
Frieze New York closed its 15th edition at The Shed on Sunday, May 17, after five days that joined leading international galleries, museum acquisitions, artist projects, and high collector activity in one of the city’s key May art weeks. The 2026 fair welcomed 25,000 visitors from 75 countries and brought together 68 galleries from 26 countries. Exhibitors presented a focused selection that joined emerging artists with internationally established names, while collectors, institutions, foundations, curators, and artists gave the fair a dense professional audience from the opening preview to the final hours.
ART
The fair also marked another year of Frieze New York at The Shed and continued its relationship with Global Lead Partner Deutsche Bank. Galleries reported strong sales from the first preview day, with sales at several market levels. The week included seven-figure transactions, mid-range institutional activity, and works by emerging artists priced from roughly $4,000. Private collectors took part alongside university collections, museums, and foundations, giving the edition a strong commercial result and a visible institutional profile.


Museum Acquisitions
The inaugural Sherman Family Foundation Acquisition Fund gave the 2026 edition one of its clearest public collection stories. The fund supported acquisitions by the Brooklyn Museum and the Baltimore Museum of Art through four Focus presentations. Brooklyn Museum acquired two works by Bettina from Ulrik. Baltimore Museum of Art acquired Both Banks I by Reika Takebayashi from Public Gallery, Destellos, PILLAN SIKILL 1 by Seba Calfuqueo from W-Galería, and Festival 7 by Joanne Burke from Soft Opening. Each living artist represented through the fund also received an unrestricted $5,000 award, while an additional artist award will support documentation and preservation of Bettina’s work posthumously.


Courtesy of ©Frieze, Photography by Casey Kelbaugh/CKA
Seven-Figure Placements
Sales at the upper end of the fair began with White Cube, which sold El Anatsui’s LuwVor I for $2.2 million and MivEvi III for $1.9 million. The gallery also placed Antony Gormley’s SET VII for 450,000 pounds, Howardena Pindell’s Deep Space #4 for $275,000, and Marina Rheingantz’s Salvador for $250,000. Thaddaeus Ropac sold Georg Baselitz’s Stunde der Nachtigall for 1.4 million euros, Robert Rauschenberg’s Bob Song (Salvage) for $825,000, and Alex Katz’s Black Roses 3 for $600,000. Almine Rech placed a James Turrell light work in the $900,000 to $1 million range, while Hales sold the main work from its Virginia Jaramillo solo presentation for $540,000.


Courtesy of ©Frieze, Photography by Casey Kelbaugh/CKA
Sold-Out Booths and Gallery Momentum
Other major galleries also reported broad activity. Gagosian recorded sales for artists including Derrick Adams, Helen Frankenthaler, Gerhard Richter, Adriana Varejão, Stanley Whitney, and Francesca Woodman. Pace Gallery sold works from its Maya Lin and Leo Villareal presentation in the $100,000 to $200,000 range. Kukje Gallery sold two works by Ha Chong-Hyun, plus works by Kibong Rhee, Kyungah Ham, Ugo Rondinone, Julian Opie, Gimhongsok, and Jean-Michel Othoniel. Tina Kim Gallery also reported sales for Ha Chong-Hyung, Kim Tschang-Yeul, Kibong Rhee, Lee ShinJa, Maia Ruth Lee, Livien Yin, Suki Seokyeong Kang, Davide Balliano, Pio Abad, and Jane Yang D’Haene.
View this post on Instagram
Several booths achieved near sell-out or sold-out results. Johyun Gallery sold out its focused presentation of Lee Bae, with works ranging from $100,000 to $250,000. James Cohan placed all eight paintings from its Kelly Sinnapah Mary solo presentation, led by The Sacred Garden at $130,000. Night Gallery sold seven Hayley Barker paintings priced between $30,000 and $175,000. Public Gallery sold out its presentation of Reika Takebayashi, while Soft Opening sold out its booth of new Joanne Burke works. Almeida & Dale and François Ghebaly nearly sold out their joint presentation, with sales including works by Jaider Esbell, Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato, Tony Matelli, Melike Kara, Patricia Iglesias Peco, Maia Ruth Lee, and Maxwell Alexandre.


Courtesy of ©Frieze, Photography by Casey Kelbaugh/CKA
Latin American Galleries Gain Attention
Frieze New York 2026 also gave strong visibility to Latin American galleries and artists. Fourteen of the 68 participating galleries came from the region, with artists from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and other countries in the section. Eight Brazilian galleries participated with support from Latitude. The selection committee included Fátima González of Campeche in Mexico City and Omayra Alvarado-Jensen of Instituto de Visión in Bogotá. Participating galleries connected to the region included Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel, A Gentil Carioca, Almeida & Dale, Kurimanzutto, Mendes Wood DM, Mitre Galeria, Campeche, Isla Flotante, Instituto de Visión, and W-Galería.


Courtesy of ©Frieze, Photography by Casey Kelbaugh/CKA
Focus Section and Stand Prize
The Focus section, curated for the third consecutive year by Lumi Tan and supported by Stone Island, gave galleries founded in the last 12 years a major platform inside the fair. The section drew strong curatorial attention and significant acquisition activity. W-Galería won the 2026 Focus Stand Prize for its solo presentation of Seba Calfuqueo, whose Destellos, PILLAN SIKILL 1 also entered the Baltimore Museum of Art through the Sherman Family Foundation Acquisition Fund. The jury included Rita Gonzalez from Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Shamim M. Momin from The Bronx Museum, and Amy Smith-Stewart from The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. Honorable mentions went to Soft Opening for Joanne Burke and Gordon Robichaux for Deondre Davis.


Courtesy of ©Frieze, Photography by Casey Kelbaugh/CKA
Artist Projects and Institutional Programs
Frieze also included artist projects and institutional collaborations that shaped the fair beyond gallery booths. Jonathan González presented a performance and photographic installation with the Whitney Museum of American Art. David Lamelas collaborated with Dia Art Foundation. Kite developed a new commission in partnership with Counterpublic. These projects placed the fair in direct conversation with major cultural organizations during a week that also brought gallery openings, museum exhibitions, and satellite fairs to New York.


Ruinart Art Lounge
Ruinart added another cultural layer through its Art Lounge at Frieze New York. Each year, Ruinart partners with global artists for its Conversations with Nature series and presents commissioned works at over 30 international art fairs before the works travel to the brand home in Reims, France, for permanent installation. For Frieze New York, Ruinart hosted preparatory works and studies by 2026 Conversations with Nature partner Tadashi Kawamata. The artist created these studies ahead of three large-scale in-situ pieces planned for 4 Rue des Crayères, the Ruinart Maison and UNESCO-listed site. Kawamata works with wood and reused materials and creates installations in close relation to natural, urban, or architectural settings. His process begins with observation of light, air currents, vegetation, and natural patterns, then develops through drawings and models before production.

Institutional Attendance
The fair drew a wide institutional audience, including representatives from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Museum, Baltimore Museum of Art, Dia Art Foundation, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Pérez Art Museum Miami, Dallas Museum of Art, Storm King Art Center, National Gallery of Canada, and many others. Collectors, artists, cultural figures, and public names also attended, among them Elizabeth Banks, Ciara, Anderson Cooper, Misty Copeland, Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Dillon, A$AP Ferg, Julia Fox, Bette Midler, Norman Reedus, Michael Stipe, Sharon Stone, and Kelly Wearstler. With sales, museum acquisitions, Focus prizes, institutional projects, and Ruinart’s art presentation, Frieze New York 2026 closed with a detailed picture of the market and cultural activity surrounding contemporary art in New York.


















