A sharp market, institutional appetite, and global galleries bringing serious heat to The Shed.
The 2026 edition of Frieze New York 2026 delivered exactly what the market hoped for: blue-chip confidence, strong institutional acquisitions, and collectors moving decisively across both established and emerging voices. The multimillion-dollar placements by White Cube, sold-out solo booths spotlighting emerging artists, and gallery sales figures and confirm New York’s continuing role as the global center for contemporary art commerce.

Museums were active early, galleries reported brisk opening-day sales, and collectors gravitated toward ambitious presentations that balanced historical rigor with fresh contemporary narratives. Below, L’Étage Magazine rounds up the major acquisitions, standout works, and gallery sales that defined the week.

Institutional Acquisitions
Baltimore Museum of Art
The Baltimore Museum of Art expanded its collection with a thoughtful group of acquisitions centered on contemporary global voices and materially rich practices.
Reika Takebayashi — Both Banks I (2026)
Acquired from Public Gallery

Japanese artist Reika Takebayashi presented meditative paintings exploring memory, landscape, and shifting spatial perception. Public Gallery sold out its Frieze Focus presentation, signaling significant institutional and collector interest around the artist’s evolving practice.
Seba Calfuqueo — Destellos, PILLAN SIKILL 1
Acquired from W–Galería

Chilean Mapuche artist Seba Calfuqueo is recognized for interdisciplinary works examining Indigenous identity, ecology, spirituality, and colonial histories. The acquisition reflects growing institutional engagement with Indigenous contemporary art practices from Latin America.

Joanne Burke — Festival 7
Acquired from Soft Opening

Irish artist Joanne Burke creates psychologically layered paintings that merge figuration with dreamlike abstraction. Festival 7 adds a dynamic painterly voice to the museum’s contemporary holdings.

Brooklyn Museum

The Brooklyn Museum acquired two works by legendary Downtown New York artist Bettina from Ulrik as part of the inaugural Sherman Family Foundation Acquisition Fund.
Bettina — Traffic Patterns
From the series Phenomenological New York (1970s)

Bettina — Untitled work
From the series Phenomenological New York (1970s)

Bettina – Untitled Work – Phenomenological New York (1970s). Courtesy Frieze.
A cult figure of New York’s downtown art scene and longtime resident of the Chelsea Hotel, Bettina created deeply atmospheric photographic works that transformed the city into an abstract psychological landscape. Her Phenomenological New York series was produced during the 1970s and merges conceptual photography, urban alienation, and experimental image-making into a singular portrait of the city.
While acquisition details remain undisclosed, the purchases generated strong attention among curators and collectors during the fair’s institutional preview days.
Standout Works – Frieze New York 2026

El Anatsui — LuwVor I (2025) & MivEvi III (2025)
Ghanaian-born sculptor El Anatsui is internationally celebrated for monumental wall sculptures composed of recycled aluminum bottle caps, copper wire, and salvaged metal fragments. A leading figure in contemporary African art, Anatsui transforms discarded materials into shimmering tapestry-like forms that explore colonial trade, consumption, labor, memory, and transformation. His work has been exhibited at the Venice Biennale, Tate Modern, and the Metropolitan Museeum of Art amognst others worldwide.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by White Cube
- LuwVor I (2025) sold for $2.2 million
- MivEvi III (2025) sold for $1.9 million
The sales became the defining market headline of Frieze New York 2026 and established White Cube as the fair’s top-selling gallery of the week.
Both works featured Anatsui’s signature cascading metallic surfaces assembled from thousands of hand-linked bottle caps and aluminum fragments. The monumental sculptures resembled draped textiles while simultaneously evoking maps, ceremonial cloths, and architectural skins. Their shimmering surfaces shifted dramatically with movement and light, making them among the fair’s most visually magnetic installations.

