15 Oct 2025 - 19 Oct 2025

Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2025

The Regent's Park

Details

Frieze today unveils the highlights of the 23rd edition of Frieze London and the 13th edition of Frieze Masters, returning to The Regent’s Park from 15–19 October 2025. At Frieze London, audiences will encounter must-see solo projects, artist-led initiatives and curated sections that bring new perspectives to contemporary practice. Frieze Masters will complement this with landmark rediscoveries and works spanning across centuries, creating dialogues between past and present. Together, the two fairs will once again transform London into a meeting point for global perspectives and cultural exchange.

Alongside the fairs, Frieze Week will animate the city with a dynamic programme of exhibitions, performances and events across London’s leading institutions and galleries, reaffirming the capital’s position as a major centre of the international art calendar.

Frieze London and Frieze Masters are supported by global lead partner Deutsche Bank for the 22nd consecutive year. For 2025, Deutsche Bank will present Noémie Goudal: Inhale Exhale, in the Deutsche Bank Wealth Management Lounge at both fairs. 

Eva Langret (Director, Frieze EMEA): ‘The artists and galleries at this year’s fairs show how Frieze London and Frieze Masters together capture London’s global outlook and historic depth. At Frieze London you’ll see ambitious solos that carry real force alongside artist-led initiatives like Artist-to-Artist and Jareh Das’s Echoes in the Present. With 35 participants from over 20 countries, our Focus section reinforces Frieze London’s identity as a site of discovery, where new voices show how the city continues to set the pace for contemporary art.’

‘This year Frieze Masters will bring landmark rediscoveries into view — from a Rubens panel to a rare Ptolemaic relief — and pair them with fresh readings of the 20th century in Valerie Cassel Oliver’s SpotlightStudio, curated by Sheena Wagstaff, presents six singular voices including R. H. Quaytman, Glenn Brown and Samia Halaby, while Abby Bangser’s new Reflections section traces conversations across objects, materials and time. Together these highlights invite audiences to look afresh at how the past continues to inform and challenge the present,’ added Emanuela Tarizzo (Director, Frieze Masters).

FRIEZE LONDON: NEW PERSPECTIVES 

Frieze’s flagship fair will bring together 168 leading galleries from 43 countries, underscoring the fair’s position as one of the most international in the world. Reflecting London’s character as a city shaped by global perspectives, the fair will foreground ambitious solo and duo presentations, artist-to-artist selections, and curated sections that bring new perspectives and capture the breadth and urgency of contemporary art today.

At the entrance of the fair Portas VilasecaThe Pit and Soft Opening will set the tone with bold statements exploring cross-generational dialogues, Indigenous traditions, and questions on identity, each introducing some of the most current and compelling practices in contemporary art. Among this year’s must-see solo presentations:

  • Modern Art will present fifteen new stoneware sculptures, both freestanding and wall-based, by Sanya Kantarovsky. The works showcase his painterly approach, realised through glazes incorporating copper carbonate, cobalt oxide, and manganese dioxide.
  • Gagosian will present new works by Los Angeles native Lauren Halsey, whose Afrofuturist and Funk-inspired installations and sculptures explore themes of community, identity, and civic engagement.
  • Lehmann Maupin will show works by internationally renowned artist Do Ho Suh, with selections from SpecimensScaledBehaviour, and Spectators series, in addition to several thread drawings and a large-scale fabric installation.
  • Cecilia Brunson Projects will present work by indigenous artist Claudia Alarcón, who, alongside her individual practice, leads the Silät collective, an organisation of one hundred women weavers of different generations from the Alto la Sierra and La Puntana Wichí communities in Argentina.
  • Soft Opening will debut a solo presentation by London-based artist Ebun Sodipo, featuring sculpture and wall-based collages that draw on ancestral knowledge and visual archives to explore the Black transfeminine experience and subvert historical notions of race and gender.
  • Pace Gallery will showcase works by William Monk, whose enigmatic paintings use rhythmic, divisional compositions to dissolve figuration into vibrant visual mantras, creating works that evoke a visceral connection between inner and outer experience.
  • Portas Vilaseca will offer a solo show by Guatemalan Maya-Tz’utujil artist Antonio Pichillá Quiacaín, bringing textile-based works, sculptures and video that draw from ancestral weaving traditions to challenge colonial narratives and affirm Indigenous cultural resilience.
  • Esther Schipper will present Sarah Buckner‘s recent paintings, mostly female figures, drawing on mythical, literary, and personal references.
  • Stephen Friedman Gallery will present new works on paper and paintings by Sarah Ball that explore the psyche and outward portrayal of her subjects through closely cropped, surreal compositions and the subtle precision of colored pencil.

