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Photo London 2025 Confronts a Changing Photography Market

Photo London returns to Somerset House for its tenth edition at a pivotal moment for the photography market.

Founded in 2015, Photo London emerged as lens-based fine art was gaining recognition as a collectible asset. Previously considered niche, photography was asserting itself within the city’s art ecosystem. Larger, Mayfair-centric commercial galleries were beginning to dedicate significant space to photographic works, while smaller, photography-focused dealers such as Atlas Gallery, Huxley-Parlour, and Flowers were enjoying rising profiles.

Today, as the fair marks a decade of operations, photography is firmly entrenched in the art world mainstream. Blue-chip galleries now routinely display photographic works alongside painting and sculpture at art fairs like Frieze and Art Basel. This shift was exemplified by mega gallery Hauser & Wirth’s decision to represent Cindy Sherman in 2021—a bellwether event for photography’s ascent. Sherman, who began her career in the 1970s, was long overlooked by major art fairs but now shares gallery representation with icons like Louise Bourgeois and Philip Guston. In 2023, fellow mega gallery Gagosian announced its representation of Nan Goldin and brought original prints by Francesca Woodman to Art Basel, alongside personal works by the fashion photographer Richard Avedon.

If the market served by Photo London is expanding, it is also evolving—for few mediums will be as disrupted by new technologies as photography. This year, concerns about AI-generated imagery are likely to weave their way into conversations with prospective buyers and enthusiasts.

Before the 2023 edition of the fair, German artist Boris Eldagsen submitted Pseudomnesia: The Electrician (2023), an AI-generated image created with DALL·E 2, to the Sony World Photography Awards’ Creative Category. Industry-recognized judges awarded Eldagsen the prize, unaware that the work was created without a camera. Eldagsen declined the award, arguing that AI-generated images—what he called “promptography”—differ fundamentally from photography. The incident, which made global headlines, underscored how AI tools challenge established definitions of the medium and can thus disrupt market structures. Questions abound as to how AI will challenge the art form—or reshape it altogether. “The photo scene in London a decade ago was founded on a more traditional type of platform,” said Timothy Persons of the Berlin gallery Persons Projects. “That is changing, but gradually and slowly.”

Other collectors are more upbeat. “Photography is a strategy for ideas and image making, and it is incredibly effective,” said Benjamin Tischer of the New York gallery New Discretions, which is bringing work by Jordan Eagles to Photo London this year. “Jordan is using photography as the foundation of the work, but building upon it,” Tischer added. “Is it photography? Yes, and wall sculpture as well.”

Untitled (Shard), 2020
Jordan Eagles

New Discretions

URBC/PHASE, 2022
Jordan Eagles

New Discretions

than ever before. Over 100 galleries will attend the fair, including dealers from cities as far-flung as Taipei, Istanbul, Buenos Aires, Seoul, Reykjavík, and New Orleans. Significant displays of work by photographers from Tehran and Palestine will also be included.

This year’s edition also marks a leadership change, with Sophie Parker taking the helm as director. At 36, Parker is an insider who has risen through the ranks. She is determined to modernize the event, making it more responsive to the everyday and often ephemeral practices of photography. Her vision is to broaden the fair’s accessibility. “I want anybody coming to this fair to feel comfortable and confident to speak to galleries and have conversations,” she said. “It’s important that the experience isn’t intimidating—that it’s open and inviting to new collectors and seasoned ones alike.”

Photo London often mirrors generational divides within the art world. Classic prints from the medium’s storied masters, created with analogue processes, cater to the desires of established collectors who value historical significance. This is a traditional segment of the market that long predates the fair.

But, over the last decade, new impetus has come from emerging markets in Asia and the Middle East, as well as from younger collectors whose engagement is driven by social media. “Photography is the visual language of this century due in part to the advancement of the mobile phone,” said Persons. “Because collecting photography is still affordable, it is attracting a younger generation’s attention.”

This new collector class is increasingly interested in NFT photography, augmented reality, and immersive installations that blur the lines between photography, fine art, and digital culture. “Gen-Z collectors in particular are gaining in importance,” said Alexander Golya, sales director at CAMERA WORK in Berlin. “They have grown up with the medium of photography and are primarily looking for contemporary art by artists such as Christian Tagliavini and Eugenio Recuenco, who work across genres.”

Yet, a question remains: is Photo London truly capturing this momentum? At Paris Photo last autumn, digital art gallery Fellowship showcased American artist Trevor Paglen’s ongoing “Evolved Hallucinations” series—a deeply researched exploration of how AI produces representations of physical reality. Paglen’s images, created by a generative adversarial network trained to classify and generate new visuals, stirred significant interest. Despite its growth, Photo London faces an increasingly competitive landscape. Unseen Photo Fair in Amsterdam, once a major player in Europe’s photography market, went bankrupt in 2020 but is slated for a comeback in a new dockside location this September. During the pandemic, Photo London struggled, arguably losing ground to Paris Photo, its larger and more established rival.

