Frieze LA Names 95 Exhibitors for 2024 Edition, Along with Reconfigured Layout

Frieze Los Angeles has named the 95 exhibitors that will take participate in its upcoming 2024 edition, scheduled to run March 1–3, with a VIP preview day on February 29.

A major change to this year’s edition is that its dates have been pushed back two weeks; the fair’s previous editions have typically taken place during the second week of February and often coincided with Valentine’s Day and the Presidents Day holiday weekend in the US.

“People tend to skip away for that long weekend,“ Christine Messineo, Frieze’s director of Americas, told ARTnews in an interview. “Since we’re a four-day fair, the hope is. that this will draw more people to come to the fair and spend more time in LA.“

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The fair will return this year to the Santa Monica Airport, where it relocated beginning with the 2023 edition. For this edition, Frieze LA will reconfigure its floor plan and now include a central outdoor space that will be designed by WHY Architects. The fair will also not make use of the Barker Hanger, where a portion of exhibitors had been located last year. This edition of Frieze will also activate the athletic field and community park with performances and sculptures, respectively.

“The layout for 2024 is streamlined and efficient but designed with good sight lines and discoveries at every corner,” WHY founder and creative director Kulapat Yantrasast said in a statement. “Inside is a focused art experience with uplifting filtered natural light while the outside courtyard is full of art and cultural activities for friends to linger and connect.”

Messineo said she wanted to re-design the fair’s layout after her observations from last year’s fair where she noticed that visitors had decided to spend the day at the fair, as opposed to “dipping in and out” like they might in New York before gallery hopping in Chelsea. The central outdoor space itself responds to where many visitors congregated during the 2023 edition. “We have the feeling of a campus—and that’s something to embrace,” said Messineo. “We wanted to give visitors comfortable moments there.”

As with past editions, the fair will be split in two sections, with 83 exhibitors in the main Galleries section and 12 in the Focus section, dedicated to emerging US-based galleries. Across the fair, nearly 50 percent of participants have a location in the Greater LA area, and 13 will participate in the LA fair for the first-time, including closely watched galleries like Silverlens (of Manila and New York), Bank (Shanghai), and Kasmin (New York).

Among the leading LA galleries that will participate in the main section are David Kordansky Gallery, Blum (formerly Blum & Poe), François Ghebaly, Night Gallery, Nonaka-Hill, Regen Projects, Various Small Fires, and Anat Ebgi, which had previously participated in the Focus section.

Blue-chip galleries like Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, Lisson Gallery, Pace, White Cube, and David Zwirner will also participate, as will Pilar Corrias, Gladstone, Xavier Hufkens, Gallery Hyundai, Jenkins Johnson, Mendes Wood DM, Ortuzar Projects, and Proyectos Monclova.

“What I have loved witnessing about LA is its growth over the past three years,” Messineo said. “LA has really been embraced the commercial art world, as evidenced by galleries who plant to open spaces there or have recently done so. And the city’s institutions have also embraced the fair. There’s a sense of excitement for this edition.”

Looking at artists “ecologies as a vibrant framework for art making,” the Focus section—which includes galleries like Matthew Brown, Lyles & King, Shulamit Nazarian, Make Room, Ochi, and Hannah Traore Gallery—will be curated this year by Essence Harden, visual arts curator at the California African American Museum.

In a statement, Harden said, “I was deeply interested in the possibility of stretching the term ecology to include position, geography, material and theoretical concerns within art making. The presentations chosen for this year’s Focus section reflect that winding impulse, highlighting a series of dynamic emerging galleries and artists.”

The full exhibitor list follows below.

