A hailstorm rattled in opposition to the 85 tonnes of glass that make up the huge curving roof of Olympia’s Grand Corridor, whereas darkish clouds solid shadows throughout the cubicles under. But the temper was mild—giddy, even—as Photograph London (till 17 Could) opened for previews on Wednesday (13 Could) at its new house in West Kensington. And that temper was mirrored in some vigorous gross sales by Thursday afternoon, the primary of 4 public days, by which period the climate had switched between late winter and early summer time and again once more, altering by the minute.
Paris-B Gallery reported a sale of three works to 1 purchaser coming to £100,000, together with two by Chinese language artist Yang Yongliang. In Digicam, additionally from Paris, sharing a sales space with L Parker Stephenson Pictures from New York, had offered each the classic and the fashionable print of Jane Everlyn Atwood’s Auto Portrait (Serpent)—the hero picture used for the truthful’s promotion—for £13,000 and £2000 respectively.
Robert Hershkowitz was having a powerful truthful, together with gross sales of works by PH Emerson and Frederick Fiebig, simply a few months after the eponymous supplier in early European pictures had died. Radius Publishing had offered 40 p.c of its inventory by Thursday lunchtime. And there was anecdotal chatter that pointed to the beginnings of a superb truthful for a lot of others too, the place costs vary from £100 to £400,000, however the place the low-to-mid-thousands is the norm.
It’s not the placement that has raised the cheer. This traffic-choked nook of the capital, described by the Night Normal as “an unwelcome slab of London actual property to all however the lanyard-wearing courses”, is trying a revival, together with the £1.3bn refurbishment of Olympia’s exhibition halls, which is ongoing into 2027.
Somerset Home, the truthful’s house for the earlier decade, was marmite to galleries and guests alike. The Thames-side setting and its beautiful courtyard, so usually bathed in sunshine throughout earlier festivals, are fondly remembered. However its warren of small rooms unfold throughout varied wings and flooring of the historic neoclassical constructing advanced was not. Photograph London was maddeningly troublesome to navigate.
Alfredo Jaar, Trying to find Africa in Life
Courtesy the artist and Goodman Gallery
This week, nobody appears in any doubt that Olympia is the superior venue, offering a extra business-like environment, and the sunshine and area to be seen. It’s such an apparent statement that it dangers understatement, says Michael Benson, one half of the husband-and-wife staff that based the truthful a decade in the past. “We have to take heed to what our galleries are saying to us, they usually have been starting to say, fairly critically, ‘We won’t come again to Somerset Home. It is simply too troublesome for us to do enterprise’…. We might get individuals saying, ‘I acquired missed. I noticed [film producer and collector] Michael Wilson strolling previous my sales space, and he by no means got here in.’ It is very troublesome to overlook anybody at Olympia. It’s a way more democratic method of doing a good. There is no a part of it that feels prefer it’s not getting its fair proportion.”
It doesn’t do any hurt both that London’s collector class tends to reside West. However it’s nonetheless a big gamble. When the primary iteration of Photograph London (launched by supplier Daniel Newburg in 2004, earlier than its takeover by Reed Exhibitions, proprietor of Paris Photograph) relocated from the Royal Academy of Arts to Previous Billingsgate three years later, it was a catastrophe. However the motive wasn’t the placement alone. And a big a part of the success of the present truthful’s relocation within the different path was the chance to inject new vitality and, beneath the directorship of Sophie Parker, herald some much-needed high quality management.
Previously, the favored finish of the market—music, trend, movie star portraiture—felt overrepresented, whereas extra ‘severe’ work proven by establishments was absent, maybe presumed unpalatable for market tastes. It resulted in a complicated rift for guests, and the sense that Photograph London was not the place to measure the heart beat of the medium. The truthful has finished a lot to handle this, with an expanded Discovery part dedicated to younger galleries, and way more area given over to the unbiased ebook publishers which can be the beating coronary heart of latest pictures.
Notably, two of this yr’s Deutsche Börse Pictures Basis Prize shortlist are current on the truthful—the aforementioned Atwood, and Weronika Gęsicka, proven by JEDNOSTKA from Warsaw, who have been promoting works from the Polish artist’s acclaimed Encyclopedia sequence for between €4800 and €10,000, though the winner, Rene Matić, introduced Thursday night at The Photographers’ Gallery, isn’t.
