Monday, February 23, 2026

Meet 8 Tech Leaders Who Are Building Impressive Art Collections https://ift.tt/DPzR1y9

In the past decade, the technology sector has minted a new generation of art collectors—founders, venture capitalists, and executives whose professional lives are defined by innovation.

While stereotypes linger about the types of art that these collectors are drawn to, the reality is far more nuanced. What unites them is less a preference for medium and more a shared mindset: comfort with risk, appetite for discovery, and conviction in backing vision early. Many draw parallels between startup investing and supporting artists at pivotal moments in their careers.

Here, we share how eight collectors in the tech industry are approaching art buying.


Dylan Abruscato

President, TBPN

Los Angeles

A digital native, it’s unsurprising that Dylan Abruscato’s first art purchase—a painting by Jordy Kerwick—was done through Instagram. “I just saw his art on my explore page and sent a DM,” Abruscato said. “It was easy, friendly, and straightforward. I bought the work because I liked it and wanted to live with it.”

A media and technology executive who is the president of TBPN, a daily live tech talk show, Abruscato continues to collect with his wife, Sarah. Their home is filled with artwork mixing his preference for playful and colorful styles and her interest in contemporary interpretations of classical and Old Masters themes. Their collection includes names like Jess Valice, Sara Anstis, and Ben Sledsens.

As he’s grown as a collector, so too have Abruscato’s colleagues in tech. “I always draw a parallel between collecting art and startup investing,” he said.

“Purchasing an artwork supports the person behind it—their livelihood, their business—in the same way early-stage investors are supporting founders. Both take curiosity, patience, and a genuine belief in who you’re investing in.”

Marsha Lipton

CEO and co-founder, Numeraire Future Trends

Abu Dhabi

Marsha Lipton didn’t begin her art-buying journey with the intention of building a collection. “It began quietly, without a plan or framework,” she reflected. Her first artwork was a birthday gift from her husband: a French countryside painting by Louis Peyrat. Its calm presence proved unexpectedly transformative.

“As often happens, that first piece quietly anchored everything that followed,” she said. Soon after, she acquired a small Salvador Dalí sculpture, Carmen–Castanets (ca. 1970), for her husband and slowly added to their collection over the years.

Trained in scientific fields, Lipton and her husband approach art with analytical rigor. “Works of the Russian avant-garde have always resonated with us for precisely that reason, balancing formal structure with intellectual ambition and disciplined execution,” Lipton said.

Lipton recalls watching as generative AI began to erode confidence in traditional artwork documentation and provenance. “What struck me as far more consequential was the impact on trust,” she noted. That realization led Lipton to co-found Numeraire Future Trends, which creates biometric-level digital identities based on an artwork’s physical makeup.

For Lipton, collecting and technology converge in stewardship—ensuring that cultural objects retain their integrity, meaning, and history across generations. “Numeraire grew directly out of our experience as collectors,” she explained. “It reflects questions I had been asking myself: how the story connects to what one is actually looking at, and how that knowledge can be preserved over time.”


Chris Lyons

General partner, Andreessen Horowitz

Miami

Chris Lyons approaches art collecting as an extension of community and lived experience. His passion took shape during the rise of the digital art community, when his work in cryptocurrencies placed him “between two worlds—physical artists curious about digital art and digital artists interested in the traditions of the art world,” he said.

As a venture capitalist with a background in music production, Lyons specializes in finding equity opportunities for creatives, athletes, and entertainers. For Lyons, collecting art is about support and storytelling—“buy what you love,” he said, “because you’re the one who gets to live with it.”

One of the first artists who resonated with Lyons was Derrick Adams. He was drawn to the storytelling and symbolism of Adams’s “Floater” series, particularly a work featuring a Black unicorn. “In tech,” Lyons noted, “‘unicorn’ often represents something rare or transformational, and becoming a general partner at my firm—especially as the first Black general partner—was a defining professional moment.” The piece became his first acquisition. Adams is now a close friend; Lyons owns four of his works and has collaborated with him on digital projects, including the Reasonable Doubt NFT, commissioned by Jay-Z in 2021.

Working in tech, Lyons finds that art balances his day-to-day life. “With so much of our attention focused on screens—and on fast-moving fields like crypto and AI—art offers an important counterbalance,” he explained. He also believes art complements how people in technology tend to think. “It encourages curiosity, reflection, and perspective—qualities that are just as valuable as efficiency or scale,” he explained.