Galleries

ExhibitorLocation(s)
303 GalleryNew York
Altman SiegelSan Francisco
Bank Shanghai
Blum Los Angeles, Tokyo, New York
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery New York, Los Angeles
Bortolami New York
The Box Los Angeles
Canada New York
Château Shatto Los Angeles
Clearing New York, Brussels, Los Angeles
James Cohan New York
Pilar Corrias London
Dastan Gallery Tehran, Toronto
Massimo De Carlo Milan, London, Hong Kong, Paris, Beijing
Jeffrey Deitch New York, Los Angeles
Anat Ebgi Los Angeles, New York
galerie frank elbaz Paris
Stephen Friedman Gallery London, New York
James Fuentes Los Angeles, New York
Gagosian New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Geneva,
Basel, Gstaad, Rome, Athens, Hong Kong
François Ghebaly Los Angeles, New York
Gladstone New York, Los Angeles, Brussels, Rome, Seoul
Alexander Gray Associates New York, Germantown
Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles, New York, Paris, London, Somerset,
Zurich, Gstaad, St. Moritz, Hong Kong, Menorca,
Southampton, Monaco
Galerie Max Hetzler Berlin, Paris, London, Marfa
Hannah Hoffman Los Angeles
Xavier Hufkens Brussels
Gallery Hyundai New York, Seoul
Taka Ishii Gallery Tokyo, Kyoto, Maebashi
Jenkins Johnson Gallery Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco
Casey Kaplan New York
Karma New York, Los Angeles
Kasmin New York
kaufmann repetto New York, Milan
Sean Kelly New York, Los Angeles
Anton Kern New York
Tina Kim Gallery New York, Seoul
David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles, New York
Kukje Gallery Busan, Seoul
L.A. Louver Los Angeles
Lehmann Maupin New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, London
Galerie Lelong & Co. New York, Paris
David Lewis New York
Lisson Gallery Los Angeles, London, New York, Beijing, Shanghai
MadeIn Gallery Shanghai
Matthew Marks Gallery New York, Los Angeles
Anthony Meier Mill Valley
Mendes Wood DM São Paulo, Brussels, Paris, New York
Nino Mier Gallery New York, Los Angeles, Brussels, Marfa
Victoria Miro London, Venice
Night Gallery Los Angeles
Nonaka-Hill Los Angeles
OMR Mexico City
Ortuzar Projects New York
Pace Gallery New York, London, Seoul, Geneva,
Hong Kong, Los Angeles
Maureen Paley London
Parker Gallery Los Angeles
Parrasch Heijnen Los Angeles
Perrotin New York, Paris, Hong Kong, Seoul,
Tokyo, Shanghai, Dubai, Los Angeles
Petzel New York
The Pit Los Angeles, Palm Springs
Proyectos Monclova Mexico City
Almine Rech New York, Paris, Brussels, London, Shanghai, Monaco
Regen Projects Los Angeles
Roberts Projects Los Angeles
Nara Roesler New York, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro
Thaddaeus Ropac London, Paris, Salzburg, Seoul
Michael Rosenfeld Gallery New York
Esther Schipper Berlin, Paris, Seoul
Marc Selwyn Fine Art Los Angeles
Jack Shainman Gallery New York
Silverlens Manila, New York
Jessica Silverman San Francisco
Sprüth Magers Berlin, London, Los Angeles, New York
Standard (Oslo) Oslo
Craig Starr Gallery New York
Tiwani Contemporary London, Lagos
Rachel Uffner Gallery New York
VSF/ Various Small Fires Los Angeles, Dallas, Seoul
Vielmetter Los Angeles
Welancora Gallery New York
White Cube London, Hong Kong, New York, Paris, Seoul
David Zwirner New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Hong Kong

Focus

ExhibitorLocation(s)Artist
Babst Gallery Los Angeles Harry Fonseca
Matthew Brown Los Angeles Kent O’Connor
Dominique Gallery Los Angeles Mustafa Ali Clayton
Quinn Harrelson Los Angeles Ser Serpas
Lyles & King New York Akea Brionne
Make Room Los Angeles Yeni Mao
Chela Mitchell Gallery Washington, D.C. Siena Smith
Shulamit Nazarian Los Angeles Widline Cadet
Ochi Los Angeles, Ketchum Lilian Martinez
pt.2 Gallery Oakland Muzae Sesay
Sow & Tailor Los Angeles Javier Ramirez
Hannah Traore Gallery New York James Perkins