The Armory Show has announced the more than 230 exhibitors that will participate in its upcoming edition, scheduled to run at the Javits Center in New York, from September 5–7, with a VIP preview on September 4.
This edition marks the first under the direction of Kyla McMillan, who joined the Armory Show last July, after its 2024 exhibitor list had been announced. Among the changes that McMillan will introduce are a new floor plan, an additional section, and a reconfiguration of its section for large-scale works.
“The 2025 edition of The Armory Show will build on our legacy with a program rooted in New York’s cultural vitality and shaped by dialogue between American and international perspectives,” McMillan said in a statement. “This upcoming edition looks to provide expanded points of access for a range of collectors. Through newly imagined formats, the fair will foster deeper connection and discovery.”
This year’s edition will see over 20 exhibitors returning after a hiatus, including White Cube, Andrew Kreps, Esther Schipper, Marianne Boesky Gallery, and Instituto de Visión. Additionally, some 55 galleries will be participating for the first time, including Skarstedt, Megan Mulrooney, ILY2, Superposition Gallery, Martha’s, and JO-HS.
Other leading galleries who will show at the fair are 303 Gallery, Ben Brown Fine Arts, James Cohan, Garth Greenan Gallery, Mariane Ibrahim, Kasmin, Sean Kelly, Victoria Miro, Nara Roesler, Michael Rosenfeld, Silverlens, Templon, and Vielmetter.
The floor plan revision will see the fair’s Solo section, for single-artist presentations, intermixed within its main Galleries section. Galleries in the Solo section include Catharine Clark Gallery, Luis de Jesus, SMAC Gallery, and Spinello Projects.
A new section, called Function, will be organized by dealer Ebony L. Haynes, senior director at David Zwirner and 52 Walker. This section will look at how “artists both engage with and puncture the tenants of design,” according to a release. Haynes has lined up nine galleries for the section, including 56 Henry, Corbett vs. Dempsey, House of Gaga, Marinaro, and Silke Lindner, which won this year’s Gramercy International Prize, which comes with a free booth for a New York gallery that has never participated in the Armory Show.
The Platform section this year will instead be led by Souls Grown Deep, the nonprofit dedicated to promoting Black artists from the American South, with its chief curator Raina Lampkins-Fielder organizing the large-scale works that will be on view. (The participating artists and their galleries will be announced at a later date.)
The Focus section, organized by Jessica Bell Brown, executive director of the Institute for Contemporary Art at Virginia Commonwealth University, will also look at artists from the American South. Galleries taking part include Timothy Hawkinson Gallery, The Hole, K Contemporary, What If The World, and Wolfgang Gallery.
The Armory Show will also include two additional sections. Rebecca Camacho Presents, 1969 Gallery, Fragment, kó, Kendra Jayne Patrick, and Hannah Traore Gallery will feature in the Presents section, for galleries under 10 years old. And the Not-for-Profit section will include the Lower East Side Printshop, Tierra del Sol Gallery, and the Storefront Center for Art and Architecture, which has won the fair’s Armory Spotlight award.
Additionally, Carnegie Museum of Art director Eric Crosby will lead the fair’s eighth Curatorial Leadership Summit.
In a statement, Kristell Chadé, the executive director of fairs for Frieze, which has owned the Armory Show since 2023, said, “The Armory Show holds a singular place in New York’s cultural and commercial landscape, engaging the city’s seasoned collectors and institutions. In appointing Kyla as Director, we recognised her curatorial intelligence and her clear understanding of what drives a fair’s success. Her leadership reinforces The Armory Show’s identity as a distinctly American fair, shaped by New York’s pace, rigour and reach.”
The full exhibitor list follows below.
