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Art Basel’s Fight Against Pre-Fair Sales

Basel Exclusive aims to restore surprise to the art fair model – but can a return to anticipation reverse years of pre-selling and private dealing?

Tom Seymour16 June, 2026

Henry Moore, Large Four Piece Reclining Figure, 1972–73, cast 1984 © The Henry Moore Foundation. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd. Courtesy Gagosian

When Art Basel opens its VIP preview in Switzerland this week, hundreds of collectors will encounter something increasingly rare in the contemporary art market: a work they have not already seen.

Launched for the 2026 edition of the fair, Basel Exclusive asks participating galleries to withhold at least one major artwork from its pre-fair PDFs, online viewing rooms and advance client presentations until the opening hours of the fair itself. Collectors will only learn of the identity of the works if they arrive in person, at opening time.

More than 200 galleries have reportedly signed up, making it one of the most significant interventions in the mechanics of art-fair selling since digital previews became standard practice during the pandemic.

The initiative responds to a phenomenon that has quietly transformed the art-fair business. Long before collectors step onto the Messeplatz, many of the strongest works have already circulated through private PDFs, WhatsApp groups and discreet client presentations. By the time VIPs arrive, the most sought-after pieces are often already sold.

Gerhard Richter, Silsersee, 1995. Courtesy of the artist and Sies + Höke

Basel Exclusive is being presented as a way of restoring discovery, but it is also an attempt to incentivise attendance, and reclaim something fairs have gradually lost: exclusivity. It is an analogue move in a digital age.

The initiative, then, reflects the changing role of fairs within the wider art economy. As one senior curator for a blue chip gallery described it to The Art Journal, public sales are merely “the ice you can see”. The vast majority of transactions take place below the surface. Auction results and fair announcements generate headlines, but they represent only a fraction of overall market activity.

The latest Art Basel and UBS Art Market Report illustrates the shift. Public auction sales rose 9 percent in 2025, while private sales at auction houses fell 5 percent after several years of growth. Dealer sales increased by just 2 percent even as art fairs accounted for 35 percent of dealer turnover, up from 31 percent in 2024. The report is clear – fairs remain important, but they are increasingly one of many points of sale.

For decades, Art Basel’s Swiss edition occupied a unique position as the place where major works appeared for the first time. Dealers held back masterpieces because the concentration of museum directors, curators and elite collectors justified the gamble. The fair was not merely a marketplace. It was a stage.

That role has become harder to sustain. The growth of WhatsApp culture and year-round collector engagement has reduced the necessity of waiting for a specific event.

Meanwhile, the rise of Art Basel Paris has altered the geography of the calendar. Since taking over the Grand Palais in 2022, the fair has become a focal point for an art world increasingly drawn to the convergence of luxury, fashion and culture. International galleries have expanded their Paris operations and many dealers now speak of October in Paris as more important than June in Basel.

Officially, Basel remains the flagship. Yet the announcement of Basel Exclusive inevitably raises questions about why such a significant measure has become necessary.

One explanation is straightforward. Collectors increasingly complain about arriving at fairs only to discover that the best works were sold weeks earlier. Basel is good for mixing with an elite crowd in the cool breeze of the Rhine, but, in the absence of truly great art to buy, is that enough of a draw for the top collectors? By withholding the identity of truly great pieces until the opening day, the fair is hoping to generate a reason for them to attend in person, credit card in hand.

Galleries have their own incentives. Dealers have spent years investing heavily in fairs and still consider them a cornerstone of their business model. Basel Exclusive offers a chance to restore some of the theatre that justifies such massive upfront costs in the first place. A fair that produces genuine competition around an artwork is far more valuable than one that merely exists to confirm transactions completed elsewhere.

Precious Okoyomon, Sun dried slick the flames blind us - to the fact the fire bears the real - the radical body as somehow untouchable, 2025. Photo: Nicolas Brasseur. Courtesy the artist and Mendes Wood DM

Another interpretation is more strategic. After several years of uneven market performance and a succession of high-profile gallery closures, Art Basel might be attempting a jumpstart on an increasingly temperamental engine. The market returned to growth in 2025, reaching an estimated $59.6 billion globally, but the recovery remains both uneven and concerningly concentrated at the upper end. Much of the gallery sector continues to navigate rising operational costs and an increasing dependence on a relatively small group of major collectors.

The works selected for Basel Exclusive offer clues to how Art Basel and participating galleries are responding to that challenge.

The initiative includes ultra-contemporary names closely associated with today’s primary market, including Precious Okoyomon and Alvaro Barrington. Yet the list is equally notable for its concentration of established historical figures. Works by Gerhard Richter, Helen Frankenthaler, Yves Klein, Alexander Calder, Philip Guston, Amedeo Modigliani, Bruce Nauman and Leonora Carrington all feature among the unveiled highlights.

Frankenthaler’s inclusion is particularly notable, given her current visibility in Basel through a major exhibition at Kunsthalle Basel. Richter remains among the most dependable names in the secondary market, while Calder, Klein and Modigliani represent precisely the sort of museum-quality inventory historically associated with Basel's prestige.

The selection suggests that Basel Exclusive is not primarily an experiment in emerging talent. If anything, the opposite appears true.

Pierre Huyghe, Of Ideal, 2019-ongoing © VG BildKunst, Bonn, 2026. Photo: Andrea Rossetti. Courtesy the artist and Esther Schipper

This is revealing. If Art Basel’s objective were simply to generate excitement, it could have prioritised the newest names and strongest speculative narratives. Instead, the initiative leans heavily on artists whose markets are already established and whose institutional credentials are beyond question.

Basel Exclusive therefore appears less concerned with discovery than with scarcity. The message is not that these works are new. It is that they are available here, now, and nowhere else.

But will Basel Exclusive actually succeed in changing collector behaviour? Dealers have little incentive to abandon the private relationships that increasingly sustain their businesses. Collectors are unlikely to stop requesting advance access to major works. Basel Exclusive is attempting to reverse an established and fairly brutal logic.

In doing so, Basel Exclusives can only be read as a throw of the dice. By restoring a degree of uncertainty to the transaction, it is betting on the hope that an increasingly impatient market will be willing to wait.

Will collectors play along? We are about to find out.

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