Standout dual or group presentations include:

  • The Pit will present Three Generations of Female California Ceramics including works by trailblazing Bay Area artist Viola Frey with new ceramics by Jennifer King and Maryam Yousif, both of whom engage directly with Frey’s legacy.
  • Emalin will showcase a group project with Tolia AstakhishviliAlvaro BarringtonDaiga GrantinaStanislava Kovalcikova, and Karol Palczak. Astakhishvili will transform a wall of the booth with paint, plaster, and organic materials.
  • Lisson Gallery will present a carefully curated selection of works that reflect on the fragile beauty of the environment and the consequences of human impact on its ecosystems. Bringing together sculpture, installation, painting, film and photography, the presentation creates a dialogue between artists including Sarah CunninghamRyan GanderHugh HaydenLeiko IkemuraOtobong NkangaLaure ProuvostAllora & CalzadillaLucy RavenHiroshi Sugimoto and Tunga.
  • Selma Feriani will present a group show by Maha Malluh (sculptural series), Catalina Swinburn (woven paper piece) and Filwa Nazer (new textile-based work) – three artists whose practices investigate identity, environments and cultural narratives through distinct material and conceptual languages.
  • James Cohan will offer works by Naudline Pierre and Josiah McElheny. Pierre’s new vibrant large-scale paintings merge Renaissance, Baroque and 19th-century traditions with personal mythology and radical self-expression. McElheny will debut Late Emergence, a chandelier-like sculpture evoking the Met Opera and the Big Bang, alongside new mirrored works from his Libraries series.
  • Garth Greenan Gallery will highlight Jaune Quick-to-See Smith‘s Don Quixote in America (2024–2025), one of her final works before her passing at 85. Part of her iconic Trade Canoe series, the large-scale canvas depicts a canoe carrying a grim Don Quixote and a sinister cargo of American pop. The booth also features works by Melissa Cody, Pap Souleye FallCannupa Hanska Luger and Ester Partegàs.
  • White Cube will showcase a three-artist presentation featuring sculptures by Marguerite Humeau, and paintings by Howardena Pindell and Sara Flores, exploring ideas of the natural world, whether informed by the history of science, tethered to personal memory or rooted in indigenous knowledge systems.
  • Sullivan+Strumpf will bring together new works by acclaimed Australian artists that explore the concept of threads as a vehicle for family, community and universal connection; artists include Tony Albert, Julia Gutman, Gregory Hodge, Naminapu Maymuru-White and Alex Seton.

Focus

Following the successful redesign of Frieze London 2024, the Focus section, for emerging galleries up to 12 years old, will remain at the heart of the fair. This year, 35 exhibitors, representing over 20 countries, will present solo or dual shows. Stone Island returns for the third consecutive year as Official Partner of Frieze Focus, offering each participating gallery a bursary as part of its global partnership with Frieze. Focus will feature several new names this year, exploring the vibrant international scene of young galleries…. young galleries, among them a. SquireBombonCoulisseCylinderGatheringKayokoyukiEli KerrKing’s Leap and Niru Ratnam. Highlights of the section, this year advised by Joumana Asseily (Founder, Marfa’), Piotr Drewko (Founder, Wschód) and Cédric Fauq (Chief Curator, CAPC Musée d’art Contemporain de Bordeaux), include:

