132Feb. 19, 2025

The organizers ofFriezeNew York have revealed the sixty-seven galleries that will be participating in the event’s 2025 iteration, slated to take place May 7–11 at the Shed, which has hosted it since 2021. The exhibitors represent over twenty-five countries and include megagalleries Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, Pace Gallery, Perrotin, Thaddaeus Ropac, White Cube, and David Zwirner, as well as international galleries such as Tokyo’s Tomio Koyama Gallery; the Seoul- and Busan-based Kukje Gallery; and Mexico City’s OMR. A raft of New York galleries are participating as well, including 303 Gallery, Miguel Abreu Gallery, Chapter NY, Casey Kaplan, and Ortuzar.
“Each year,Frieze New Yorkbrings together art galleries, artists, and collectors from around the world,” said Christine Messineo, Frieze’s director of Americas, in a statement. “Over several days, dynamic voices that shape today’s international art world engage with the best and the brightest in New York City’s rich cultural landscape. The result is an experience that deepens one’s understanding and enjoyment of contemporary art.”
In addition to its main section, the fair will feature its traditional Focus section, which welcomes young galleries featuring emerging or underrepresented artists. Seven of the twelve galleries are new, among them Champ Lacombe of London and Biarritz; Seoul’s G Gallery; King’s Leap and Management, both of New York; London’s Public Gallery; Voloshyn Gallery, of Miami and Kyiv; and Singapore’s Yeo Workshop. The section is being curated by Lumi Tan for a second year running, and counts among its highlights New York-based gallery Gordon Robichaux’s presentation of the work of Jenni Crain, who died of Covid-19-related complications at the age of thirty; a trio of interactive video works by Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley centering Black trans experience at Public; and an installation created from antique textiles by Balinese artist Citra Sasmita at Yeo Workshop.
“I’m particularly thrilled that this year’s Focus section is able to support an increased international presence, with galleries from Seoul, Singapore, London, Kyiv, and Biarritz joining returning galleries from Belo Horizonte, São Paulo, and Lisbon, while celebrating the resilient ecosystem of young galleries in New York,” said Tan in a statement. “The ambitious presentations across the section demonstrate the imperative role of artists in complicating neatly packaged narratives around the individual and society, taking on subjects such as the effects of extractive commercial and military industries, the feminist repositioning of story-telling traditions, and the new imaginaries that result from the translation of digital engagements into physical encounters.”
Frieze New York’s announcement comes at a fraught time for the fair, whose parent company, Endeavor, wasreported this past fallto be exploring a sale of Frieze, its titular magazine, and its London exhibition space. Too, Frieze LA is set to open to VIPs on Thursday in the wake of the rapacious blazes that devastated the California city earlier this year.
A full list of Frieze New York exhibitors is below.
PARTICIPATING GALLERIES, FRIEZE NEW YORK 2025
303 Gallery, New York
A Gentil Carioca, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo
Miguel Abreu Gallery, New York
Apalazzogallery, Brescia
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York, Los Angeles
Matthew Brown, New York, Los Angeles
Canada, New York
Carlos/Ishikawa, London
Chapter NY, New York
James Cohan, New York
Lodovico Corsini, Brussels
Dastan, Tehran, Toronto
Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York
Emalin, London
Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, New York
Frith Street Gallery, London
Gagosian, New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Le Bourget, Basel, Gstaad, Rome, Athens, Hong Kong
François Ghebaly, Los Angeles, New York
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Cape Town, London, New York
Alexander Gray Associates, New York, Germantown
Gray, Chicago, New York
Hales, New York, London
Hauser & Wirth, New York, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Paris, London, Somerset, Menorca, Monaco, Zurich, Gstaad, Basel, St. Moritz
Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, New York
Instituto de Vision, New York, Bogota
Jenkins Johnson Gallery, New York, San Francisco
Casey Kaplan, New York
Karma, New York, Los Angeles
Anton Kern, New York
Tina Kim Gallery, New York
Tomio Koyama Gallery, Tokyo
Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York
Kukje Gallery, Seoul, Busan
kurimanzutto, New York, Mexico City
Mendes Wood DM, São Paulo, Brussels, Paris, New York
Victoria Miro, London, Venice
The Modern Institute, Glasgow
mor charpentier, Paris, Bogotá
Night Gallery, Los Angeles
OMR, Mexico City
Ortuzar, New York
Pace Gallery, New York, London, Hong Kong, Geneva, Seoul, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Berlin
Perrotin, New York, Paris, Hong Kong, Seoul, Shanghai, Tokyo, Los Angeles, London
Proyectos Ultravioleta, Guatemala City
Nara Roesler, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, New York
Thaddaeus Ropac, London, Milan, Paris, Salzburg, Seoul
Esther Schipper, Berlin, Paris, Seoul
Société, Berlin
Stevenson, Cape Town, Johannesburg, Amsterdam
sultana, Paris, Arles
Union Pacific, London
Vermelho, São Paulo
White Cube, London, New York, Hong Kong, Paris, Seoul
David Zwirner, New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Hong Kong
FOCUS (12)
Central Galeria, São Paulo – C. L. Salvaro
Champ Lacombe, London, Biarritz – Stefania Batoeva
Company Gallery, New York – Stefania Batoeva
G Gallery, Seoul – Yehwan Song
Gordon Robichaux, New York – Jenni Crain
King’s Leap, New York – Audrey Gair
Madragoa, Lisbon – Rodrigo Hernández
Management, New York – Tahir Karmali
Mitre Galeria, Belo Horizonte, São Paulo – Luana Vitra
Public Gallery, London – Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley
Voloshyn Gallery, Miami, Kyiv – Nikita Kadan
Yeo Workshop, Singapore – Citra Sasmita