Frieze London 2025
Frieze London's Artist-to-Artist section highlights talent emerging amid political tensions
While leaders around the world are placing a great deal of focus on people's differences, here unity and collectivity come to the fore
Everyone’s a winner, baby: prizes abound during Frieze London
We take stock of who has won what, from the Tate Frieze Fund to the Circa 2025 prize
Frieze London diary: a Mick Jagger meeting, a movie night and punk fair style
Plus: an artist generates intrigue with distinctive face tattoos
Thinking bigger: gallery stalwarts Sadie Coles, Maureen Paley and Stuart Shave on why they're expanding to new London spaces
Amid a challenging art market, the gallerists remain positive about London's resilience as an international hub
In pictures: p(art)y people at the Frieze London VIP preview
Celebrities and art world glitterati descended on Regent’s Park today for the fair's VIP preview
The Art Newspaper and L'OFFICIEL to launch Frieze week pop-up at historic London newsagent
Join us this weekend at Shreeji, Marylebone, for complimentary drinks, and to grab your free copy of all our Frieze daily editions
Freedom of expression: Tate exhibition offers an overdue showcase of Nigeria’s Modernist artists
The show’s 300 works reveal how the country’s artists celebrated their culture and challenged colonialism
‘There is always something else to discover’: Glenn Brown on the art he collects and why
The artist known for his reinterpretations of others’ works explains why he treasures an early Hockney drawing and why he’ll be steering clear of Frieze week parties
Joy Gregory: ‘It’s about translation and trying to understand’
The British artist, whose work addresses identity in often maligned Indigenous communities from Africa to Australia, has just opened her first institutional survey in London
Almine Rech reopens in London with downsized gallery
The new venue is around a quarter of the size of Rech’s former London gallery, which closed in August
A tale of two philanthropies: why private foundations differ in London and Paris
While the new Fondation Cartier exemplifies the heft of corporate giving in Paris, the additions of YDP and Ibraaz bring London greater diversity
Frieze London diary: a boozy gallery bar, head-turning headlines and talking mice
Plus: artworks with ectoplasm
Palestinian artist ‘cancelled’ by US museum comes to Frieze Masters
Samia Halaby’s retrospective at the Eskenazi Museum of Art was cancelled last year, but she's in London with a message of optimism
Wayne Thiebaud’s first UK show reveals the hidden depths of his deceptively simple paintings
At the Courtauld Gallery, the artist's pastel-coloured works are clearly shown to be still lifes with bite
'I want to show the real deal': property developer Rajan Bijlani on his Modernist design collection
Few collectors are as well positioned for Frieze as Rajan Bijlani, whose home, a former pottery studio, is a ten-minute stroll across Regent’s Park
Frieze Sculpture brings shade—and light—to Regent's Park
Fatoş Üstek, the curator of this year's outdoor section, explains why shadows matter
Máret Ánne Sara: ‘art became necessary since nothing else helped’
The Sámi-Norwegian artist integrates the key motifs of a reindeer herder community with the wider ecological crisis in her Turbine Hall commission
At Frieze London, a new section explores the flow of cultural influence between Africa and Brazil
Across eight galleries featuring ten artists, ‘Echoes in the Present’ is curated by the Nigerian art historian Jareh Das
Comment | Frieze galleries have committed to climate donations—now it's time for the art world to pack in its private jets
A new initiative will see some galleries donate a percentage of their sales to the Gallery Climate Coalition, but when it comes to environmental action there is still much to be done, writes Louisa Buck


















