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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art News > The Best Booths at Feria Material 2026
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The Best Booths at Feria Material 2026

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 6 February 2026 18:10
Published 6 February 2026
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Contents
Kianí del Valle at EmbajadaBerenice Olmedo at LodosElián Stolarsky at El Chico GalleryPerez Bros. at Charlie James Gallery“Mano de Obra” at CimbraConor Ackhurst at Season 4 Episode 6

For a little over a decade, Feria Material has brought together emerging and midsize galleries from across Mexico and Latin America, as well as the US and Europe, whose programs tend toward the experimental. Now in its 12th edition, the fair has gained a strong following, making it more than just a satellite to the larger Zona Maco, which opened its 22nd edition on Wednesday.

Material, whose newest edition launched on Thursday, has moved around quite a bit. A wrench was thrown into this year’s edition when it had to quickly pivot from Expo Reforma, where it had staged its last few editions, to find a new venue. The fair ultimately found one in Maravilla Studios, a series of soundstages in the city’s Atlampa neighborhood, about 20 minutes north—traffic permitting—from the old site. Despite a bit of farther travel, the fair was well attended during its opening day, with crowded booths and long lines for the impressive food and drink options in the early evening.

Dealers told ARTnews that there was new energy this year, likely because of the change in location. One benefit of Maravilla Studios: exhibitors aren’t split over multiple floors (accessible via slow escalators), as they were at Expo Reforma. Instead, the 70 participating galleries are divided into five salas (exhibition halls) that make the fair easily digestible.

Below, a look at the best booths at Feria Material 2026, which runs through Sunday, February 8.

  • Kianí del Valle at Embajada

    A group of abstract diagrams on a wall.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    Toward one end of Material’s largest space, Hall E, is Embajada’s booth, which features works by artists in the San Juan–based gallery’s program, including Claudia Peña Salinas and Georgina Treviño. The latter has designed a credit card for Mexican bank Hey Banco; Material visitors can register for it. On the exterior wall booth are a set of enigmatic drawings. At first glance, some appear to be schematics for a complex machine. In fact, they are movement notations by artist and choreographer Kianí del Valle, who collaborates with well-known musicians such as Lorde and Bad Bunny, whose Super Bowl performance del Valle helped envision. These uncanny drawings don’t reveal much to the untrained eye, but they are fascinating nonetheless. Above them are two monitors in which del Valle performs some of these compositions, including one in which she reinterprets the hellish parts of Hieronymus Bosch paintings.

  • Berenice Olmedo at Lodos

    Several prosthetics mounted to a wall.Several prosthetics mounted to a wall.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    This Mexico City gallery has two works by Berenice Olmedo, including Amalia (2021), a sculpture composed of various found prosthetics that the artist has joined together. To them, the artist has added motors and sensors that the sculpture to convulse at different intervals. The prosthetics that Olmedo uses in Amalia were originally intended for children that have since outgrown these devices, rendering them obsolete. Nearby, hanging on a wall, is Zeltzin (2025), which was commissioned for the artist’s recent exhibition at BAMPFA. Taking Olmedo’s use of prosthesis a step further, the work features various medical instruments—adjoined surgical steel traumatology instruments, aluminum tubes, socket adapters for prosthesis—which the artist has adjoined with resin, giving these implements a tactile quality.

  • Elián Stolarsky at El Chico Gallery

    A person walking among paintings on fabric depicting buildings.A person walking among paintings on fabric depicting buildings.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    Born in Montevideo and based in Madrid, Elián Stolarsky has a fascinating set of fabric works at the booth of El Chico Gallery, which also hails from the Spanish capital. Stolarsky is a second-generation member of a family that escaped the pogroms in Poland during the 20th century and relocated itself in Uruguay. There is little documentation accompanying that family history, which has acted as an animating force for the artist’s practice. The works here, made of various stitched together pieces of found fabric, are from an ongoing series entitled “País Extraño” (Strange Country). Stolarsky has expanded the series’ purview to survey conflicts around the world and how they not only impact global history but the history of a country, a people, and even a family facing displacement. Embedded in each of these works, some of which measure more than six feet, are drypoint renderings of photographs taken by Robert Capa during the Spanish Civil War. A moment captured in the single frame of a photo is just one element in the larger fabric of history, Stolarsky seems to say.

  • Perez Bros. at Charlie James Gallery

    Three paintings of cars and automobile wheels.Three paintings of cars and automobile wheels.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    On one wall of Charlie James Gallery’s booth is a set of mixed media works by the Perez Bros., whose work draws on the lowrider car shows they’ve attended since their youth in Los Angeles. From a distance, it appears as if the artists extracted a neat square or rectangle from the hood of a lowrider. But in fact, they have finished their tender acrylic paintings, seemingly made with graphite or ballpoint pen, with automotive glitter flake and epoxy. A yellow work, titled Sickass C4 (2025–26), shows a group of men admiring a convertible with a Felix cat, the mascot for a Chevy dealership in LA, grinning nearby. My favorite is 4 Life (2025), which takes the brothers’ lifelong dedication to cars to its visual extreme, with a chortling skeleton in the driver’s seat of a car.  

  • “Mano de Obra” at Cimbra

    A person staring at a booth with scaffolding in it.A person staring at a booth with scaffolding in it.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    Cimbra is an itinerate curatorial project from Oaxaca that started off by staging projects in abandoned spaces in 2022. It is participating in Material for the first time in the Proyectos section, which focuses on supporting the work of enterprises that highlight contemporary Mexican art. For the fair, Cimbra has brought together four Mexican artists for a maximalist group presentation, titled “Mano de Obra” (Labor), that packs a punch. All four artists—Blanca Gonzalez, Guadalupe Vidal, Marco Velasco, and Jysus Ramirez—focus on some of the most pressing issues in Mexico, including ever-increasing construction and how that can ultimately destroy the earth. Ramirez tackles the subject with an installation consisting of a yellow-painted scaffolding, onto which cardboard figures of construction workers perilously hang. Velasco takes a quieter approach with lamp-like sculptures resembling water jugs; they reflect on the precarity of water access in Oaxaca, a result of bad infrastructure and the current climate crisis.

  • Conor Ackhurst at Season 4 Episode 6

    Two framed pieces of felt that are carged to display concert halls.Two framed pieces of felt that are carged to display concert halls.
    Image Credit: Maximilíano Durón/ARTnews

    A pair of stacked pianos is one of the first things you see upon entering the fair’s Hall D space. The sculpture is a tribute to the composer Erik Satie, whose apartment outside Paris was discovered to contain his own stack of pianos upon his death in 1925. Behind this impressive installation is a suite of wall-hung works by Conor Ackhurst made of felt, a nod to the material’s use in pianos as shock absorbers and as a soundproofing material. These works, depicting different parts of the Sala Nezahualcóyotl, the main concert hall of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, are fascinating.

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