  • Christelle Oyiri (Gathering) will present an immersive installation blending playful, acid-green visuals with a critical exploration of chlordecone’s lasting impact on Martinique and Guadeloupe.
  • Eunjo Lee (Niru Ratnam) will show a trilogy of films for the first time as a continuous narrative, as originally intended, using gaming-graphics software such as Unreal Engine and Blender to create immersive worlds.
  • Alex Margo Arden (Ginny on Frederick) will show two major works: a remake of an Accident Reporting Board painting and a sculpture made from decommissioned mannequins from the National Motor Museum, reflecting on labour, progress, and its human cost.
  • Gray Wielebinski (Nicoletti) will debut a new installation, sculpture and collage works that explore the aestheticisation of violence, juxtaposing gun-grip resin casts and ballistic tile panels to interrogate power, spectacle, and American mythologies.
  • Jan Gatewood (Rose Easton) will show five mixed-media drawings incorporating gestures from children in his studio neighbourhood, alongside reproductions of other artworks including a floor-based sculpture with the theme of borrowed labour.
  • Lara Fluxà (Bombon) will show an installation featuring metal structures and glass sculptures that explore ecosystems, power, and the unpredictability of accidents.
  • Michelle Uckotter (King’s Leap) will present oil pastel paintings and a site-specific installation that implicates the viewer in a voyeuristic hall of mirrors.
  • Rafał Zajko (Coulisse) will present five sculptural works incorporating civil defence sirens, vocal anatomy, and symphonic arrangements, with a circular centrepiece as its focal point and a performative activation of the sculptures.
  • Xin Liu (Public) will present a kinetic water tank overrun with duckweed, accompanied by embroidered latex panels and speculative ecosystems.
  • Alina Rentsch (Petrine) will showcase a site-specific installation transforming a corner booth into an illusionary room, using carpet, lamp, and truss to probe the art fair as both architectural stage and economic system.

Artist-to-Artist

Now in its third edition and sponsored for the first time by Tiffany & Co.Artist-to-Artist returns with six established artists presenting solo projects by emerging voices. The section highlights Frieze’s enduring commitment to artistic exchange and peer-to-peer recognition within its global network. This year’s participating artists include:

  • Rising star Ana Segovia, nominated by Abraham Cruzvillegas​, will reinterpret Spain’s golden age of cinema through paintings and scenography (kurimanzutto).
  • Sculptor and installation artist Ilana Harris-Babou, nominated by Camille Henrot, will showcase sculptural game tables, ceramic wall reliefs, prints, and a video installation that draws on urban ‘third spaces’ (Dreamsong).
  • Interdisciplinary artist Katherine Hubbard, nominated by Nicole Eisenman, will present new photographs made with her mother, Antonette Berger, transforming their Philadelphia home into a stage (Company Gallery).
  • London-based artist Neal Tait, selected by Chris Ofili, presents a new series of paintings featuring solitary figures that emerge through painting itself (Lungley Gallery).
  • Mexican American artist René Treviño, nominated by Amy Sherald​, will present a series of paintings and fabric sculpture that mix European and Mesoamerican histories (Erin Cluley Gallery).
  • Indian artist Venkanna, nominated by Bharti Kher, presents large-format ink brush and egg tempera paintings with bold three-color compositions (Gallery Maskara).

Echoes in the Present

Curated by Dr. Jareh DasEchoes in the Present explores connections between artists from Brazil, Africa, and their diasporas, examining shared histories, cultural exchange, and the interplay of land, material, and memory across heritage, innovation, and speculative futures. Select highlights include:

