Featuring Contemporary Art
From East Asia
To the Middle East
Where Asia’s Visionary
Art Meets the World
FOCUS Asian Contemporary Art Fair is the world’s only global platform for Asian contemporary art, embracing voices from across Asia and the Asian diaspora.
Held in London, New York, and Paris, it unites leading galleries and artists from East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.
FOCUS blends cultural authenticity with innovation, presenting works that transform traditional materials and techniques alongside experimental creations.
By connecting collectors, curators, institutions, and media worldwide, it shapes a new chapter for Asia’s most visionary artistic voices.
Press & Features & News
FLINT CULTURE
The FOCUS Asian Contemporary Art Fair will hold its fourth New York edition from May 21 to 24 at Chelsea Industrial, the 22,000 sq ft venue in the city’s bustling gallery district.
Coinciding with Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month, this edition of FOCUS marks its first in New York since a programming decision to platform works by artists from Asia and the global Asian diaspora.
HYPERALLERGIC
Contemporary Asian art is the central force of Focus Art Fair, this year organized around the topical theme of “Human-Technology Coexistence.” The show is split into multiple sections highlighting emergent art that embodies the diversity of the continent’s creative cultures. One section will be devoted to artists whose practices intersect with generative AI as it becomes inextricably integrated with daily life, and another will emphasize process over product through references…
Fadmagazine
Sunlight finally peeked out on Manhattan this Thursday evening, just as a line started wrapping around Chelsea Industrial, on West 28th Street—artists, fans, collectors, and Andres Serrano, all queuing for a first look at Focus Art Fair, “the only NYC fair dedicated to the intersection of tech-enabled and traditional art.” Inside, 52 exhibitors from over 10 countries explore this year’s curatorial theme, “Human Creativity vs. Machine Potential,” with an eye for East Asian artists…