AlUla), Galerie Anne Barrault (Paris), Tanya Bonakdar Gallery (New York), Bortolami (New York), Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi (Berlin), Ellen de Bruijne Projects (Amsterdam), Galerie Buchholz (Cologne, Berlin, New York), Emanuela Campoli (Paris, Milano), Capitain Petzel (Berlin), Cardi Gallery (Milan, London), Carlos/Ishikawa (London), Ceysson & Bénétière (Paris, Saint-Etienne, Lyon, Tokyo, Koerich, New York), Chapter NY (New York), ChertLüdde (Berlin), Sadie Coles HQ (London), Consonni Radziszewski (Lisbon, Milan, Warsaw), Galleria Continua (San Gimignano, Rome, São Paulo, Beijing, Havana, Boissy-le-Châtel, Paris), Paula Cooper Gallery (New York), Pilar Corrias (London), Lodovico Corsini (Brussels), Galleria Raffaella Cortese (Milan), Crèvecœur (Paris), Galerie Chantal Crousel (Paris), Croy Nielsen (Vienna), Massimodecarlo (Milan, London, Paris, Hong Kong), Jeffrey Deitch (Los Angeles, New York, West Hollywood), Document (Chicago, Lisbon), galerie frank elbaz (Paris), Emalin (London), Empty Gallery (Hong Kong), Larkin Erdmann (Zurich), Galerie Cécile Fakhoury (Dakar, Abidjan), Fanta-MLN (Milan), Selma Feriani Gallery (Tunis), Konrad Fischer Galerie (Düsseldorf, Berlin, Los Angeles), Foksal Gallery Foundation (Warsaw), Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo), Peter Freeman, Inc. (New York, Paris), Lars Friedrich (Berlin), Gagosian (New York, Paris, Hong Kong, Athens, Rome, Basel, Saanen, London, Beverly Hills), Galerie Christophe Gaillard (Paris, Brussels), Galerie 1900-2000 (Paris), Felix Gaudlitz (Vienna), François Ghebaly (Los Angeles, New York), Gianni Manhattan (Vienna), Gladstone Gallery (New York, Brussels, Rome, Seoul), Goodman Gallery (Cape Town, Johannesburg, London), Marian Goodman Gallery (New York, Paris, Los Angeles), Maxwell Graham (New York), Greene Naftali (New York), Galerie Karsten Greve (Paris, St. Moritz, Cologne), Hauser & Wirth (Zurich, London, Somerset, New York, Basel, Gstaad, St. Moritz, Paris, Hong Kong, Monaco, Ciutadella de Menorca, Los Angeles, West Hollywood), Galerie Max Hetzler (Berlin, Paris, London, Marfa), Hollybush Gardens (London), Xavier Hufkens (Brussels), Mariane Ibrahim (Paris, Chicago, Mexico City), Taka Ishii Gallery (Tokyo, Kyoto, Maebashi), Alison Jacques (London), Galerie Jousse Entreprise (Paris), Casey Kaplan (New York), Jan Kaps (Cologne), Karma (New York, Los Angeles), Karma International (Zurich), kaufmann repetto (Milan, New York), Anton Kern Gallery (New York), Tina Kim Gallery (Seoul, New York), David Kordansky Gallery (Los Angeles, New York), Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler (Berlin, Munich), Andrew Kreps Gallery (New York), Kukje Gallery (Seoul, Busan), kurimanzutto (Mexico City, New York), Labor (Mexico City), Landau Fine Art (Montreal, Meggen), Laveronica arte contemporanea (Modica), Layr (Vienna), LC Queisser (Tbilisi), In Situ – fabienne leclerc (Romainville), Lehmann Maupin (New York, London, Seoul), Galerie Lelong (Paris, New York), Lévy Gorvy Dayan (New York, London), Lisson Gallery (London, New York, Los Angeles, Shanghai), Loevenbruck (Paris), Luhring Augustine (New York), Luxembourg + Co. (London, New York), Magnin-A (Paris), Mai 36 Galerie (Zurich), Marcelle Alix (Paris), Gió Marconi (Milan), Marfa’ Projects (Beirut), Matthew Marks Gallery (New York, Los Angeles), Galerie Max Mayer (Berlin), Fergus McCaffrey (New York, Tokyo, Saint