  • Diambe’s new paintings and sculptures mixing figuration and abstraction, featuring landscapes, organic forms, and fantastical beings in oil, tempera, pigment, bronze, and beeswax (Simões de Assis).
  • Tadáskía’s poetic explorations of the ‘shell’ through painting, sculpture, drawing, and word, where metamorphosis, fantasy, and Afro-diasporic/Indigenous narratives converge (Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel).
  • Alberto Pitta’s new paintings and a sculpture, most from his long-running Mariwô series, inspired by the protective Mariwô leaf used in Candomblé houses. Vibrant and graphic, his works draw on textile printing and serigraphy, closely tied to popular festivities, fashion, and dance (Nara Roesler).
  • Bunmi Agusto’s mixed-media drawings charting Brazil–Nigeria ties from Portuguese trade to her ancestor João Agusto’s 19th-century return from Bahia to Lagos, and the lasting influence of Brazilian returnees on Lagos architecture (Tafeta).
  • Serigne Mbaye Camara’s sculptural and graphic works, which transform found materials into poetic narratives exploring memory, spirit, and the tension between nature and industry (Galerie Atiss Dakar).

FRIEZE MASTERS: ENCOUNTERS ACROSS TIME

Frieze Masters 2025 brings together 137 galleries spanning 27 countries, staging rediscoveries, rare masterpieces and curated sections that open dialogues across centuries.

Highlights include:

  • Salomon Lilian‘s presentation will include a remarkable painting by Peter Paul RubensHercules as a Gladiator. This well-preserved panel is an important benchmark in the artist’s oeuvre, datable to the very last years of the sixteenth century (c. 1599-1600) on the basis of dendrochronology and stylistic analysis. It marks the end of his youth and the beginning of his mature period.
  • ArtAncient will show a Ptolemaic quartzite relief of the god Andjety, newly linked to Belle da Costa Greene’s 1914 correspondence. The work bridges antiquity, collecting history, and the emergence of the modern art advisor.
  • Hauser & Wirth‘s presentation will include a project curated by US-based artist Nicolas Party, selecting a small number of 19th and 20thcentury paintings.
  • Francesca Galloway will present Indian paintings from the Shangri Ramayana and the Petersburg Album, featuring works by Abu’l Hasan and Manohar, as well as a study of three fishes linked to Lord Valentia, reflecting 18th-century interest in India’s art and natural world.
  • Daniel Crouch Rare Books’ presentation This Sceptred Isle will offer a survey of 700 years of British maps highlighting cartography’s role in shaping national identity.
  • Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert and Frankie Rossi Art will have a joint presentation to mark the 60th anniversary of Private View: The Lively World of British Art – the landmark 1965 publication with photos by Lord Snowdon, bringing a selection of the artists featured together including Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Frank Auerbach, Howard Hodgkin and Lucian Freud. The presentation will include an early David Hockney work.
  • Pace Gallery will bring a solo show of Peter Hujar’s work, backstage portraits of New York’s drag and theatre scene in the 1970s, intimate yet defiantly subversive.
  • Jörn Günther Rare Books will bring rare manuscripts with ties to British history, including the St Benet Holme Apocalypse and Catherine of Aragon’s Hours, revealing an interplay of art, science, and devotion across centuries.
  • Gallery Wendi Norris will show Wolfgang Paalen and peers, exploring the artist’s engagement with Indigenous American art. Shown with Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo, Alice Rahon, and Peter Young, the display traces Surrealism’s transcultural dialogues.
  • Shibunkaku’s show Into the Depths of Form collects work by Postwar Japanese masters. Yamaguchi Takeo, Kumagai Morikazu, and Fukuda Heihachirō. Exploring geometry, nature, and abstraction, the display extends to avant-garde calligraphy, ceramics, and works by Yayoi Kusama and Gerhard Richter.
  • Galeria MaPa’s presentation will focus on Afro-Brazilian Culturewith paintings by Abdias do Nascimento and Ivan Moraes shown alongside Candomblé ritual objects.
  • Schoelkopf Gallery will present an Andrew Wyeth solo show20 works in tempera, watercolour and drawing by the American realist master, including rarely seen works exploring the emotional resonance of landscape and portraiture.
  • Luxembourg + Co. will show the first retrospective outside the US of Light and Space-affiliated artist Joe Ray. His work merges abstraction with social realities shaped by race, politics and the cosmic imagination.
  • Salon 94 and Karma will offer a joint presentation of work by the senior Aboriginal artist Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori, whose paintings translate her ancestral country into bold abstractions.
  • Johyun Gallery will present an extensive overview of the artistic legacy of Park Seo-Bo, encompassing works from his early Primordialis series through to the Ecriture series of the 1990s.
  • Philip Mould & Company’s presentation will offer a focus on British women artists over four centuries, spanning works by both Joan Carlile and Mary Beale, the two leading women artists of the 17th century, up to Vanessa Bell and Jessica Dismorr, representing the Modernist era.
  • Trias Art Experts will focus on the theme of menagerie, featuring Meissen porcelain animals by Johann Joachim Kaendler.

