Frieze London, one of the world’s most influential contemporary art fairs, focuses only on contemporary art and living artists. Taking place in The Regent’s Park, London, the fair’s exhibiting galleries represent some of the most exciting artists working today. A team of world-leading independent curators advise on feature sections, making possible performance-based work and ambitious presentations by emerging galleries. The fair focuses on living artists and innovative practice. Frieze London coincides with and is within walking distance of its sister fair, Frieze Masters, which shows the work made before the year 2000.
The fair has announced the exhibitor list for Frieze London and Frieze Masters 2025, which are both set to take place from October 15th to 19th 2025. The two fairs will together host more than 280 galleries from 45 countries, with Frieze London welcoming 166 galleries, and Frieze Masters welcoming 123 galleries. Seven galleries are participating in both fairs.
Here is the list of Indian Galleries Participating in Frieze London 2025
1. Experimenter

Tenzing Dakpa | Weather Report. Courtesy: Experimenter
Experimenter was co-founded by Prateek & Priyanka Raja in 2009 in Kolkata, India. With a multidisciplinary approach, the gallery is an incubator for an ambitious and challenging contemporary practice. The gallery, rooted in dialogue and dissent, is considered to be a ‘pace-setter’ for the Indian Contemporary Art scene and extends from exhibition-making to knowledge creation, through regular talks, performances, workshops and through its much acclaimed, annual curatorial intensive – Experimenter Curators’ Hub. The gallery attempts to expand the scope of contemporary practice beyond the ambit of its expected role.
Check out their work here
2. Jhaveri Contemporary
Jhaveri Contemporary was formed in 2010 by sisters Amrita and Priya with an eye towards representing artists, across generations and nationalities, whose work is informed by South Asian connections and traditions. The gallery’s dedication to original scholarship, engendered through its carefully crafted shows, is one of the many ways it distinguishes itself. Entwined with this philosophy is another guiding principle: showcasing the heterogeneous practices of long-celebrated luminaries as well as emerging talents, often in generously interrogative conversations. With a focus on mining lesser-known art histories, Jhaveri Contemporary facilitates dialogue between artists, curators and historians to add to the wider field of art.
To know more, check out their website here.
3. Gallery Maskara

LOVE ME AS I AM| T. Venkanna. Courtesy: Gallery Maskara
Founded by Abhay Maskara, Gallery Maskara opened a space in Colaba, Mumbai in 2008 with a clear and compelling mission to exhibit and promote the art of the present. In the ensuing years, the gallery quickly became known for its cutting-edge program, site-specific installations and super-sized contemporary art. The gallery nurtured emerging artists, most of whom had their first solo shows at the gallery, and many went on to achieve national and international acclaim.
“There is no art without a (cultural, political and artistic) context and every artist/viewer has got a certain background, but radical art creates its own context and almost ‘the magic’ of visual art, is that even if you don’t know the source of inspiration of the artist, an artwork still can trigger imagination, can touch and move a person. – Abhay Maskara, Curatorial Director
To know more, check out their website
4. Nature Morte
Finite & Infinite | Rm. Palaniappan. Courtesy of Nature Morte
Founded in New York’s East Village in 1982 and closed in 1988, Peter Nagy revived Nature Morte in New Delhi in 1997 as a commercial gallery and a curatorial experiment. In the early years, Nature Morte became synonymous in India with challenging and experimental forms of art; championing conceptual, lens-based, and installation genres and representing a generation of Indian artists who went on to international exposure. Today, Nature Morte is the leader in its field in India with increasing visibility around the world, representing many of the most accomplished contemporary artists working in India today, fostering the most promising new talents, and introducing the works of international artists to the country.
To know more, check them out here
5. Project 88
Cavalcade | Raqs Media Collective. Courtesy of Project 88
If you want to know what constitutes the future of contemporary art in South Asia, Project 88 is the place from where you could begin your exploration of tomorrow’s terrain. From it’s inception in 2006 and under the adventurous directorship of Sree Banerjee Goswami, Project 88 have developed a context for the exhibition of experimental and ambitious work in all media by artists whose practice have strong conceptual foundations. A second generation gallerist, Sree grew up with art in Kolkata where her mother Supriya Banerjee founded Galerie 88.
Project 88 remains committed to the discovery and nurturing of emerging talent, even as it works with cutting-edge, intelligent, internationally known mid-career artists from South Asia and elsewhere. Many of it’s artists are in major international collections and are featured regularly in the most prestigious biennales and museum shows. The future of the art landscape is being shaped here.
Check out the gallery website here
6. Vadehra Art Gallery
Sudhir Patwardhan | Cities: Built, Broken. Courtesy of Vadehra Art Gallery
Founded in 1987, Vadehra Art Gallery is a pioneer of South Asian art, representing artists across four generations from the Indian Subcontinent and its diaspora, helping to shape it as a celebration of culture, identity and intellect. As a confidante to art history and a champion of contemporary creativity, the gallery nurtures a dynamic and flourishing ecosystem where the artist and their work take centre stage, promoting a legacy of artistic expression that resonates with global audiences.
The gallery is recognized for its early support of modern masters such as M.F. Husain, Ram Kumar, S.H. Raza, and Tyeb Mehta, alongside subsequent generations of post-modernists like Arpita Singh, A. Ramachandran, Nalini Malani, Gulammohammed Sheikh, and Rameshwar Broota. Its expansive contemporary programme emphasizes influential names such as Atul Dodiya, Shilpa Gupta, Anju Dodiya, N.S. Harsha, Gauri Gill and Sunil Gupta, as well as emerging talent like Zaam Arif, Biraaj Dodiya and Ashfika Rahman.
Explore their collection here.
Frieze London in 2023. Courtesy: Linda Nylind/Frieze
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