Contemporary Art Galleries in Moscow

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

The commercial gallery sector within contemporary art in Moscow concentrates physically around Winzavod, the former winery near Kurskaya whose courtyard has served since the late 2000s as the de facto address for Moscow's private art trade. Within and around it operate galleries of distinct generations: established dealers such as Triumph and pop/off/art alongside younger spaces like Osnova, built on emerging and mid-career practice. Their positions shifted sharply after 2022, when the withdrawal of international fairs and partners pushed the sector to reorganize around domestic demand. Galleries that once oriented themselves toward Vienna or Basel now anchor a recalibrated market sustained by the Cosmoscow fair and a newer, dealer-led fair launched through a self-organized gallery association. The result is an ecosystem more internally dependent than before, in which commercial spaces rather than art institutions in Moscow increasingly carry the work of sustaining critical and experimental contemporary practice, absorbing a curatorial and financial risk that public structures in the city have never reliably underwritten.

Explore Moscow

A local guide to Moscow, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Russia art context.

Gallery Districts in Moscow

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

Gallery activity in Moscow is weighted heavily toward the eastern edge of the center, where a belt of converted factories around Kursky station concentrates most of the commercial and experimental programming. The Winzavod complex anchors this zone, drawing roughly a dozen contemporary galleries into a single former winery; a short walk away, the older Artplay cluster leans toward design, architecture, and media-based work, while Fabrika, set in a disused paper mill further north, runs a less market-driven program built around studios and non-profit projects. Together these sites give the Basmanny district a continuous industrial-conversion character, where commercial dealing, emerging practice, and street-art interventions occupy the same red-brick footprint.

A second concentration sits in the historic center, organized along a different logic. Rather than occupying repurposed industry, central galleries gather in polished retail and hotel settings, the clearest case being a cluster of commercial spaces assembled under one roof near Tverskaya and oriented toward collectors and the upper end of the market. Beyond these two poles, the distribution thins into a shifting set of artist-run and project spaces that open and close without fixing to any single quarter, carrying much of the city's more provisional and discursive work outside the established commercial map.

Galleries in Moscow

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

Khodynka Gallery

Khodynka Gallery

Gallery Khodynka Field, Moscow EmergingNew mediaExperimental

Municipal contemporary art gallery in Moscow associated with experimental exhibition formats, often supporting new media, sound, video, and younger artistic practices within the local scene.

It broadens Moscow’s contemporary field by giving experimental practices a civic exhibition framework.

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Na Shabolovke Gallery

Na Shabolovke Gallery

Gallery Shabolovka, Moscow Research-drivenInstitutionalLocal scene

Gallery in Moscow centered on avant-garde heritage, constructivist architecture, and contemporary reinterpretations of Soviet pre-war art through exhibitions, research, and public education.

It makes Shabolovka’s architectural history legible through contemporary curatorial and research methods.

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Galerie Iragui

Galerie Iragui

Gallery Winzavod, Moscow CommercialGlobalResearch-driven

Contemporary art gallery associated with Moscow’s Conceptual art lineage, presenting emerging and established artists through a research-oriented and internationally connected program.

Its conceptual focus gives the gallery a precise role within Moscow’s intellectual art circuit.

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OVCHARENKO

OVCHARENKO

Gallery Winzavod, Moscow EstablishedGlobalCommercial

Commercial gallery in Moscow with a long-standing contemporary program, presenting established Russian artists and younger positions across painting, sculpture, installation, and conceptual practices.

Its continuity makes it one of Moscow’s important commercial structures for post-Soviet contemporary art.

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pop/off/art

pop/off/art

Gallery Winzavod, Moscow GlobalEstablishedCommercial

Founded in 2004, pop/off/art is a contemporary art gallery in Moscow representing Russian and international artists, with a focus on post-Soviet and Eastern European positions.

The gallery gives Moscow’s market a focused bridge toward post-Soviet and Central European narratives.

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RuArts Gallery

RuArts Gallery

Gallery Ostozhenka, Moscow EstablishedInstallationGlobal

Founded by Marianna Sardarova in 2004, RuArts Gallery in Moscow presents painting, photography, video, sculpture, and installation, with participation in Russian and international art fairs.

RuArts connects Moscow’s gallery scene with urban art, photography, and international fair circuits.

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

This Moscow 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.