Kelly Sinnapah Mary — The Sacred Garden(2026)
Born in Guadeloupe, Kelly Sinnapah Mary creates lush figurative paintings, installations, and sculptural environments rooted in Caribbean folklore, mythology, ecology, ancestry, and postcolonial identity. Her practice frequently blends fantasy and spirituality with historical narratives, creating dreamlike scenes populated by hybrid human-animal figures and dense botanical worlds.

Gallery & Sale
Presented by James Cohan
- The Sacred Garden (2026) sold for $130,000
- The gallery sold out all eight paintings in the solo booth presentation.
The Sacred Garden immersed viewers in a dense tropical landscape inhabited by mystical figures and layered symbolic imagery. Painted in jewel-toned greens, golds, and violets, the work explored themes of transformation, ancestral memory, camouflage, and the spiritual relationship between humans and the natural environment. The booth itself was transformed into a garden-like installation, amplifying the painting’s immersive atmosphere.

James Turrell — Major Light Work
James Turrell is one of the most influential living American artists, renowned for immersive light installations that manipulate perception, color, and spatial awareness. Associated with the California Light and Space movement, Turrell’s work transforms light itself into sculptural material, encouraging meditative experiences of seeing and consciousness.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by Almine Rech
- Major light work sold for approximately $900,000–$1 million.

Courtesy of the Artist and Almine Rech.
Though the exact title was undisclosed, the installation featured Turrell’s signature atmospheric illumination and subtle gradations of color that dissolved architectural boundaries. The work transformed the booth into a contemplative sensory environment, contrasting sharply with the visual density of neighboring presentations. Its museum-scale ambition made it one of the fair’s most discussed experiential works.
Virginia Jaramillo — Centerpiece Work from the “Curvilinear” Series

Virginia Jaramillo is a pioneering American abstract painter associated with postwar geometric abstraction and minimalism. Emerging in New York during the 1960s, she became known for her lyrical “Curvilinear” paintings, which fuse geometry, movement, and atmospheric color fields into elegant meditative compositions.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by Hales

- Centerpiece work sold for $540,000.
The monumental abstract painting featured Jaramillo’s signature sweeping curved forms suspended against luminous color fields. Delicate yet architectonic, the composition balanced restraint and movement through precisely controlled lines and tonal shifts. The sale marked one of the strongest historical rediscoveries of the fair and reinforced institutional demand for overlooked women abstractionists.

Maya Lin & Leo Villareal — Dual Presentation
Maya Lin is internationally known for blending sculpture, architecture, environmental activism, and memorial design, most famously through the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Leo Villareal is recognized for monumental digital light installations using programmed LED systems that create endlessly shifting visual patterns.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by Pace Gallery
- Multiple works sold between $100,000–$200,000.

The presentation paired Lin’s environmentally inspired sculptural works with Villareal’s immersive digital light installations. Together, the booth explored themes of data, landscape, climate systems, movement, and technological perception. The installation stood out for its museum-quality spatial design and serene atmosphere amid the intensity of the fair.

Ha Chong-Hyun — Dansaekhwa Paintings
Ha Chong-Hyun is a leading figure of the Korean Dansaekhwa movement, a postwar monochrome painting tradition emphasizing materiality, repetition, process, and meditative abstraction. His iconic “Conjunction” paintings involve pushing thick oil paint through burlap from the reverse side of the canvas, producing textured surfaces that merge painting and sculpture.
Galleries & Sales
Presented by Kukje Gallery and Tina Kim Gallery
- Kukje Gallery sold works between $390,000–$468,000
- Tina Kim Gallery sold paintings for $390,000 and $180,000.
The paintings featured Ha’s signature textured monochrome surfaces built through repetitive physical gestures and dense accumulations of paint. Their restrained palettes and tactile materiality embodied the meditative rigor of Dansaekhwa while resonating strongly with contemporary collectors seeking historically significant abstraction.
Sara Flores — Kené Paintings
Sara Flores is a Shipibo-Konibo artist from the Peruvian Amazon whose paintings reinterpret traditional Indigenous Kené patterns through contemporary abstraction. Her work preserves and expands Indigenous visual language while exploring cosmology, healing traditions, spirituality, and ecological knowledge.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by White Cube
- Prices undisclosed, but White Cube cited “exceptional response” and strong institutional interest surrounding her presentation.
Flores’s intricate geometric paintings translated ancestral Amazonian designs into large-scale contemporary compositions. Built from rhythmic linear patterns and organic symmetry, the works radiated a hypnotic visual energy that distinguished them within the fair. Her simultaneous representation of Peru at the Venice Biennale amplified collector and museum attention.
Reika Takebayashi — Both Banks I (2026)
Reika Takebayashi is known for atmospheric paintings that merge landscape, abstraction, and psychological space. Her work frequently explores memory, fluidity, and environmental transformation through layered surfaces and delicate tonal transitions.