Lyons uses platforms like Artsy to train his eye, but says the moments that matter most happen offline, especially in artists’ studios. His collection gravitates toward vibrant, expressive works—often colorful and abstract yet narrative-driven—largely by Black artists worldwide. “You train your eye by looking,” he said, “but you train your judgment by listening.”

Amber Atherton

Partner, Patron Fund

San Francisco

Amber Atherton began collecting art like many others working in tech: through word of mouth and social media. For years, she had admired work by the British artist Mat Collishaw, which started when she saved an image on her Tumblr. She was able to acquire one of his works in 2020. “It was incredibly satisfying to see something I’d admired online for so long finally live on my own wall,” Atherton said. “That moment really marked the beginning of collecting with intention rather than just admiration from afar.”

Atherton’s path—from growing up in Hong Kong to years in London and a move to San Francisco in 2017—has shaped an eclectic approach to discovery. Today, she works as a venture capitalist and entrepreneur.

Atherton cites friends like collector and curator Tiffany Zabludowicz and gallerist Jessica Silverman as key influences. “Silverman introduced us to wonderful artists, including Chelsea Ryoko Wong and Patricia Peco,” Atherton said. She also frequents fairs, citing L.A.’s Felix Art Fair as a favorite.

Atherton is drawn to artists who share her cultural overlap of the U.K. and Hong Kong, as well as her husband’s American and Indian heritage. She is also interested in the intersection of technology and humanity embodied by artists like Paul Laffoley and Trevor Paglen.

“As a consumer VC [venture capitalist], I spend a lot of time thinking about how technology shapes behavior and culture before those shifts become obvious,” she said. “In some ways, collecting art feels similar—you’re looking for artists who capture something emerging in the present or hint at where culture is heading next. The best artists, like the best founders, often see around corners.”


Jeff Morris Jr.

Founder, Chapter One

California

Having earned an MFA in film from the University of Southern California, Jeff Morris has always been drawn to creativity across media and disciplines. His path as an art collector began by chance.

“The first piece of art I ever purchased was a print by Norman Seeff,” he recalled. Morris and his wife, painter Simone Lopes Morris, saw the work, a black-and-white photograph of Steve Jobs holding the original Macintosh computer, at the Hotel Bel-Air.

After reaching out to the artist for a studio visit, “he graciously said yes and spent time walking us through his work,” leading them to buy an outtake from that historic shoot. “We considered it a wedding gift to ourselves,” Morris said. “It still hangs in my office today.”

After helping grow the dating app Tinder, Morris is now founder and general partner of Chapter One, a venture capital firm for the tech world. As their collection grows, the couple continues to buy directly from artists, as well as through galleries, social media, and art fairs. At a visit to Frieze L.A. two years ago, they walked out with an Eduardo Sarabia work “on the spot,” Morris said. Their collection also includes works by Hugo McCloud, Ben Crase, and Jordy Kerwick.

As an artist, Simone has been a major influence: “I like to joke that she could have been the world’s best curator,” Morris said. Together, they “buy what we love,” Morris explained, adding, “If you love it, you’ll never regret the purchase.”



Sandy Cass

Managing Partner, Red Swan Ventures

New York

Sandy Cass has built an art collection shaped by curiosity and a love of systems. He began collecting straight out of school while traveling through Latin America. “I started buying small paintings by local artists [who] I thought captured the vibes of the towns I was visiting,” he recalled.

A former COO/CFO of Artsy, Cass is now managing partner of Red Swan Ventures, which supports founders in culture, tech, and systems. His first major acquisition came a little over a decade ago, when he purchased a small Cai Guo-Qiang work on paper at auction. “I thought his use of gunpowder, the spectacle of the act of creation, and its nod to China’s history [were] so cool,” he said.

Cass credits seeing large volumes of art and learning from dealers, friends, and fellow collectors for sharpening his eye. His background in computer science informs his taste for artists working within frameworks or rule-based systems, including Jack Whitten, as well as artists whose work balances rigor with humor, such as David Shrigley and Chloe Wise.