GALLERIES
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
303 Gallery | New York |
ACA Galleries | New York |
Aicon | New York |
Aicon Contemporary | New York |
Aki Gallery | Taipei, Leipzig |
Dastan | Toronto, Tehran |
Albertz Benda | New York, Los Angeles |
A Lighthouse called Kanata | Tokyo |
Alisan Fine Arts | Hong Kong, New York |
Alzueta Gallery | Paris, Madrid, Barcelona, Casavells |
Ames Yavuz | Sydney, Singapore, London |
Anant Art | Noida |
El Apartamento | Madrid, Havana |
Archeus / Post-Modern | London |
Bastian | Berlin |
Richard Beavers | New York |
Berggruen Gallery | San Francisco |
Berry Campbell | New York |
Bienvenu Steinberg & C | New York |
Blouin Division | Montreal, Toronto |
Peter Blum Gallery | New York |
Rutger Brandt Gallery | Amsterdam |
Ben Brown Fine Arts | London, Hong Kong, Palm Beach |
Buchmann Galerie | Berlin, Lugano |
CARVAHLO | New York |
Casterline|Goodman | Chicago, Nantucket, Aspen |
James Cohan | New York |
Cristea Roberts Gallery | London |
DAG | Mumbai, New Delhi, New York |
De Buck Gallery | New York |
Dep Art Gallery | Milan, Ceglie Messapica |
Dirimart | Istanbul, London |
Duane Thomas Gallery | New York |
Anat Ebgi | Los Angeles, New York |
Galeria Estação | São Paulo |
Max Estrella | Madrid |
Experimenter | Kolkata, Mumbai |
Eric Firestone Gallery | New York, East Hampton |
Galerie la Forest Divonne | Brussels, Paris |
Galerie Forsblom | Helsinki |
Fredericks & Freiser | New York |
Frestonian Gallery | London |
Galerie Thomas Fuchs | Stuttgart |
Galleria Studio G7 | Bologna |
Galeri st | Istanbul |
Gazelli Art House | London |
Goya Contemporary Gallery | Baltimore |
Garth Greenan Gallery | New York |
Hales | London, New York |
Halsey Mckay Gallery | East Hampton, New York |
Harper’s | East Hampton, New York, Los Angeles |
Edwynn Houk Gallery | New York |
Huxley Parlour | London |
Mariane Ibrahim | Chicago, Paris, Mexico City |
Lyndsey Ingram | London |
Instituto de Vision | New York, Bogota |
Fox Jensen Gallery | Sydney, Auckland |
Johnson Lowe Gallery | Atlanta |
Johyun Gallery | Busan, Seoul |
Galerie Judin | Berlin |
Kasmin | New York |
Sean Kelly | Los Angeles, New York |
Michael Kohn Gallery | Los Angeles |
Tim Van Laere Gallery | Antwerp, Rome |
Galerie Christian Lethert | Cologne |
Library Street Collective | Detroit |
Locks Gallery | Philadelphia |
Loft Art Gallery | Marrakech, Casablanca |
Luce Gallery | Turin |
Galerie Ludorff | Düsseldorf |
Galerie Ron Mandos | Amsterdam |
Miles McEnery Gallery | New York |
Nino Mier Gallery | New York, Brussels |
Yossi Milo | New York |
Francesca Minini | Milan |
Massimo Minini | Brescia |
Victoria Miro | London, Venice |
Nature Morte | Mumbai, New Delhi |
Nazarian / Curcio | Los Angeles |
Galeri Nev | Ankara |
Nicodim Gallery | New York, Los Angeles, Bucharest |
Galleria Lorcan O’Neill | Venice, Rome |
Pablo’s Birthday | New York, Verbier |
Paragon | London |
Pilevneli | Istanbul, Bodrum |
Poligrafa Obra Grafica | Barcelona |
ProxyCo | New York |
Mucciaccia Gallery | Rome, London, Cortina, Singapore |
Everard Read | London, Franschhoek, Johannesburg, Cape Town |
Retro Africa | Abuja |
Yancey Richardson Gallery | New York |
Nara Roesler | Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, New York |
Gallery Rosenfeld | London |
Michael Rosenfeld Gallery | New York |
Saatchi Yates | London |
Richard Saltoun Gallery | New York, Rome, London |
SECCI | Pietrasanta, Milan |
Secrist | Beach | Chicago |
Silverlens | New York, Manila |
Skarstedt | Paris, London, New York |
Fredric Snitzer Gallery | Miami |
Sorry We’re Closed | Brussels |
Southern Guild | Cape Town, Los Angeles |
Marc Straus Gallery | New York |
TAFETA | London |
Hollis Taggart | New York |
Tandem Press | Madison |
Tang Contemporary Art | Bangkok, Seoul, Beijing, Hong Kong, Singapore |
