The Postcode Lottery of London Gallery Weekend
London's far-flung galleries will fill with visitors this weekend, but beyond the monied centre, will anyone actually buy?

Nada Elkalaawy, Scene XIV: A Stir of Echoes, 2025-26 (installation view, Matt Carey-Williams). Courtesy the artist and Matt Carey-Williams
London Gallery Weekend (LGW) has, by its own metrics, become a significant fixture in the contemporary London art calendar.
Set between the close of the spring auction season and the opening of Art Basel, the event sees over 120 galleries across the capital coalesce into a single, coordinated programme, one that has attracted more than 250,000 visitors since its inception five years ago.
In practice, it is also an exercise in psycho-geography: down to Deptford and Peckham, east to Shoreditch and Bethnal Green, northwest to Lisson Grove, further out to Park Royal and Harlesden, the programme provides a version of the city that lies outside the art market's usual centripetal forces.
But while the map may be generous, the terrain is not always equal.
For galleries located in the zones the weekend's VIP tours and curated routes can easily reach, LGW functions primarily as a way to re-engage their existing collector base while directing outreach energy towards an influx of visiting curators.

Kembra Pfahler, abra kedavour costume and flyer for a show at the HOLE gallery during the pandemic years, 2026, pen, marker, acrylic, whiteout on paper, tulipwood frame, 50 x 70 x 3 cm (framed). Photo: Stephen James. Courtesy the artist and Emalin, London
But what about the other galleries, located in the postcodes that many well-heeled collectors would never think to tread, and feeling the brunt of a market under immense economic pressure?
"I'm not sure there's an average London collector anymore," says Eilidh Watson from Matt Carey-Williams gallery, whose space is off the Edgware Road. "What has shifted is people are now collecting with greater confidence in their own tastes, rather than simply following the prevailing market narrative."
Several gallerists describe a generational turn: older collectors are slowing down and their children are not always following. The gap is currently being filled from elsewhere. Sundaram Tagore, inaugurating its London space on Pall Mall this weekend after building an international base across New York and Singapore, says the city is a "natural meeting point" for collectors already in motion.
But London's draw as a globally connected market is under measurable pressure: UK sales, though up 2 percent in 2025, remain 15 percent below their pre-pandemic peak, while administrative changes introduced by Brexit continue to deter overseas collectors. But if the mid-tier closures of the past few years have shown us anything, it is that the broader London market has yet to resolve the tension between its international ambitions and its domestic market realities.
LGW sidesteps this by way of timing. Many collectors arrive via the Venice Biennale circuit, others tour Europe ahead of Art Basel the following week. Edward Sheldrick of Elizabeth Xi Bauer gallery in Clerkenwell has noticed his collector base skew younger alongside a marked increase in visitors travelling from other parts of the country and the world. Similarly, Cedric Bardawil, the Soho gallerist who has sold work in the past off the back of LGW events or tours, welcomed American collectors into his space. They came specifically to visit Alice Macdonald's show before travelling on.
"The art world is getting so much bigger, so there's always new people from new places," says Kate MacGarry, who has run her gallery in Shoreditch for 24 years. "LGW tends to reach a much wider public audience than something like Condo London, which is a bit more of an insider's thing."
For many collectors, the weekend functions as an entry point for galleries they would never normally engage with. At Walworth's SOUP, Hector Campbell finds younger buyers "eager to engage with a gallery programme as a whole", rather than simply acquire new works. At Shoreditch's SLQS, Sarah Le Quang Sang says that LGW's east London tours on a Sunday have brought new collectors through the door; at Copperfield in Borough, Andrea Maffioli says that LGW's general tours reach people who might otherwise be too afraid to visit or enquire about an exhibition. In the monied west of London, the newly formed Lisson Grove Galleries collective has organised a coordinated day of back-to-back events across five neighbouring spaces.