Like other collectors in tech, Cass notes the role of digital platforms in informing his collecting. “Instagram has been a big part of my education—following the artists directly, but also following collectors who I think have great taste,” he said. “My journey as a collector has been as much a social one, learning from others as it has been an individual one, spending time with the art.”

Shardé Marchewski

Former Global Head of Purpose & Inclusion, Wayfair

Boston

Shardé Marchewski began collecting art a decade ago during a trip to Accra, Ghana. “It was my first time in Africa, and I wanted to leave with something special,” she recalled. After spotting three works on Facebook by the then-emerging Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe, she visited the Artists Alliance Gallery and purchased them for $450. “I was quite proud of myself and felt that this was my first ‘adult’ art purchase,” Marchewski said. “Those pieces have appreciated by over 10,000 percent. I fell in love with Otis's work because of the beauty of his craftsmanship, and I am so proud that he was my introduction into the art world.”

Unsurprisingly, Marchewski’s decade in e-commerce informs her approach to buying art. She is also a business founder and specialist in diversity, equity, and inclusion. “I feel the most comfortable purchasing art online, and this is 100 percent influenced by my time at Wayfair,” she said.

Using platforms like Artsy, she strategically engages—liking, saving, following—leveraging algorithms to refine her exposure. Yet travel remains essential; she and her husband, who have visited over 50 countries, always make time to visit local galleries.

In 2020, amid COVID isolation, the murder of George Floyd, and the birth of her first child, the focus of her collecting sharpened. “I had this unsettling feeling—Black people and Black culture were under attack, and I needed to do something,” she said. “My gut told me to preserve our culture and to protect it at all costs. I started collecting artifacts more intentionally.”

She began acquiring works and historical artifacts that safeguard Black cultural legacy, including pieces by David Driskell and Brandon V. Lewis, an artist from Marchewski’s hometown of Baton Rouge. In a nod to her husband’s East German heritage, the couple also buys work by artists like A. R. Penck and Max Pechstein. Many pieces from their collection are now on view in “In Our Image” at the ShowUp Curatorial Incubator Program in Boston, which runs through March 1st.

“Art is both legacy and language,” Marchewski added. “If you stroll through my art collection, you will see very clearly a story of me, my ancestors, and the future generations to follow.”


Sarah Maryam Moosvi

VP of Marketing for GKIDS

New York

Though she purchased her first artwork in 2011, Sarah Maryam Moosvi marks 2020 as a pivotal year for her collecting. “Like many others that year, a moment of remote creative collaboration set me on this path,” she said.

At the time, she collaborated with Pindar Van Arman, Kitty Simpson, and an autonomous robot to create Sarah MMXX (2020), an AI digital portrait that evokes the Roman god Janus with two faces.

In her professional life, Moosvi works as a marketing executive for the film and television distributor GKIDS. As a collector, Moosvi prioritizes “proximity to an artist’s thinking and sustained engagement with their practice,” she said.

She attends salons hosted by galleries like Heft, bitforms, and Office Impart, which she considers “a critical part of cultural infrastructure.” Early guidance from artists like Sasha Stiles and curators such as Regina Harsanyi shaped her focus on generative and time-based media, informing her broader institutional engagement, including her role as a trustee at the Museum of the Moving Image.

“My work with technology sharpens my attention to infrastructure—how digital systems shape visibility, authorship, and preservation,” she said. She closely follows emerging tech models and considers how metadata and context allow born-digital works to circulate meaningfully.

“For me, collecting is a form of cultural strategy,” she explained, “a way to influence what remains visible, legible, and possible within a world increasingly mediated by machines.”



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Loewe Foundation Craft Prize announces finalists for 2026 edition. https://ift.tt/LZqblA2

The Loewe Foundation has announced the shortlist of finalists for its 2026 Craft Prize. They have selected 30 artists from 133 countries, whose works will be shown in an exhibition at the National Gallery Singapore from May 13th through June 14th. On May 12th, the winner, along with two special mentions, will be announced on May 12th. The winner will be awarded €50,000 ($58,840), while the two special mentions will each receive €5000 ($5,880).