Studio

Curated by Sheena Wagstaff (Chair Emerita, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) with Margrethe Troensegaard. Now in its third year, Studio features six solo presentations, inviting visitors to spend time with the work of contemporary artists who have a genuine understanding of historical art via robust new works, complemented by early pieces, and a small display of personal objects from their studio. These memory markers show how artistic identity evolves through an accumulation, often curious, of artefacts and stories.

  • Anju Dodiya – born and works in India
    Ancestral Log, large-scale works and drawings in watercolour and mixed media, exploring myth, autobiography, and the restlessness of contemporary life.
  • Samia Halaby – born Palestine, works in USA
    Survey of six decades of abstract painting and kinetic work, tracing her explorations of light, motion, and perception.
  • H. Quaytman – born and works in USA
    New works drawn from Book (vol. II of her catalogue raisonné), extending her engagement with art history through image, text, and abstraction.
  • Glenn Brown – born and works in England
    Paintings and drawings that reconfigure art historical references into layered, hallucinatory compositions.
  • Dorothy Cross – born and works in Ireland
    Presentation spanning sculpture and installation, reflecting on nature, the body, and transformation through material and metaphor.
  • Anne Rothenstein  born and works in England
    Dreamlike paintings on panel blending memory, found imagery, and atmosphere into psychologically charged scenes.

Spotlight

Curated for a third year by Valerie Cassel Oliver (Sydney and Frances Lewis Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts), Spotlight features rediscovered artists and lesser-known works from the 20th century. The section features solo presentations including:

  • Galatea & Luis Strina: Cildo Meireles is a pioneer of Conceptualism in Brazil. His drawings constitute a sensitive archive of Brazilian history; though rarely exhibited and less known than his monumental installations, these drawings are essential to understanding Meireles’ conceptual radicalism.
  • kó: Twins Seven-Seven was a pioneering Nigerian artist who gained prominence in the 1960s through the Mbari Mbayo workshops in Osogbo, Nigeria. A central figure of the Osogbo Art School, his art envisions a vivid and imaginative world filled with humans, animals, plants, and deities of Yoruba lore.
  • Jhaveri Contemporary: Novera Ahmed is the first modern sculptor of Bangladesh, producing some of the earliest public artworks in Dhaka. This will be the first presentation of her work in the UK, a solo stand of bronze sculptures created between 1966 – 1973.
  • Lawrie Shabibi: Mona Saudi is one of the leading sculptors of her generation in the Arab world. This presentation will bring together five stone sculptures and eleven works on paper produced between 1973 and 1978, offering a cross-section of her five-decade practice.
  • The Gallery of Everything: Madge Gill was a visionary whose spirit guide – Myrninerest – authored the pale faces, swirling patterns and cryptic dialogue of a vast and enigmatic channel. This solo presentation will include works on card and calico and assemblies of postcards in her principal medium, ink, curated by Vivienne Roberts.
  • Volte Gallery: Nalini Malani has a fifty-year multi-media practice that includes film, photography, painting, Wall Drawing/Erasure Performance, theatre, animation and video/shadow play. This presentation will include recently discovered work from her studio archive.
  • Zürcher Gallery: Alice Adams is best known for her site-specific land art installations and public projects. This presentation will include three sculptures and five works on paper by Adams from the 1960s, a decade marked by Adams’ relationship to materials sourced from local hardware stores, lumber yards, or salvaged from the streets.