Gallery & Sale
Presented by Public Gallery
- Entire booth sold out
- Both Banks I (2026) acquired by the Baltimore Museum of Art.
Both Banks I featured softly shifting forms suggestive of water, reflection, geological erosion, and dreamlike terrain. Built through translucent layers and fluid transitions of color, the painting carried a contemplative stillness that distinguished it within the Focus section. The museum acquisition immediately positioned Takebayashi among the breakout discoveries of Frieze New York 2026.
Gordon Parks — Photograph Presented by Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Gordon Parks was one of the most influential American photographers of the twentieth century, celebrated for his groundbreaking documentary photography chronicling race, inequality, civil rights, fashion, and everyday American life. Beyond photography, Parks was also a filmmaker, composer, novelist, and activist whose work for Life magazine transformed visual journalism through emotionally charged storytelling and cinematic composition.

Parks’s photographs are revered for their ability to merge social realism with lyrical beauty, often centering Black American life with dignity, intimacy, and psychological depth.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by Jenkins Johnson Gallery
- A Gordon Parks photograph sold for $80,000 at Frieze New York 2026.
While the exact photograph title was not publicly disclosed, the sale reflected the continued institutional and collector demand for Parks’s historically significant photographic practice. His works frequently capture moments of vulnerability, resilience, and social transformation through stark black-and-white imagery and masterful compositional framing. Within the context of Frieze New York 2026, the placement underscored the sustained market strength for historically important twentieth-century photography.
Derrick Adams — Works Presented by Gagosian

Derrick Adams is known for vibrant multidisciplinary works examining leisure, identity, Black joy, consumer culture, and representations of Black American life. Working across painting, collage, sculpture, installation, and performance, Adams combines bold color palettes, fragmented compositions, and pop-cultural references to create psychologically layered scenes of contemporary Black experience.
His work often reclaims images of rest, pleasure, and recreation as radical gestures of visibility and affirmation within contemporary art history.
Gallery & Sale
Presented by Gagosian
- Gagosian reported sales of works by Derrick Adams during Frieze New York 2026, though prices were undisclosed.
At Frieze New York 2026, Adams’s works formed part of Gagosian’s broader presentation exploring abstraction, nature, and transformation. His colorful compositions featuring stylized figures, geometric fragmentation, and scenes of leisure stood out within the booth for their energetic visual rhythm and cultural immediacy. Adams’s practice continues to resonate strongly with collectors and institutions for its celebratory yet critically nuanced portrayals of Black contemporary life.
Gallery Sales – Frieze New York 2026
White Cube

White Cube led the fair’s sales with major placements by Ghanaian sculptor El Anatsui:
- LuwVor I (2025) — $2.2 million
- MivEvi III (2025) — $1.9 million
Additional sales included:
- Antony Gormley — SET VII (2024) — £450,000
- Howardena Pindell — Deep Space #4 (2025) — $275,000
- Marina Rheingantz — Salvador (2026) — $250,000

Works by Sara Flores, Marguerite Humeau, Julie Curtiss, and others were also placed during the week.