The 30 finalists were selected from among 5,100 submissions by a panel of experts including artist and former Craft Prize finalist Sara Flynn; Antonia Boström, the Victoria and Albert Museum’s former director of collections, and Amy Greenspon, an independent curator and Loewe’s art advisor. The selected artists work across a diverse range of media including ceramics, woodworking, textiles, furniture, book binding, glass, metal, jewelry, and lacquer. Their works explore the tension between balance and chaos, make references to the natural world, and recontextualize cultural traditions.

Loewe’s new creative directors, Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez, will sit on the jury for the first time. In selecting the winner and two special mentions, they will be joined by luminaries from across design, journalism, institutions, and architecture. These include 2025 Craft Prize winner Kunimasa Aoki, essayist and architect Frida Escobedo, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s curator of modern architecture, design, and decorative arts, Abraham Thomas.

“The Craft Prize continues to reveal the extraordinary diversity and ambition of contemporary craft,” said Sheila Loewe, the president of the Loewe Foundation. “The works shortlisted for the 2026 edition demonstrate how deeply rooted traditions can be reimagined through innovation, skill and imagination. Bringing this exhibition to Singapore reflects the global dialogue at the heart of the Prize and our ongoing commitment to supporting artists at pivotal moments in their careers.”

There are several artists on the list who work primarily with ceramics, including Korea’s Jongjin Park, Denmark’s Morten Løbner Espersen, and the London-based, Zimbabwe-born Xanthe Somers. Those working with glass include Japan’s Ayano Yoshizumi, Kirstie Rea from Australia, Denmark-based Maria Koshenkova. Other artists selected include the fiber artist Gjertrud Hals, lacquer artist Nan Wei, and book artist and bookbinder Adelene Koh. The full list of finalists can be found below.



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Friday, February 20, 2026

All the Art You Need to See During L.A. Art Week 2026 https://ift.tt/TbRWeNx

Frieze Los Angeles launched in 2019 and swiftly became a fixture in the art world calendar. The event effectively kicks off the city’s busiest week of fairs, gallery openings, talks, parties, dinners, and more. This year, it also serves as a runway to an especially big season for L.A.: In March, beloved local artist Lauren Halsey debuts sister dreamer, her long-anticipated sculpture park in South Central, and in April, LACMA will open its long-awaited David Geffen Galleries, a major expansion of the museum’s footprint.

Frieze still headlines art week from its tent at the Santa Monica Airport, though the week’s best discoveries expand far beyond the fairgrounds. If, like me, you’re visiting for the week and aren’t driving (and you’re confounded by the logic of L.A. traffic), the smartest approach is to plan by neighborhood. Pick your clusters wisely and you’ll spend more time with art—and less time crawling the 10 in an Uber.

Below is a focused selection of 10 key art destinations for L.A. Art Week 2026. We’ve also made this Google Maps list you can save to your phone, with the following sites (plus more galleries), to make navigating on the ground easier.


1. Frieze Los Angeles

Santa Monica | Santa Monica Airport, 3027 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica


The main event: Frieze Los Angeles brings together around 100 international galleries under a tent at the Santa Monica Airport. As you approach from the parking lot or drop-off point, you’ll typically find a solid lineup of food trucks and dining options, plus Frieze Projects, a slate of public artworks curated by Art Production Fund. While it’s a close cousin of the other Frieze fairs, there’s a light-filled, al fresco West Coast character that sets this event apart from convention-center events. I always make time for the Focus sector, which highlights solo and duo presentations by emerging galleries. It’s a nicely scaled fair—you can see most of it in around two hours with time left for a bite or a beverage outside.


2. Post-Fair

Santa Monica | 1248 5th Street, Santa Monica

Going into its second year, Post-Fair has built a reputation as the cool, fresh counterpart to Frieze—and its location makes it a convenient stop after the main fair. Local gallerist Chris Sharp directs the charming, unhurried event in the lofty and light-filled Art Deco halls of the former Santa Monica Post Office. Galleries receive generous wall and floor space, so the layout feels more open and free-flowing than a typical booth setup. One-third of the galleries are local, but there’s also a strong international presence, with exhibitors hailing from Paris to Oaxaca, Mexico. Expect emerging and mid-career talent and more experimental work—and a useful reset for your eyes after the bigger fair. I’m especially excited for P.P.O.W’s presentation of Phoebe Helander’s paintings. You can walk it quickly, but it’s worth lingering and chatting with gallerists; I’d budget at least an hour.