Barthélemy), Mendes Wood DM (São Paulo, Paris, New York, Brussels), Mennour (Paris), Meyer Riegger (Berlin, Karlsruhe, Seoul, Basel), Galerie Le Minotaure (Paris), Victoria Miro (London, Venice), Misako & Rosen (Tokyo), Modern Art (London, Paris), The Modern Institute (Glasgow), Edouard Montassut (Paris), mor charpentier (Paris, Bogotá), Galerie nächst St. Stephan Rosemarie Schwarzwälder (Vienna), Richard Nagy Ltd. (London), Nahmad Contemporary (New York), Galerie Neu (Berlin), Neue Alte Brücke (Frankfurt am Main), neugerriemschneider (Berlin), Nicoletti (London), Galleria Franco Noero (Turin), David Nolan Gallery (New York), Galerie Nathalie Obadia (Paris, Brussels), Ortuzar (New York), P.P.O.W (New York), P420 (Bologna), Pace Gallery (New York, Los Angeles, Berlin, Hong Kong, Minato City, Seoul, Geneva, London), Pace Di Donna Schrader Galleries (New York), Perrotin (Paris, New York, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo, Seoul, Dubai, London), Petrine (Paris, Düsseldorf), The Pill (Istanbul, Paris), Galeria Plan B (Cluj, Berlin), PM8 / Francisco Salas (Vigo), Galerie Jérôme Poggi (Paris), Prats Nogueras Blanchard (Barcelona, Madrid), Galerie Eva Presenhuber (Zurich, Vienna), Almine Rech (Paris, Brussels, New York, Shanghai, Monaco, Saanen), Reena Spaulings Fine Art (New York), Regen Projects (Los Angeles), Michel Rein (Paris, Brussels), Isabella Ritter (Paris), Thaddaeus Ropac (Paris, Paris-Pantin, Salzburg, Milan, Seoul, London), Michael Rosenfeld Gallery (New York), Salle Principale (Paris), sans titre (Paris), Esther Schipper (Berlin, Paris, Seoul), Semiose (Paris), seventeen (London), Sfeir-Semler Gallery (Beirut, Hamburg), Jack Shainman Gallery (New York), Sikkema Malloy Jenkins (New York), Jessica Silverman (San Francisco), Skarstedt (New York, Paris, London), Société (Berlin), Soft Opening (London), Sprovieri (London), Sprüth Magers (Berlin, London, Los Angeles, New York, Hong Kong), Standard (Oslo) (Oslo), Stevenson (Cape Town, Amsterdam), Luisa Strina (São Paulo), Sultana (Paris, Arles), Catinca Tabacaru (Bucharest, Harare), Take Ninagawa (Tokyo), Templon (Paris, Brussels, New York), Tornabuoni Art (Paris, Florence, Forte dei Marmi, Milan, Rome, Crans Montana), Trautwein Herleth (Berlin), Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois (Paris, New York), Van de Weghe (New York), Tim Van Laere Gallery (Antwerp, Rome), Vedovi Gallery (Brussels), Vitamin Creative Space (Beijing, Guangzhou), We Do Not Work Alone (Paris), Galerie Michael Werner (Berlin), White Cube (London, New York, Hong Kong, Paris, Seoul), Galerie Jocelyn Wolff (Paris), Yares Art (Santa Fe, Beverly Hills, New York), Galerie Thomas Zander (Cologne, Paris), David Zwirner (New York, Paris, Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles), Emergence: 243 Luz (Margate), Bank (Shanghai, New York), Brunette Coleman (London), ermes ermes (Rome), Exo Exo (Paris), Green Art Gallery (Dubai), Eli Kerr (Montreal), KIN (Brussels), Lo Brutto Stahl (Paris, Basel), Mariposa (Los Angeles, New York), P21 (Seoul), ROH (Jakarta), Schiefe Zähne (Berlin), Galeria Stereo (Warsaw), Galerie Oskar Weiss (Zurich), Wschód (Warsaw, New York), Premise: Almeida & Dale (São Paulo), Blue Velvet (Zurich, Madrid), kó (Lagos), Galerie Eric Mouchet (Paris, Brussels), Olney Gleason (New York), Pavec (Paris), Le Violon Bleu (Sidi Bou Said), Amanda Wilkinson Gallery (London), Galerie Zlotowski (Paris)