Professeur Polidor, 2014
Christian Tagliavini

CAMERA WORK

365° – 17 Enero, 2019
Eugenio Recuenco

CAMERA WORK

Yet, a question remains: is Photo London truly capturing this momentum? At Paris Photo last autumn, digital art gallery Fellowship showcased American artist Trevor Paglen’s ongoing “Evolved Hallucinations” series—a deeply researched exploration of how AI produces representations of physical reality. Paglen’s images, created by a generative adversarial network trained to classify and generate new visuals, stirred significant interest. Despite its growth, Photo London faces an increasingly competitive landscape. Unseen Photo Fair in Amsterdam, once a major player in Europe’s photography market, went bankrupt in 2020 but is slated for a comeback in a new dockside location this September. During the pandemic, Photo London struggled, arguably losing ground to Paris Photo, its larger and more established rival.

As a response, the fair has diversified its offerings with virtual tours and online platforms, ostensibly to reach broader audiences but also as a hedge against digital disruption. “When I first started back in 2018, we only worked with galleries that had physical spaces,” Parker said. “Very quickly, we saw the way people interacted with art was changing—online galleries became much more normal, and we adapted to that.”

Yet a gap exists here that is yet to be bridged. “The older collectors are no longer as active as they once were, and the upcoming generation needs more time to mature,” said Persons. “Thus creating a hesitant market.”

Self titled Adaptation of Abduction of Sabine Women (1581–83), 2018
Niko Luoma

Persons Projects

Saguaros Surrounded by the Bloom, 2025
Nanna Hänninen

Persons Projects

Some gallerists suggest the fair could push boundaries even further. “If I were on the committee of Photo London, I would create an additional section: it looks like photography, but it’s not photography,” said Cyrille Catherin of Galerie ORIANE in Munich. “Pushing the boundaries of photography without going too far.”

As it enters its second decade, Photo London must grapple with how digital and machine-generated art fits into its curation strategies. To reflect photography at its most contemporary, addressing these technological shifts will be crucial.

Whether Photo London can maintain its relevance amid these changes remains to be seen. Its role as both a commercial hub and a cultural platform will depend on its ability to respond to the evolving dynamics of the photography market. As it marks its tenth edition, the fair stands at a crossroads—an emblem of photography’s growth, and a measure of its future resilience as a momentary, lens-based art.

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Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages

Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages“I live along the Atlantic coast, where I collect marine waste that inspires and feeds into this body of work,” Brecevic says.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages appeared first on Colossal.

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$70 million Giacometti fails to sell at Sotheby’s modern evening sale.

Sotheby’s modern evening sale fetched $186.4 million on May 13th.. The sale’s most highly anticipated lot—Alberto Giacometti’s Grande tête mince (1955), estimated in excess of $70 million—failed to attract a buyer. All prices include fees.

The Giacommeti work—a bronze bust of the artist’s brother Diego—saw bidding stall around the $64 million mark, according to The Art Newspaper. With no pre-sale guarantee for the work, it failed to sell, reportedly drawing gasps from those in attendance.

Of the 65 works offered on the evening, Sotheby’s reported an 83% sell-through rate, which excludes five withdrawn lots. The sale’s leading lot was René Magritte’s La Traversée difficile (1963), which sold for $10.04 million, just above its low estimate of $10 million. Magritte’s La Bonne aventure (1939) sold within its $3 million–$4 million estimate for $3.34 million.

Some of the auction’s early lots performed well, including Jean Arp’s Figure-germe dite l’apres-midinette (1959), which sold for $3.58 million against a $1.8 million high estimate, and Robert Delaunay’s Nature morte (1936), which fetched $2 million against a $1.5 million high estimate. A lamp designed by Frank Lloyd Wright broke the famed architect’s auction record when it sold for $7.49 million against a $5 million high-estimate.

Still, the auction saw several blue-chip works fall below their pre-sale estimates. Joan Miró’s Tête de fumeur (1925) sold for $914,400, below a $1 million low-estimate, while Fernand Léger’s La Jeune fille au bouquet (1921) sold for $3.71 million against a $5 million low-estimate.

In total, nine lots failed to sell, including pieces by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Edgar Degas, Pierre Soulages, and Andrew Wyeth. Withdrawals included works by Winslow Homer, Wassily Kandinsky, Cândido Portinari, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and, during the sale, Rufino Tamayo.

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Radio Juxtapoz, ep 164: Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth in the Universe of Shyama Golden

Radio Juxtapoz, ep 164: Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth in the Universe of Shyama Golden
“‘Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth’ was a phrase my parents would say whenever something was out of my control and didn’t go exactly according to plan,” Shyama Golden wrote on the subject of her new solo show of the same name for PM/AM in London. “It feels to me like a short phrase that embodies the entire human struggle, like Sisyphus pushing the boulder up the hill.” The Los Angeles-based painter has created a universe where reincarnation, generational trauma and suffering (and a sense of humor to cope with it), Sri Lankan folktales and a personal journey through time and the soul’s journey through eras. Golden told me she wanted to create a works that spoke of “past…
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Paola Grizi Adds New Meaning to ‘Literary Figures’ in Emotive Bronze Sculptures

Paola Grizi Adds New Meaning to ‘Literary Figures’ in Emotive Bronze SculpturesReliefs of eyes, noses, and mouths peer outward like knowledge and stories personified.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Paola Grizi Adds New Meaning to ‘Literary Figures’ in Emotive Bronze Sculptures appeared first on Colossal.

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“SCOPE” at Sentiment, Zürich

Seeing is never just seeing. It is shaped by technology and history, by power, and by the body. Philosopher Elizabeth Grosz reminds us that perception isn’t merely light hitting the eye—it’s both a physical and a social experience. What we see is dictated by what we’re allowed to see, by what’s framed for us, and