3. Felix Art Fair

Hollywood | The Roosevelt Hotel, 7000 Hollywood Blvd, Los Angeles

Felix has become one of the most beloved satellite fairs in the country—largely because it revolves around the delightful David Hockney–painted pool at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. The cabana rooms around the pool are where I usually start: Each hotel room hosts a different gallery, mainly small and midsize programs known for giving emerging artists a platform. Then take the elevator up to the tower for two more floors of guest rooms filled with art. Pop in and out as you sweep through the long hallways and rub shoulders with the art crowd. It’s always fun to see which artworks get hung in the bathrooms. Plan to stay awhile: It takes time to see all the rooms, and it’s hard to resist hanging by the pool. If you want to do it properly, I’d give it at least two hours—maybe three—and stop by some nearby Hollywood galleries before or after.


4. Hollywood Galleries

Hollywood | Various locations

During art week, the stretch of galleries from West Hollywood through central Hollywood becomes an essential circuit that could keep you busy for many days. Several blocks of Santa Monica Boulevard, North La Brea, and Highland Avenues are dotted with excellent galleries. This is one of the rare areas where you can gallery hop on foot—within reason. It’s not New York (where a long stroll between neighborhoods is nice and convenient in good weather); in L.A., even a mile can be impractical, and sometimes not the safest route. Focus on small clusters, not a meandering marathon. Our Google Maps list is especially helpful here. On Tuesday evening, I’m excited about several openings, including three new shows at Megan MulrooneyKate Zimmerman Turpin, Alma Berrow, and a group show called “Afterimage” curated by artist Tommy May—as well as the Leiko Ikemura show at Lisson Gallery; and a pair of solo shows at Karma of works by Milton Avery and Casey Bolding.


5. MAK Center for Art and Architecture

West Hollywood | 835 Kings Road, West Hollywood

No visit to L.A. is complete without taking in local architecture, and I’m always drawn to the MAK Center during art week. Housed in Rudolph Schindler’s landmark Schindler House, it’s an unusual-yet-delightful exhibition setting. This year, the MAK Center presents “Nancy Holt: Light and Shadow Poetics,” exploring the pioneering Land artist’s use of light, perception, and space. The California modernist architecture alone is worth the trip.

If you’re craving more art inside very L.A. architecture and planning to head east, look up Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House in Barnsdall Park and the Neutra VDL House along the Silver Lake Reservoir. Both similarly stage exhibitions within their historic environs, and their settings offer some of the best communal, outdoor space that the east side of Los Angeles has to offer.

The MAK is conveniently located for a West Hollywood galleries run, too. The lovely Francis Gallery and Hauser & Wirth’s West Hollywood outpost are nearby. Plus, Perrotin is staging a compelling group show in West Hollywood at the former Spago restaurant (1114 Horn Avenue), called “Paging Dr. Feelgood,” tapping into the city’s history as a mecca of spirituality and wellness.


6. Hauser & Wirth Downtown

Arts District | 901 E 3rd Street, Los Angeles

We Live Close To Tha Ground, 2026
Christina Quarles
Hauser & Wirth

If we were ranking the most impressive gallery spaces in the U.S., Hauser & Wirth’s downtown L.A. flagship would be high on the list (the gallery also has an impressive space in West Hollywood). For anyone used to New York’s tighter footprints and crisp white cubes, it’s always awe-inducing. The gallery is set inside a former flour mill the size of a full city block in the Arts District and typically presents multiple shows at a time. The on-site restaurant Manuela and a small garden with chickens add to the considerable charm. During art week, a big Monday-night opening packs the house. This year, I’m especially eager to see a solo presentation of L.A. painter Christina Quarles, who’s known for electric, fluid depictions of the body, as well as a major show displaying the collection of trailblazing L.A. collector Eileen Harris Norton. If you’re making the trip downtown, MOCA and the galleries in the Santa Fe building are easy stops to add on.