Reflections

New for 2025 and overseen by Abby BangserReflections is a section of the fair showcasing decorative art and objects. For the first edition the presentations are inspired by two of the most iconic collections of objects in the world: Sir John Soane’s Museum & Kettle’s Yard.

  • AGO Projects – Tapestries by Pedro Preux and vintage ceramics by Gustavo Pérez trace two legacies of Mexican modern craft and design.
  • Brun Fine Art – Antique marble works, from Roman and Neoclassical sculpture to decorative fragments, presented in dialogue with Soane’s spirit of immersive display.
  • Ippodo Gallery – Venetian glass artist Laura de Santillana’s tablet and Sun series fuse Murano traditions with Japanese influence.
  • Elliot Davies Fine Art – Debuting at Frieze Masters with a newly discovered bust of the young Emperor Nero by Roman neoclassical sculptor Bartolomeo Cavaceppi (c.1716–1799), presented alongside ancient Roman, medieval, and Renaissance fragments.
  • Erskine, Hall & Coe – Works by Hans Coper, Lucie Rie, and Jennifer Lee highlight the enduring ceramic legacy of Kettle’s Yard.
  • Vagabond – Soane: An Architect’s Eye – Antiquities, fragments, and models reimagined in a contemporary layout inspired by Sir John Soane’s eclectic vision.

PROGRAMMING HIGHLIGHTS

dunhill x Frieze Masters Talks Programme

The annual Frieze Masters Talks Programme, produced in collaboration with dunhill and curated this year by Arturo Galansino (Director General of Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi in Florence), will explore how art across millennia inspires and challenges today’s creative landscape. The series opens on Monday 13 October with Emilie Hammen and Elizabeth Way discussing fashion’s place in the museum, exploring its historical role, potential as a living archive, and capacity to inspire. From Wednesday, the talks will continue at the dunhill x Frieze Masters Talks Auditorium at the fair with conversations from Christopher RothkoCarl StrehlkeWilliam DalrympleSusan StrongeTracey EminNicholas Cullinan, Antony Gormley, Glenn Brown, Matthew Harle, Edward George and more.

The conversations will be recorded as a podcast and made available on frieze.com and dunhill.com, as well as platforms including Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Film Programme

Frieze x ICA Film Programme returns with a new selection of recent moving image works by contemporary artists from galleries participating in Frieze London 2025. The programme will be presented onsite at the ICA, London, and online at ica.art and frieze.com.

From Frieze Week (14 – 19 October), the ICA Theatre will host a drop-in screening programme featuring works played on a continuous loop throughout the day. In addition to the physical screenings, the programme will be available to stream worldwide until 31 October 2025.

The jury comprises Steven Cairns (Head of Artistic Programme, ICA) and three international experts: Helena Kritis (Chief Curator, WIELS, Brussels), Julian Ross (Head of Film Programming & Distribution, Eye Filmmuseum, Amsterdam) and Almudena Escobar López (Curator, Scholar, and Archivist, Toronto).

The Frieze x ICA Film Programme shortlist includes​​ Marianne FahmyLaws of Ruins (2024), presented by Gypsum; Luke FowlerBeing Blue (2024), with The Modern Institute; Toby CatoGrant Cato Zone, shown by Harlesden High Street; Jessica WilsonSmile Driver, with diez; Nicholas Galaninkʼidéin yéi jeené (You’re doing such a good job), presented by Peter Blum Gallery; Hannah BlackBroken Windows, with Arcadia Missa; Ebun SodipoNasty Girl 2 (The Beast), shown by Soft Opening; Martine SymsDED, with Sadie Coles HQ; Randolpho LamonierDOOM, presented by Portas Vilaseca Galeria; and Aline MottaNatural Daughter, with Mitre Galeria.