Alice Mac, Crow and Seagull, 2026, oil on canvas, 90 x 110cm. Courtesy the artist and Cedric Bardawil
There is a vision of visitors who arrive as members of the public and leave, potentially, as the market's next participants. As Angelina Volk of Shoreditch’s Emalin says: "Everyone plays an equally important role in the ecosystem, whether they are curators or writers or artists or clients. We don't really differentiate."
But the most dynamic collective social programming in 2026 tends to happen further out, beyond Mayfair, Soho and Shoreditch and into the reaches of the city. At Queensrollahouse in Acton, about as far from the Serpentine as it is possible to get while remaining within the LGW map, eight galleries including Harlesden High Street, Sherbet Green and Season 4 Episode 6 are hosting what curator Sophie Barrett-Pouleau calls "one last laugh of London Gallery Weekend".
But galleries further from the weekend's established routes report a more complicated return on participation. The entry cost, understood to be in the region of £550 per gallery, is the same regardless of location, but, given the city's geography, the footfall it buys is not. Some galleries in close proximity have responded pragmatically by sharing fees, which in turn allows neighbours to benefit from a single gallery's participation without paying in themselves. The committee's practical response has been to introduce a minibus service connecting all South London LGW galleries for VIPs and curators, although it remains a major challenge to extend the same route density that central London galleries receive naturally to the average non-VIP. A European collector tells me they find London's version considerably tamer than Gallery Weekend Berlin's well-established after-hours culture, and not interesting enough to justify staying in the city for the weekend.
Fee-sharing and minibuses are pragmatic responses to broader issues LGW did not create. The larger market has its own version of the same problem: if the mid-tier closures of the past few years demonstrated anything, it is that central locations offer no guarantee of commercial viability in a market that has contracted to the extent it has. "It's a challenging business for both artists and galleries," says Maximillian William, owner of the Fitzrovia gallery. "For most of us, this is a labour of love, and every year you're able to continue doing it feels like a privilege." Pressed on the subject, most gallerists decline to comment, deeming circumstances too individual and generalisations too unreliable.
What does emerge is a countervailing optimism: the Art Basel/UBS Art Market Report 2024 found that dealers with turnover under $500,000 recorded an 11 percent increase in sales, while those with turnover above $10 million saw averages decline by 7 percent. LGW's own figures reflect this, with 15 new participants in the 2025 edition, 11 of which had opened in London within the previous two years, while 27 participating galleries have opened in or relocated to larger spaces across the same period.
It is tempting therefore to conclude that the market is self-correcting. But the conditions that made Harlesden, Park Royal and Acton the frontier of London's emerging gallery scene, including rising rents and tightening collector liquidity, are the same conditions that closed the mid-tier galleries before them. This is real estate affordable enough to take risks in, but only for now. Harlesden High Street's Gloria's, a parody of GAIL's bakery that takes as its subject the disappearance of third spaces for POC through gentrification, makes the point from a postcode the official LGW map only just about reaches. The curatorial attention LGW brings to these spaces is valuable, but is a programme that offers smaller galleries their best route to institutional traction also at risk of reshaping what those galleries feel able to make and show?

Reginald Sylvester II, ‘Noa's First’, 2026, acrylic and drab shelter half on rubber, 182.9 x 152.4 cm. Courtesy the artist and Maximillian William, London
The weekend's ambitions are noble and its curatorial routing has matured considerably, but these are not the same thing as market (or indeed moral) health. The dominant purchasing mechanisms remain tied to institutional grants, public collections and government funds, rather than the discretionary private collector spend that sustains a gallery's commercial programme in the longer term. Overseas collectors continue to orient primarily around established names in Mayfair and Fitzrovia. For newer and younger galleries, especially those on the periphery, the weekend functions largely as a way to secure press, occasionally useful for relationships or institutional introductions, but not yet a reliable revenue driver. As Lucas Giles of Palmer Gallery (who timed Carolina Aguirre's solo exhibition specifically around the weekend) puts it: "London Gallery Weekend is good for footfall and good institutional contact, but not so much collectors."
Is footfall, in a contracting mid-market, sufficient collateral? The next generation of London gallerists has inherited a landscape reshaped by closures they did not cause and a collector base still recalibrating after years of market volatility. LGW can clearly bring people through the door, but whether they actually buy, and from whom, remains the more pressing question.
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