7. The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)

Downtown L.A. | 250 S Grand Avenue + Geffen Contemporary, 152 N Central Avenue, Los Angeles

With two locations downtown, MOCA is one of L.A.’s essential institutions. It boasts an impressive permanent collection of post-war and contemporary art, and the museum always has at least one temporary exhibition worth prioritizing during art week. This year I’m compelled to visit both venues. The Grand Avenue building will open “Haegue Yang: Star-Crossed Rendezvous,” a major presentation of the Korean artist’s signature Venetian-blind installations. And at the Geffen Contemporary in Little Tokyo (a short Uber hop east), “MONUMENTS” genuinely justifies a visit: The show presents decommissioned monuments, including Confederate statues, alongside contemporary artworks to address how such sculptures portray and influence American history and national identity. The show is co-presented by fellow art institution The Brick, which is located along the same stretch as the Melrose Hill galleries.


8. Julia Stoschek Foundation

Downtown L.A. | Variety Arts Theater, 940 S Figueroa Street, Los Angeles

Earlier this month, the Julia Stoschek Foundation opened its first U.S. show, an immersive exhibition spread across six floors of the historic Variety Arts Theater. Based in Berlin and Düsseldorf, the foundation of major collector Julia Stoschek has amassed one of the world’s most significant private collections of time-based and video art. This American debut, “What a Wonderful World: An Audiovisual Poem,” is edited by Udo Kittelmann and features work by Marina Abramović, Arthur Jafa, Anne Imhof, Jordan Wolfson, Jacolby Satterwhite, Lu Yang, and others. It’s open evenings on Wednesday through Sunday from 5 p.m. to midnight, plus an events program on Sundays.


9. Melrose Hill Galleries

Melrose Hill | Various locations

Melrose Hill emerged a few years ago as a gallery destination, anchored in large part by the L.A. outpost of David Zwirner, with several cool younger galleries within walking distance. During art week, David Zwirner is opening solo presentations of work by Belgian painter Luc Tuymans and L.A. painter Raymond Saunders, who passed away last year. James Fuentes, Fernberger, and Chateau Shatto are along the same few blocks of N Western Avenue.


10. Miracle Mile/Mid-Wilshire Galleries

Miracle Mile/Mid-Wilshire | Various locations, Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles

The stretch of Wilshire around LACMA is a rewarding gallery corridor—and several exciting shows will be on view during art week. LACMA itself is always worth a stop, and just across the street, Sprüth Magers is opening an exhibition of new paintings by David Salle. Down the block, Anat Ebgi is opening three solo shows featuring Veronica Fernandez, Heather Guertin, and Alejandro García Contreras. Plus, there’s an exciting pop-up show: Barry McGee, with The Hole and Jeffrey Deitch, is turning a former 99-cent store near LACMA (6121 Wilshire) into a weeklong “artist flea,” with an anti-fascist zine fair and live performances.

A short drive west, Pace’s idyllic ivy-covered gallery is showing an exhibition of large energizing paintings by young L.A. artist Lauren Quin that I’m dying to see. Plus, David Kordansky, Perrotin, and Roberts Projects are all within reach. This part of the city rewards a properly planned afternoon—and unlike some other stops on this list, you can probably park by or Uber to one location and walk between a few spots.

Explore our favorite works from L.A. Art Week in our curator’s picks collection.



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Thursday, February 19, 2026

10 Must-See Exhibitions During Frieze Los Angeles 2026 https://ift.tt/FwlQjIq

After last year’s wildfires scorched more than 40,000 acres and displaced over 180,000 residents, the Los Angeles art community came together in ways unusual for the sprawling metropolis: Benefit exhibitions and mutual aid networks flourished. That surge of local pride and solidarity carries into this year’s Frieze week, with institutions and galleries foregrounding California artists, many closely tied to the city itself.

Solo presentations of historical figures like Wallace Berman and Raymond Saunders (at Michael Kohn Gallery and David Zwirner, respectively) join those of rising, ultra-contemporary voices such as Veronica Fernandez and Ash Roberts (at Anat Ebgi and Francis Gallery). At Hauser & Wirth, a major exhibition devoted to storied L.A. patron Eileen Harris Norton surveys decades of advocacy while bringing together many of the region’s defining artists of the last half century.

The expanding art fair landscape reflects the same enthusiasm and momentum: new arrivals like ENZO in Echo Park join Frieze, Felix, The Other Art Fair, and last year’s standout addition, Post-Fair, turning the week into a citywide festival.

Here are 10 of the most anticipated gallery shows during Frieze Los Angeles 2026.


