In the art world, nothing can be said to be certain except death, taxes, and Art Basel delivering a must-see fair in its namesake city. Since its founding in 1970 by gallerists Ernst Beyeler, Trudi Bruckner, and Balz Hilt, Art Basel has turned its small namesake Swiss city into the contemporary art world’s beating heart for one week each June.
Here, hundreds of the world’s top galleries bring their strongest works from the 20th century to today, attracting tens of thousands of visitors, including scores of serious collectors and curators from both private and institutional backgrounds.
Though the fair has grown to include editions in Miami Beach, Hong Kong, Paris, and, most recently, Qatar, it’s the hometown event that remains the industry’s gold standard. Here, we break down why this remains the case more than 50 years after it started.
Art Basel’s consistency has continually set the art market tone
More than 300 annual art fairs have launched globally since Art Basel began, yet none have matched the Swiss fair’s reputation for quality control that it’s built over that half-century.
The fair’s foundational commitment to showing only the best galleries and artists is enforced through a rigorous—and much-discussed—selection process.
That has ensured Art Basel has weathered industry cycles, pandemics, and market crashes, thanks to the passion of both its team and its attendees.
Few people understand this longevity more acutely than Stefan von Bartha, whose first time at Art Basel came at just six weeks old, when his family’s local namesake gallery was run by his parents, Margareta and Miklos.
“What continues to make Art Basel in Basel unique is the combination of visionary leadership,” he explained to Artsy.
“From its founders to its current director, Maike Cruse, and an exceptionally knowledgeable and engaged audience that returns year after year.”
Curation remains at the core of Art Basel
The quality of Art Basel begins with the fair’s eight-person committee, made up of gallerists themselves. Each year, they’re tasked with sorting through hundreds of proposals, submitted nine months ahead of the fair with the exact artists each gallery will choose and intricate mockups of the booth layout.
And with no gallery guaranteed a spot—no matter their history with the fair—the selection process ensures that each exhibitor must rethink their approach year after year.
The fair often receives more than 750 applications from around the world and must whittle down the final number to just below 300.
It’s this peer-driven approach that has ensured the fair remains consistently high-quality, with first-class programming drawing many gallerists to reapply despite the financial risks.
“Art fairs are a huge burden we choose to take every year,” Lorraine Kiang, co-founder of New York gallery Kiang Malingue, told Artsy. “Art Basel in Switzerland is not as much a social event as its other locations. For institutions and curators, it is an essential time to see the best-quality work by artists.”
Part of the draw for dealers, including Kiang, comes from Art Basel’s special sectors. These include the public art program Parcours, which transforms the nearby Clarastrasse and Rhine riverbank into a public gallery of site-specific installations. Unlimited, its platform for monumental sculptures, immersive video programs, and other similarly ambitious works, also takes place in a hall opposite the fair.
The Art Basel flywheel
Art Basel is built on a feedback loop of excellence. Galleries bring must-see pieces because they know they’ll be seen by big collectors and curators, and these visitors come because they know they’ll see great work.
The fair ensures there’s a solid range by selling booths to a mix of mega-galleries such as Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, and Pace, as well as fast-rising spaces from around the world. Major collectors maintain a regular presence too: It’s not uncommon to see some of the world’s leading patrons cutting a path through the fair.
“Art collectors who come to Basel are the most serious and dedicated to long-term art collecting. [They] do their homework, learning about works that compel them,” noted Kiang. “For me, it’s not the quality of the hotels, nor the hospitality and food; it’s the content and quality of the collectors.”
And with the introduction of this year’s “Basel Exclusive” initiative, Art Basel has shown that the old fair can learn new tricks. The program asks exhibitors to hold back at least one major work from digital previews sent to clients, opting instead to show it when the fair opens. Nearly 200 of the 232 exhibitors in the main Galleries section are taking part, sending a strong signal that first encounters don’t always have to happen through a screen.
Constellation events in Basel bring the buzz
Art Basel is more than just a singular fair. Each year, it anchors a constellation of events throughout the city, including the smaller satellite fairs Liste and Basel Social Club (BSC), and major institutional shows at the likes of Fondation Beyeler, which “always [delivers] the best show of the year, when it comes to foundations,” collector Domenico Positano told Artsy (this year it will mount a solo presentation of French artist Pierre Huyghe).
Unlike other major cities hosting tentpole art fairs, like Paris or Miami, it’s the smallness of Basel that becomes a strength: Every essential event revolves around art. There are enough gallery dinners, foundation openings, and unorthodox side events—BSC’s locations have included a former bank vault—to fill the week. It combines to create a condensed yet focused pilgrimage for both casual and committed art lovers.
What sells in Basel matters everywhere
The high bar for quality that sets Art Basel apart also ensures that the fair remains a key barometer for the art market at large.
What sells and to whom is closely watched by galleries, auction houses, advisors, and market watchers.
The primary-market benchmarks of Art Basel sales can set the agenda for the secondary markets and later auction seasons, while works that sell quickly to institutional collectors can signal wider collecting patterns and genuine validation for an artist.
Prices ripple outward, and many artists have had breakout moments of visibility on the fair floor as collector appetites and momentum play out in real time.
For example, in 2013, a young collector bought a work by then-27-year-old Oscar Murillo at a June auction for £146,500 ($224,145)—smashing its $30,000 estimate—after discovering him at Carlos Ishikawa’s Basel booth. The Colombian artist has since gone on to win the Turner Prize in 2019, and his works are in collections ranging from the Fondazione Prada and the MoMA to Tokyo’s Taguchi Art Collection.
More than anything else, Art Basel is defined by the extent to which every corner of the industry comes together to show why contemporary art remains relevant today.
“Art Basel remains the one week of the year when the only thing you're going to do is see art, engage with it, and talk about it 24/7,” Positano told Artsy. “The quality of artworks presented in Messeplatz is the best of the year; every gallery is waiting for June to show their top-notch works.”
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