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Art Taipei 2025 ‘delivered’, showing the Taiwanese art market’s resilience amid challenges

The fair yielded ‘satisfying’ sales for some galleries as Taiwan’s art market navigates geopolitical tensions and global uncertainty

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Hong Kong gallery de Sarthe’s booth at Art Taipei 2025. Owner Pascal de Sarthe said, “Art Taipei delivered” this year. Photo: Enid Tsui
Enid Tsui

Taiwan’s stock market is booming, the New Taiwan dollar is strong and a Taiwanese collector is believed to have paid HK$197 million (US$25.4 million) for a Picasso in Hong Kong in September.

These are factors that drew various international galleries to Art Taipei, one of Asia’s longest-running art fairs that recently held its 2025 edition in the Taipei World Trade Centre.

Despite opening in the shadow of three years of steady decline in global art market turnover and rival fair Taipei Dangdai’s announcement that it would not return next year, some exhibitors left happy.

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“Art Taipei delivered,” Hong Kong gallerist Pascal de Sarthe said.

Art Taipei 2025 was held from October 23-27, 2025, at the Taipei World Trade Centre. Photo: Enid Tsui
Art Taipei 2025 was held from October 23-27, 2025, at the Taipei World Trade Centre. Photo: Enid Tsui

It might have helped that the fair, organised by the Taiwan Art Gallery Association (Taga), presented itself as an accessible “kaleidoscope” that catered to a wide range of tastes.

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