Veronica Fernandez

Prey

Anat Ebgi

Feb. 21–Apr. 4

Veronica Fernandez’s oversized canvases stage intimate portraits of family life. In her debut solo exhibition with Anat Ebgi, the Los Angeles–based artist deploys impasto, gestural abstraction, and rich jewel tones to blur the boundaries between representation and recollection. In Highway Laundry (2026), for example, thick skeins of magenta pigment threaten to overtake the street, the three figures walking along it, and the glowing gas station sign overhead. The built-up surfaces mirror the accumulation of time and memory. Fernandez often draws from the periods of housing instability she experienced during childhood: Suitcases, laundry bins, brown paper bags, and improvised toys recur across the paintings, binding otherwise disparate scenes together. The show’s title, “Prey,” conveys both the tenderness and wariness that characterize the artist’s approach to representing her past.


Leiko Ikemura

“Riding Horizon”

Lisson Gallery

Feb. 24–Mar. 28

Leiko Ikemura likewise addresses the innocence and anguish of adolescence. For her first Los Angeles exhibition, the Japanese Swiss artist explores the relationship between femininity and the natural world. Across paintings and sculptures, girlish figures merge with birds, cats, fallen trees, and ocean waves. In one colored bronze, a head gives way to a brace of blue birds; in another, feline ears sprout from a crop of hair.

The large tempera paintings amplify this ambiguity. Forms dissolve into wispy clouds, translucent washes of fog, and the raw jute canvas itself. In Zarathustra I (2014), a windswept tree grows from a creature nearly indistinguishable from an outcrop of rocks. Ikemura’s style synthesizes Western Symbolist paintings, East Asian sansuiga landscapes, and traditional Japanese ink drawings as the artist emphasizes multiplicity. Ultimately, her work yields a vision of selfhood that’s as fluid, permeable, and capacious as the worlds it depicts.


Destiny Is a Rose: The Eileen Harris Norton Collection

Hauser & Wirth

Feb. 19–Apr. 26

One of this year’s most anticipated Art Week exhibitions turns the spotlight on Los Angeles collector Eileen Harris Norton, whose five decades of patronage have centered on artists of color, especially women, working in California. Organized into chapters, the presentation gathers more than 80 works across mediums and generations, showcasing Norton’s connoisseurship as well as her commitment to social justice and education. Lorraine O’Grady’s Mlle Bourgeoise Noire (1980–83/2009)—a debutante gown made from 180 white gloves—shares space with Alison Saar’s winged assemblage Bye Bye Blackbird (1992) and David Hammons’s African American Flag (1989). Figurative paintings by Kerry James Marshall and Amy Sherald are interspersed with abstractions by Frank Bowling and Alma Thomas. Seen together, the works reveal a collector who shaped formative conversations about representation, materiality, and the cultural legacy of the American West.


Wallace Berman

It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)

Michael Kohn Gallery

Through Apr. 25

“It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” marks the centennial of Wallace Berman’s birth. The exhibition focuses on the Los Angeles artist’s iconic Verifax works: collages he produced using an early photocopy machine gifted to him in 1963. Reworking a negative image of a hand holding a transistor radio, Berman filled the device’s face with fragments of photos culled from old books, newspapers, and magazines. Jean Harlow nudes and tarot cards appear next to portraits of Fidel Castro and advertisements for pistols. Curated by his son Tosh Berman, the presentation extends the artist’s legacy beyond his Beat-era associations, emphasizing his engagement with mysticism and Kabbalah and his prescient critique of image saturation and mass media.


Raymond Saunders

“Notes from LA”

David Zwirner

Feb. 24–Apr. 25

Raymond Saunders, who passed away last July at age 90, also incorporated found imagery into his mixed-media assemblages. The Pittsburgh-born painter spent most of his career in Oakland, California, covering canvases with inky blank expanses layered with advertisements, exhibition posters, and handwritten correspondence. We Try (1985), for instance, reads as a blackboard awash with chalky smears, children’s illustrations of suns and flowers, taped papers with daubs of colorful paint, and bits of Chinese calligraphy. Throughout, texts and artifacts associated with his longtime career as an educator appear alongside gestural marks and textural color fields. The canvases register as spaces for ongoing notation and accumulation rather than resolution—visual diaries that he never quite closed.