Thaddaeus Ropac

A powerhouse week for the gallery included:
- Georg Baselitz — Stunde der Nachtigall (2012) — €1.4 million
- Robert Rauschenberg — Bob Song (Salvage) (1984) — $825,000
- Alex Katz — Black Roses 3 (2025) — $600,000
- Baselitz — Ohne Titel (2025) — €85,000
Additional works by Martha Jungwirth and Joan Snyder also sold.

James Cohan
The gallery sold out its booth dedicated to Kelly Sinnapah Mary.

Leading sale:
- The Sacred Garden (2026) — $130,000
Additional works sold between:
- $20,000–$95,000
Ortuzar Projects & Marc Selwyn Fine Art

Their collaborative presentation of Akinsanya Kambon nearly sold out.
- Nine works placed between $25,000–$55,000

Night Gallery

- Seven paintings by Hayley Barker sold between $30,000–$175,000

Kukje Gallery
Leading sales included:
- Ha Chong-Hyun — $390,000–$468,000
- Additional Ha Chong-Hyun work — $10,000–$12,000
Additional sales included works by:
Priced between $60,094–$108,000, plus sculptures by Gimhongsok and Jean-Michel Othoniel.
Hyun-Sook Leee, Founder & Chairperson, Kukje Gallery said, “This year’s Frieze New York was filled with vibrant energy. In this lively setting, Kukje Gallery enjoyed a great response from collectors, successfully selling a wide variety of paintings and sculptures—ranging from master Korean
contemporary artists to internationally renowned figures—thereby reaffirming the gallery’s competitive edge in New York, the hub of the global art market”.
Tina Kim Gallery
The gallery reported strong sales led by:
- Ha Chong-Hyun — $390,000
- Second Ha Chong-Hyun painting — $180,000
- Kim Tschang-Yeul — $120,000–$140,000
- Kibong Rhee — $120,000–$130,000
Textile works by Lee ShinJa sold between:
- $40,000–$100,000
Additional placements included works by Maia Ruth Lee, Livien Yin, Suki Seokyeong Kang, Pio Abad and others.
Johyun Gallery
The gallery sold out its focused presentation of Lee Bae.
Sales ranged from:
- $100,000–$250,000

Additional sales included:
- Kishio Suga — $40,000–$50,000
- Five paintings by Kim Taek Sang — $10,000–$60,000
- Hwang Jihae — $30,000–$50,000
303 Gallery
Major placements included:
- Doug Aitken — Terra — $225,000
- Rob Pruitt — works at $150,000 and $80,000
- Six works by Sam Falls including:
- Ceramic diptych — $150,000
- Painting — $110,000
- Ceramic table — $90,000
- Ceramic vase — $65,000
- Sue Williams — $115,000
- Sculptures by Jeppe Hein — up to €90,000
Additional works by Stephen Shore and Alicja Kwade also sold.
Lisa Spellman, Owner & Director, 303 Gallery added, “Frieze has been beyond expectations this year, their “Frieze has been beyond expectations this year, their team worked very hard bringing museums and trustees from all over the world, we especially loved the Met Patrons preview. It’s been a wild fair with strong sales throughout!”
Nara Roesler
- Marcelo Silveira — Seeds VII (2025–26) — $45,000
- Five works by Jonathas de Andrade — $12,000–$22,000

Mitre Galeria
The gallery sold nine works by:

Prices ranged from:
- $5,000–$36,000
Almeida & Dale and François Ghebaly
The galleries nearly sold out their joint stand with notable placements including:
- Jaider Esbell — $180,000
- Amadeo Luciano Lorenzato — $115,000
- Tony Matelli — $90,000
- Melike Kara — $43,000
- Patricia Iglesias Peco — $35,000
- Works by Maia Ruth Lee and Maxwell Alexandre — $25,000 each
Southern Guild

The gallery, who was ranked one of the top Frieze New York booths by Artsy, placed numerous works by:
Prices ranged between:
- $20,000–$38,000


