
Just as a healthy ecosystem flourishes in a state of equilibrium, so too do sprawling celebrations of human achievement. This week, Hong Kong will find itself at the nexus of a rich, balanced artistic ecosystem of its own: Art Basel Hong Kong. In partnership with UBS, 2026 will mark Art Basel’s 13th year in the city and 56th year as a fair, foregrounding Hong Kong as a nucleus for art in Asia and beyond. This year, Art Basel Hong Kong welcomes 240 leading galleries from 41 countries and territories to revel in the symbiotic relationship between Human, City, and Art.

“When I talk about the fair as an intersection of the cultural ecosystem, I’m referring to the delicate balance between artists, galleries, collectors, institutions, the public, and the wider cultural infrastructure,” says Angelle Siyang-Le, Director of Art Basel Hong Kong. During her tenure as director since 2022, Siyang-Le has worked to underscore the centrality of the city as both an Asian artistic hub and a global one, taking into account Hong Kong’s free port heritage and centrality within the region. “Especially in a post-pandemic environment, my focus has been on re-establishing that balance and re-fortifying those connections. A big part of that has been redirecting attention to Hong Kong’s essential identity—not only as a connector between East and West, but also between East and East. Strengthening cultural confidence in our region is critical,” she says.
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This year, the fair will reaffirm this connective ethos, championing a diversity of voices from within Asia and across the globe. Art lovers, gallerists, curators, and artists can expect a robust program: 32 new first-time exhibitors will join the fair this year; Echoes, a new sector debuting specifically at Art Basel Hong Kong, will highlight artworks created within the past five years across 10 booths and 13 participating galleries; the Encounters sector (dedicated to large-scale installations and performances) will introduce a new collective curatorial model with four Asia-based curators; the city-wide public programming will return to feature renowned tastemakers and cultural leaders, and Zero 10, the viral curated initiative which debuted at Miami Beach, will appear for its second iteration in Hong Kong.

For the debut of the Echoes sector, Korea-based Whistle Gallery will present paintings and sculptures by three Korean artists: Hyun Nahm, Min ha Park, and Sen Chung, all exploring legacy and cultural memory through the linguistics of perception. Spanish gallery Max Estrella will present works from Vietnamese-American Tiffany Chung, who uses hard data to interrogate the impact of commerce and spice trading routes on conflict and colonialism, and Colombian artist Miler Lagos, whose Trees series engages with wood and paper material as means through which power is generated or transferred. Bucharest-based Catinca Tabacaru gallery and Berlin-based NOME will present a shared booth, with a selection of works outside of the Western Canon by members of the global Non-Aligned Movement: Moroccan artist Youssra Raouchi, Filipino artist Cian Dayrit, and Zimbabwean Terrence Musekiwa.

“Echoes is also an important platform to highlight mid-career artists—an area of real market need,” emphasizes Siyang-Le on the Echoes sector. “These artists are often producing some of their most rigorous and ambitious work, yet they can be under-recognized in global programming. Hong Kong, with its dynamic and maturing ecosystem, is the ideal place to give them that visibility.”
Nowadays, visibility is currency. Art Basel Hong Kong has embraced the now inextricable role of the digital realm in the artistic future, and has affirmed that the digital landscape is a necessary part of public engagement with the fair. “The internet has fundamentally expanded who the ‘public’ actually is for us,” Siyang-Le shares. “It’s no longer just the people walking through the doors in Hong Kong—it’s anyone, anywhere, who has a relationship to Art Basel through a screen. Props to our social media team, who are doing an amazing job playing off of contemporary culture and trends and utilizing our online presence to create a portal into something deeper and making the fair feel accessible to someone who might find the traditional fair experience intimidating.”

The Zero10 sector is a shining example of this contemporaneous endeavor. The sector is supported by OpenSea, and will be showcasing a selection of innovative art for the digital era. Curated by Eli Scheinman exhibitors, including and presented by GoTone Art of This Millenium Privilege Club, Zero 10 will feature 14 exhibitors, including Botto, a decentralized autonomous artist born from a collaboration between Mario Klingemann and ElevenYellow that generates a new piece of art each week, allowing the human community (BottoDAO) to elect which artwork will go to auction. Zero10 will also feature RECURSIONS, a solo exhibition of new works by pioneering human-machine collaboration artist Sougwen Chung presented by Fellowship and ARTXCODE, and OFFICE IMPART will present works from Swedish conceptual artist Jonas Lund’s ongoing project Network Maintenance, which examines networks across the digital and physical realms.
“[Zero10] opens a door for new audiences who are engaged in digital spaces to find something they resonate with at the fair,” says Siyang-Le. “Ultimately, our mission remains the same—raising awareness of art and culture, and cultivating future generations of collectors and art lovers. The internet amplifies that mission. It doesn’t replace the in-person experience, but it expands the reach and impact of what we do.”

As in previous years, the Encounters sector will remain central to the fair in 2026, using large-scale art and performances as a means through which Art Basel Hong Kong saturates the spirit of the city itself. The curatorial team, now comprised of Asia-based curators Mami Kataoka, Isabella Tam, Alia Swastika, and Hirokazu Tokuyama, have drawn their curatorial vision from a cosmological framework of the five elements: water, fire, wind, earth, and space/ether. As such, the Lisson and Nonaka-Hill galleries will present ceramicist and material artist Masaomi Yasunaga’s work, A Certain Trajectory, a suite of eight new vessels formed through elemental origin and essence. Offsite, At Pacific Place’s Park Court, visitors can view Christine Sun Kim’s A String of Echo Traps (2022-2026), an animation installation accompanied by a sound composition presented by White Space and supported by Swire Properties.

In addition to Zero10’s engagement with the broader digital public and the sprawling Encounters installations on and offsite, Art Basel Hong Kong will also provide a healthy list of public programming, offering free public access to the film sector and the Exchange Circle platform. The public will also have access to the Conversations programming, which include a day of talks guest-curated by Venus Lau. Finally, the M+ Museum Facade presented by UBS will bring Pakistani-American artist Shahzia Sikander’s 3 to 12 Nautical Miles to the exterior of the museum, which will be screened nightly from Monday, March 23rd, to Sunday, June 21st.

If indeed, an art fair is like an ecosystem, this particular ecosystem is expansive, complex, unbound from geophysical location. These equilibriums—between public and private, between region and globe, between human and machine—prove to be creative engines for Asia’s largest art fair. As Angelle Siyang-Le affirms: “We sit at an intersection where artists, galleries, collectors, and the broader public meet, and that position obliges us to nurture the cultural landscape around us…for us, engaging the public isn’t symbolic; it’s essential.”
Art Basel Hong Kong, whose Global Lead Partner is UBS, will take place at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC) from March 27–29, 2026, with Preview Days on March 25 and 26.