Alma Berrow

“What Slips Beneath the Sugar”

Megan Mulrooney

Feb. 24–Mar. 28

Rising U.K. ceramist Alma Berrow transforms the gallery into an immersive dinner party. At the center of the exhibition, an oval table holds glossy, trompe l’oeil sculptures of half-empty salad bowls, torn In-N-Out sauce packets, bonbons coated in suggestive white powder that falls from open baggies, and ashtrays stuffed with crinkled gold cigarette butts. The guests are absent, but it’s easy to imagine the gallery-going set who’d only just slipped out for the next event. Handmade from earthenware, fired and painted with fine pigments and gold luster, the works toggle between the hyperreal and the cartoonish, the glamorous and the abject. Berrow captures the aftermath of conviviality with a sharp eye toward the performance and excess embedded in many of the city’s social rituals.


Hayv Kahraman

Libations

Vielmetter Los Angeles

Through Mar. 21

The paintings in Hayv Kahraman’s third exhibition with Vielmetter respond to the 2025 Eaton Fire in Altadena that displaced the artist and her family. Conceived as offerings “to a burning world,” the pictures feature her signature female figures—prominent brows, dark hair, pupilless eyes—engaged in rituals of mourning and resistance like dancing and sewing strands of tears. In I’ve been circling for thousands of years (2025–2026), four women whirl their long hair in circles, strings of water droplets forming a mandala-like shape between their faces.

Ritual also structures the material surface. The paintings incorporate handmade flax textiles, marbling techniques, Arabic inscriptions, and talismanic symbols such as Sufi magic squares. The canvases simultaneously depict and enact a kind of divination, proposing image-making as an antidote to disaster and devastating loss.


Tacita Dean

“Trial of the Finger”

Marian Goodman Gallery

Feb. 21–Apr. 25

Following her first major U.S. career survey, “Blind Folly,” at the Columbus Museum of Art, Tacita Dean unveils a new body of analog films, drawings, and photographs. The centerpiece: a 16mm film, Sidney Felsen decorates an Envelope (2026), observes the late Gemini G.E.L. cofounder carefully covering an artist’s royalty payment with postage and rubber stamps from his office archive. Visual evidence of his decades of creative partnership surrounds him. Elsewhere, abstract 35mm film installations share space with gestural chalk drawings on salvaged school slates and painted Polaroids of artifacts from the artist’s studio, which include mirrors and fragments of Roman sculptures. Together, the works situate Dean’s longstanding commitment to manual image-making within L.A.’s history of collaboration between artists, printers, filmmakers, and fabricators.


The Stars Before Us All

La Loma Projects

Through Mar. 28

La Loma Projects presents paintings by a group of nine Australian First Nations artists whose work is rarely seen in Los Angeles. They index landscapes, narratives, and ceremonial practices while remaining rooted in ancestral traditions reaching back tens of thousands of years. The show is organized in collaboration with Michael Reid and spans 1990 to the present, featuring luminous, layered color fields by Anmatyerre elder Emily Kame Kngwarreye and swirling dotted abstractions on linen by Raylene Walatinna and her mother Betty Chimney. Elsewhere, Timo Hogan’s monumental diptych depicts a pastel lake bisected by a white snake, while Djirrirra Wunuŋmurra’s work covers bark with repeating motifs associated with Yukuwa (yam). The paintings altogether sustain and reinvigorate techniques and symbols from one of the world’s longest continuous cultures.


Ash Roberts

The Year Room

Francis Gallery

Feb. 20–Apr. 18

A series of 12 paintings, each measuring 48 by 72 inches, traces a year’s passage in rising contemporary artist Ash Roberts’s fourth showing with Francis Gallery. As you circle the gallery, pale pink water lily–filled ponds give way to verdant forest floors, while gold-leaf skies blaze above grassy hillsides, and deep blue shadows gather between snowdrifts. Across the shifting color palettes and natural imagery, a rippling mark reappears—sometimes suggesting a flock of starlings, other times a wavering waterline.

In a departure from earlier works that leaned toward abstraction, these paintings feature recognizable forms including butterfly wings, birch trees, cirrus clouds, and full moons. Roberts draws inspiration from both her current home in Los Angeles and from her childhood in upstate New York. She suffuses the paintings with a palpable nostalgia for predictable weather patterns and discrete seasons now all but lost.



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