By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
  • Current
  • Art News
  • Art Exhibitions
  • Artists
  • Art Collectors
  • Art Events
  • About
  • Collaboration
Search
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: The Best Booths at the 2026 Outsider Art Fair
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Current
  • Art News
  • Art Exhibitions
  • Artists
  • Art Collectors
  • Art Events
  • About
  • Collaboration
  • Advertise
2024 © BublikArt Gallery. All Rights Reserved.
BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art Collectors > The Best Booths at the 2026 Outsider Art Fair
Art Collectors

The Best Booths at the 2026 Outsider Art Fair

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 20 March 2026 16:43
Published 20 March 2026
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE


Contents
“From the North”Fleisher/OllmanGalerie BonheurDuttonPol Lemétais

The field of outsider art continues to expand its parameters, encompassing not only the output of self-taught artists, folk artists, vernacular artists, and artists with developmental, mental, and physical disabilities, but virtually any maker working outside the mainstream, whether by choice or by circumstance. At the same time, however, outsider art itself is going mainstream: in recent years it has been a focus of, or significant presence in, institutional exhibitions and biennials such as the upcoming Minnie Evans show at the Whitney and the 2024 Venice Biennale.

Perhaps most tellingly, it is attracting attention from the art market as well, with Christie’s now holding an annual auction dedicated to work by outsiders. In line with these developments, and somewhat paradoxically, the Outsider Art Fair has become both more clearly a stakeholder in a growing market category, and, at the same time, more wide-ranging than ever in its definition of “outsider.”

This year’s installations run the gamut from a resurrection of Susan Cianciolo’s Run Store (2000), which features clothing and home goods created by the indie fashion designer and 40 of her friends, students, and past collaborators, to the Gallery of Everything’s solo booth of works by self-taught Gullah artist Sam Doyle (1906–1985).

As it does every year, the fair has likewise made room for a variety of price points and approaches. Ricco Maresca’s spare installation of big-ticket works by Bill Traylor, Martín Ramírez, and Henry Darger, for example, rubs shoulders with Keith de Lellis’s crowded, salon-style hang of affordable vernacular photographs, photo albums, and works on paper, including an astonishing early silkscreen by photographer Roy DeCarava. Elsewhere, a scholarly presentation of proto-Surrealist works at Cavin Morris exists comfortably beside exuberantly chaotic booths of workshops like New York’s Fountain House Gallery.

Below are five more standout booths.

  • “From the North”

    Kenojuak Ashevak, Rabbit Eating Seaweed, 1959
    Image Credit: Feheley Fine Arts.

    The community of Kinngait (known as Cape Dorset until 2020) in Nunavut, northern Canada, has produced such renowned Inuit artists as Kananginak Pootoogook, Pitseolak Ashoona, and Kenojuak Ashevak, largely through the West Baffin Eskimo Cooperative, an art studio established in 1959. This year, the fair’s annual project, “From the North,” has been curated by Canadian galleries Elca London and Feheley Fine Arts (which also has its own booth at the fair). It presents a selection of stunning works Kinngait artists, including prints made between 1959 and 2009 at Kinngait Studios, Canada’s oldest printmaking studio. Notable works include an early print by Ashevak showcasing the artist’s signature curvilinear forms, and Carrying Suicidal People (2011), a devastating colored-pencil drawing by Shuvinai Ashoona (b. 1961), who frequently addresses the sometimes bitter realities of contemporary Indigenous life.

  • Fleisher/Ollman

    Philadelphia Wireman, Untitled (Placard, Cigar Tube, Rubberized Wire, Tool), c. 1970‌–‌75Philadelphia Wireman, Untitled (Placard, Cigar Tube, Rubberized Wire, Tool), c. 1970‌–‌75
    Image Credit: Courtesy Fleisher/Ollman

    A veteran outsider art gallery, Fleisher/Ollman is showing exceptional works by William Edmondson, Joseph Yoakum, James Castle, and other 20th-century giants, as well as a group of seven sculptures by the Philadelphia Wireman, an unknown maker whose works were found abandoned in an alley in Philadelphia in the late 1970s. Each of the Wireman’s creations is a collection of found objects, including pens, nails, jewelry, scraps of plastic, and other small items bound together with wire, tape, or rubber bands. This artist rarely included printed packaging of any size in their works, which makes this Pop art–adjacent piece so unusual.

  • Galerie Bonheur

    Geoffrey Holder, Flowers in a Blue Vase, 1985Geoffrey Holder, Flowers in a Blue Vase, 1985
    Image Credit: Courtesy Galerie Bonheur

    Galerie Bonheur of St. Louis; Palm City, Florida; and Sapphire, North Carolina, is featuring two works—a still-life and a landscape—by Trinidadian-born actor, theater director, and costume designer Geoffrey Holder, perhaps best known for his Tony award–winning work on The Wiz (and his 7-UP commercials). The gallery is also showing an exceptionally large beaded Haitian Voudou flag, which shares a wall with contemporary interpretations of traditional flags by Haitian artist Mirelle Delice, a mentee of famed flag artist Myrlande Constant.

  • Dutton

    Selby Warren, Lake Peder Tasmane (sic), 1970Selby Warren, Lake Peder Tasmane (sic), 1970
    Image Credit: Courtesy Dutton

    One wall of Dutton gallery’s booth is committed to works by Australian bushman Selby Warren (1887–1979). Warren, who took up painting at age 76 and was discovered at 85, created memory paintings using that frequently incorporated mud, sand, grass clippings, and building materials. In them, he recorded his life as an itinerant laborer and the countryside and wildlife of New South Wales. His most extraordinary paintings—like this Kurt Schwitters–like composition—are startling modernistic. More of Warren’s art is on view at Dutton’s New York gallery through March 29.

  • Pol Lemétais

    Roman Vissalavski, Propaganda, 2021Roman Vissalavski, Propaganda, 2021
    Image Credit: Courtesy Pol Lemétais

    In addition to examples of classic Art Brut, French gallery Pol Lemétais is offering a selection of nearly abstract postcards by visionary British artist Madge Gill (1882–1961) and spellbinding ink drawings on vintage maps by French outsider Evelyne Postic (b. 1951), for which she won Japan’s 2025 Heralbony Art Grand Prize. Lemétais is also showing a group of sketchbook pages by newcomer Roman Vissalavski, which provide one of the few political moments in the fair. Born in Belarus in the 1990s, Vissalavski fled first to Poland before moving to France in 2024. His comic book–like pencil drawings, filled with armed soldiers and activists in miniskirts, provide trenchant commentary on his country of origin and, by extension, contemporary society as a whole. “To create, you need talent,” reads the text in one drawing. “to ruin, all it takes is malice.” True words for our times.

You Might Also Like

Art Basel Company MCH is Working On Ideas Festival to Launch in 2028

Longtime New Yorker Art Writer Dies at 100

San Francisco Mural of Cesar Chavez Painted Over

In Stanford Show, Miljohn Ruperto Trolls the Death Drive of AI Guys

Di Donna to Mount First Major Dalí Show in NYC in Nearly Two Decades

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Previous Article Lily Allen’s “West End Girl” album art goes on view at London's National Portrait Gallery. Lily Allen’s “West End Girl” album art goes on view at London's National Portrait Gallery.
Next Article Czech Culture Minister Dismisses Director of Prague’s National Gallery Czech Culture Minister Dismisses Director of Prague’s National Gallery
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
2024 © BublikArt Gallery. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Security
  • About
  • Collaboration
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?