Templon | Paris, New York, Brussels |
Ting Ting Art Space | Taipei |
Two Palms | New York |
Uffner & Liu | New York |
Van de Weghe | New York |
Vielmetter Los Angeles | Los Angeles |
Vigo Gallery | London |
Weinstein Hammons Gallery | Minneapolis |
Wetterling Gallery | Stockholm |
White Cube | Hong Kong, Paris, London, New York, Seoul |
Wooson Gallery | Seoul, Daegu |
Zidoun-Bossuyt Gallery | Paris, Dubai, Luxembourg |
Whitestone Gallery | Beijing, Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, Tokyo, Taipei, Karuizawa |
SOLO
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
Albuquerque Contemporânea | Belo Horizonte |
Arróniz | Mexico City |
Baró Galeria | Abu Dhabi, Palma De Mallorca |
Catharine Clark Gallery | San Francisco |
Gallery Espace | New Dehli |
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles | Los Angeles |
ILY2 | Portland, New York |
Nueveochenta | Bogota |
Pi Artworks | Istanbul, London |
RoFA Projects | Potomac |
Clubhouse Gallery | Wellington |
Ronchini | London |
Public Gallery | London |
RX&SLAG | Paris, New York |
Esther Schipper | Berlin, Paris, Seoul, New York |
Semiose | Paris |
SMAC Gallery | Stellenbosch, Cape Town, Johannesburg |
Spinello Projects | Miami |
Gallery Sofie Van de Velde | Antwerp |
FUNCTION
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
Andrew Kreps Gallery | New York |
Marinaro | New York |
James Fuentes | New York, Los Angeles |
House of Gaga | Guadalajara, Los Angeles, Mexico City |
Corbett vs. Dempsey | Chicago |
Nicelle Beauchene Gallery | New York |
Silke Lindner | New York |
56 Henry | New York |
Móran Móran | Los Angeles |
FOCUS
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
Crisis | Lima |
Timothy Hawkinson Gallery | Los Angeles |
The Hole | New York, Los Angeles |
K Contemporary | Denver |
LA Loma Projects | Los Angeles |
Martha’s | Austin |
Galerie Myrtis | Baltimore |
Patrick Mikhail | Montreal |
Marianne Boesky Gallery | New York, Aspen |
The Pit | Los Angeles |
Howard Greenberg Gallery | New York |
What If The World | Cape Town, Tulbagh |
Wolfgang Gallery | Atlanta |
PRESENTS
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
1969 Gallery | New York |
1 Mira Madrid | Madrid |
Gallery 495 | Catskill |
Pietro Alexander Gallery | Los Angeles |
Jack Barrett | New York |
Alexander Berggruen | New York |
Rebecca Camacho Presents | San Francisco |
Dimin | New York |
Dio Horia Gallery | Athens |
EDJI Gallery | Brussels |
EUROPA | New York |
Hesse Flatow | East Hampton, New York, Amagansett |
Fragment | New York |
Harkawik | Los Angeles, New York |
JDJ | New York |
JO-HS | New York, Mexico City |
Massey Klein | New York |
kó | Lagos |
Lyles & King | New York |
Mrs. | New York |
Megan Mulrooney | Los Angeles |
Newchild | Antwerp |
Pangée | Montreal |
Patel Brown | Toronto, Montréal |
Kendra Jayne Patrick | Bern |
PM/AM Gallery | London |
Povos | Chicago |
Marinaro | New York |
RAINRAIN | New York |
Niru Ratnam | London |
Andrew Reed Gallery | New York, Miami |
Reservoir | Cape Town |
Sapar Contemporary | New York, Almaty |
Sarai Gallery | Mahshahr, London, Tehran |
Seven Sisters | Houston |
Sheet Cake Gallery | Memphis |
marrow gallery | San Francisco |
Baert Gallery | Los Angeles |
Zalucky Contemporary | Toronto |
VETA by Fer Francés | Madrid |
Shrine | New York |
Sim Smith | London |
Superposition Gallery | New York, Miami, Los Angeles |
Swivel | New York |
Hannah Traore Gallery | New York |
YveYANG Gallery | New York |
NOT-FOR-PROFIT
Exhibitor | Location(s) |
Brodsky Center at PAFA | Philadelphia |
Fine Arts Work Center | Provincetown |
Lower East Side Printshop | New York |
New York Academy of Art | New York |
Brandywine Workshop and Archives | Philadelphia |
Storefront for Art and Architecture | New York |
Tamarind Institute | Albuquerque |
Tierra del Sol Gallery | Los Angeles |