Contemporary Art Galleries in Basel

A curated perspective on the gallery ecosystem shaping contemporary art in Basel.

Basel's commercial scene is defined by a tension of scale: a permanent gallery population far smaller than the international weight the city carries each June, when Art Basel briefly converts a compact Rhine town into the center of the global market. Year-round, the galleries anchoring contemporary practice work through deliberate, program-driven curation rather than volume. Established houses such as von Bartha — cross-generational, rooted in concrete and constructivist lineages now extended into present-day commissions — sit alongside spaces like Nicolas Krupp, whose program is built around emerging international artists working in installation, video, and conceptual formats. Most cluster near art institutions in Basel and fair infrastructure on both banks of the Rhine, making proximity to institutions and the Messeplatz a structural advantage rather than mere convenience. The result is a gallery ecosystem whose influence runs well ahead of its physical footprint, sustaining critical and curatorial credibility within contemporary art in Basel between fair cycles instead of simply servicing them.

Explore Basel

A local guide to Basel, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Swiss art context.

Gallery Districts in Basel

Key areas where contemporary art galleries are concentrated across the city.

Distance plays almost no role in how Basel's galleries arrange themselves; what organizes them is proximity to different kinds of anchor. The densest commercial cluster sits in the Grossbasel old town, where established dealers in contemporary and cross-generational work occupy converted townhouses and former workshops within walking reach of the Kunstmuseum and the St. Alban quarter, tying the market end of the scene directly to the city's institutional core. Across the Rhine, a second grouping gravitates toward Kleinbasel and the Messeplatz, clustering around the trade-fair grounds; its programming skews younger and more internationally contemporary, shaped by the fair calendar rather than by museum adjacency.

Two more peripheral concentrations carry a different character. The western districts around St. Johann hold a looser set of galleries and project spaces, often in repurposed industrial and garage architecture that allows for large-format installation and a more independent profile. Further south, the Dreispitz and Munchenstein zone -- a former goods-storage area now developed as an art campus around the regional art school and research-led institutions -- anchors the experimental edge, where off-spaces and artist-run formats operate at a remove from the fair economy and its commercial pressures.

Galleries in Basel

A selection of contemporary art galleries operating across different areas of Basel.

Nicolas Krupp

Nicolas Krupp

Gallery Krupp, Basel A consistent supporter of younger international positionscontributing to Basel's commercial scene beyond its more established blue-chip galleries.

Clara

Founded in 2000, this Basel gallery champions emerging international artists across painting, video, and installation, and has shown regularly at Art Basel since 2008.

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STAMPA

STAMPA

Gallery Spalenberg, Basel EstablishedIndependentConceptual

One of Basel's longest-running galleries, STAMPA shows contemporary Swiss and international positions and publishes artists' editions from its old-town space.

A veteran of the Basel gallery scene, valued for sustained commitment to editions and a discreet, artist-focused program.

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von Bartha

von Bartha

Gallery Bartha, Basel Established in 1970 and based near Kannenfeldplatzvon Bartha is a Basel and Copenhagen gallery rooted in concrete and constructive artrepresenting names including Imi Knoebel and Superflex.

Am

Ring

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This is a curated selection. Explore the full network of contemporary art venues on the map.

This Basel guide is part of the 1 Cubic Meter global contemporary art mapping project, which documents galleries, institutions, foundations, and independent art spaces through curated city-specific research.

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About 1 Cubic Meter 1 Cubic Meter

1 Cubic Meter is an editorial map of contemporary art venues and exhibitions, built city by city to document where contemporary art is produced, presented, supported, and encountered.

The project is built on a principle of horizontality, both geographic and qualitative. It gives attention to scenes outside the established circuit alongside the major capitals, and approaches a small artist-run space with the same editorial care as a long-standing institution. Each entry is the outcome of editorial selection, a curatorial reading of contemporary art across painting, sculpture, installation, performance, moving image, and other current practices.

We maintain the map continuously, with its focus kept entirely on contemporary art.