Each cubicles are a part of a brand new initiative, titled Supply, to encourage solo artist cubicles. Tristan Lund, an unbiased artwork advisor who had beforehand curated the truthful’s Discovery part, and who has been on the curatorial committee since, pitched the concept after studying concerning the deliberate transfer to Olympia.“We now have an more and more artwork fair-literate crowd who’re searching for one thing extra substantial, and solo cubicles provide the finest probability of getting beneath the pores and skin of an artist’s apply,” he says. Lund hopes that it would ultimately woo the blue-chip “combined media galleries who characterize a number of the greatest names in pictures, however do not have sufficient of a motive to do a pictures artwork truthful”, reminiscent of Gagosian, Tempo or David Zwirner. Maybe they’d, he says, if it was about taking considered one of their artists and curating a solo sales space.
Goodman Gallery already has a sizeable presence with Alfredo Jaar’s Trying to find Africa in Life [For Koyo Kouoh], which brings collectively all 2128 covers of Life journal revealed between 1936 and 1996 as an infinite lightbox. It’s offered in collaboration with the Prix Pictet, which was initiated by Photograph London’s founders, Benson and Fariba Farshad, and which the Chilean artist received at its newest version in September 2025.

Hélène Binet, Bruder Klaus Kapelle, Peter Zumthor (from the Zumthor sequence), (2009)
© The artist and Massive Glass, London
These solo artist shows, which have been given the area and a few monetary incentive to take the danger, have been talked about as highlights by most of the guests that The Artwork Newspaper spoke to. Amongst them is an excellent sequence of classic prints by Ute and Werner Mahler offered by Frankfurt gallery Peter Sellem, priced between £5,000 to £8,000. They embody a collection of their trend pictures from behind the Berlin Wall within the days of the GDR, alongside their first collaborative venture, Mona Lisas of the Suburbs, made up of adolescent portraits from Liverpool, Minsk, Berlin, Reykjavik and Florence. Different standouts embody Galerie Julian Sander’s presentation of Rosalind Fox Solomon, who died final June, and London-based architectural photographer Hélène Binet, proven at Massive Glass.
“Doing a solo sales space is all the time an even bigger danger,” says Charlotte Schepke, the proprietor of Massive Glass, who has works starting from £2000 to £15,000. Nevertheless, she trusts Lund. “He acquired us to Photograph London within the first place, when he was curating the Discovery part. We listened to him, as a result of I really feel he is discerning, not simply placing issues collectively. After all, you might want to promote. However, on the similar time, it helps when you possibly can give attention to one particular person. It offers people who find themselves visiting a a lot better concept about an artist. It is virtually like an exhibition, however it’s on this [fair] state of affairs.”“I by no means did the truthful earlier than. I didn’t just like the structure,” says Sander, great-grandson of the photographer August Sander. “Tristan requested me to return, particularly with the work of Rosalind Fox Solomon, and I noticed him within the area [Olympia], and I agreed to return do it.” His expertise up to now is constructive, discovering that the majority guests are fairly educated about pictures.
“It’s a connoisseur area. It is very a lot a keen purchaser, keen vendor market. Folks concerned in pictures are occupied with all elements of it: the digicam, the state of affairs, the method, the event. You go down a rabbit gap taking a look at how these objects are created. The individuals who do not know loads are glad to be taught. They’re as within the story of the {photograph} and the particular person as they’re within the object itself and the expertise.”
This chimes with a pattern recognized by Parker, who took over because the truthful’s director in 2024, having joined Photograph London in 2018. I put it to her that there was a lack of connoisseurship about pictures in London – individuals with a deep appreciation of the thing qualities of prints – partly with the absence of pictures auctions within the capital, which is the place the market first took off within the Nineteen Seventies.“I really feel prefer it’s truly swinging again,” she says. “In the course of the pandemic and post-Covid, it was very vivid stuff that translated very nicely onto a digital display, as a result of that is how individuals have been consuming artwork. However now, as individuals return to seeing work bodily, wanting to essentially perceive pictures as an object and never simply a picture that may be considered wherever, individuals are way more within the craft… When individuals begin to take a look at the large names, they develop into occupied with classic processes and conventional strategies. And now rising artists are beginning to return to these processes as nicely.
“There was large concern round AI a few years in the past, and, because of this, younger artists are eager to hone these conventional strategies which have this human factor to them; these little discrepancies, the little errors that present you that there is been a human hand concerned. And that is good to see.”