NO. 9 CORK STREET

At Frieze’s permanent gallery space in Mayfair, No.9 Cork Street, Vadehra Art Gallery will present Zaam Arif‘s first London solo exhibition, curated by Ben BroomeHafez Gallery spotlights Ibrahim El-Dessouki‘s allegorical reflections on land and power, curated by Sara Raza; and Artwin Gallery brings together artists from Central Asia and the Caucasus — Saule Dyussenbina, Akhmat Bikanov, Shamil Shaaev, Yuma Radne, Alexander Volkov, Bakhyt Bubikanova, Javkhlan Ariunbold and Nuriia Nurgalieva — in an exploration of scorn and its subtleties, curated by Slavs and Tatars with Asya Yaghmurian. The exhibitions will run until 25 October 2025.

FOOD & DRINK

Frieze London and Frieze Masters will once again bring together some of London’s most celebrated restaurants, bars and chefs, making the fairs destinations for dining as well as art. At Frieze London, visitors will enjoy restaurant dining experiences from JikoniMaison François and Sessions Arts Club plus pop-ups from BAORita’sSayuriYalumba Wine Bar and Company Drinks.

At Frieze Masters, Trullo will join the line-up for the first time, alongside returning favourites Ham Yard Restaurant & Bar and NobuGail’s Bakery will have cafés at both fairs.

PARTNER ACTIVATIONS

Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2025 welcomes leading global brands and cultural partners presenting new initiatives, installations, and collaborations that connect art, design and innovation.

Deutsche Bank presents French visual artist Noémie Goudal (b.1984) in the Deutsche Bank Wealth Management Lounge at both Frieze London and Frieze Masters. This presentation follows Goudal’s Marcel Duchamp Prize exhibition at the Centre Pompidou in 2024 and coincides with her London solo exhibition at Edel Assanti (on view through 19 December 2025). Spanning film, sculpture, photography and performance, Goudal’s practice is grounded in rigorous research at the intersection of ecology and Earth sciences. Her presentation in the lounge provides a window into the artist’s photographic and sculptural practice from 2013 to the present, featuring works that have not been shown in the UK before.

Further partners include Ruinart who showcases its ‘Conversations with Nature’ series, featuring Sam Falls’ organic works that highlight the symbiotic relationship between art and the environment. At Frieze London, LG OLED advances its ART initiative, collaborating with world-renowned artist Do Ho Suh and his brother, Eul Ho Suh, who pay a powerful tribute to their father Se Ok Suh’s artistry, brought to life through LG OLED’s cutting-edge OLED T. Degussa announces the second Young Generation Art Award with Monopol, spotlighting five emerging European artists. De Beers partners with Frieze Masters to premiere “Voyage through the Diamond Realm,” an immersive installation tracing the cosmic and earthly journeys of natural diamonds. illycaffè introduces its new illy Art Collection by Swiss artist John Armleder, transforming the coffee experience into a conceptual encounter through mirrored surfaces and iconic disco ball–inspired designs. BMW returns with a VIP fleet providing seamless shuttle service between Frieze London and Frieze Masters. These collaborations underscore Frieze’s role as a global platform for cultural innovation, bringing together leading voices from art, design and luxury.

FRIEZE WEEK PARTNER ACTIVATIONS

Frieze on Sloane Street, in collaboration with Cadogan as Frieze’s first official Destination Partner, will present a public display curated by Frieze Studios exploring nature and habitat; Abercrombie & Kent will host a Frieze Week event at Howard Hodgkin’s former studio to celebrate a curated India itinerary inspired by the artist’s travels; LOEWE Perfumes will stage an immersive activation in central London to unveil its new olfactory universe. To celebrate Frieze week, Nanushka will host a preview of its first exhibition, followed by a conversation with Founder and Creative Director Sandra Sándor exploring the dialogue between art and fashion.

Press release from Frieze

Image: Carl Freedman Gallery at Frieze London, 2024. Photography by Linda Nylind. Image courtesy of Frieze