April is Art Fair season in Dallas. The Dallas Art Fair and the Dallas Invitational have announced their exhibitor lists for 2026, each featuring Texas galleries among dozens of U.S.-based and international venues.
Seventeen Texas galleries will join the list of 85 participating galleries in the Dallas Art Fair, to take place Thursday, April 16, through Sunday, April 19, at its traditional Fashion Industry Gallery location.
Dallas galleries in the fair are Conduit Gallery, Cris Worley Fine Arts, Erin Cluley Gallery, Galleri Urbane, James Harris Gallery, Meliksetian | Briggs, Nature of Things, Pencil on Paper Gallery, Sputnik Modern, and Valley House Gallery, along with William Campbell Gallery from Fort Worth. Participating Houston venues are Inman Gallery, McClain Gallery, and Seven Sisters. Other Texas galleries in the fair will be Ivester Contemporary from Austin, Jody Klotz Fine Art from Abilene, and RULE Gallery from Marfa.
In a press release, the fair, which started in 2009, counted more than 17,000 visitors to its 2025 edition. Kelly Cornell, Dallas Art Fair Director, said the fair “has become a vital moment each spring for collectors, artists and institutions to connect and discover what’s next in contemporary art. What’s particularly exciting this year is how many global galleries are expanding their presence here — recognizing the caliber, curiosity, and commitment of new and established Dallas collectors. This lineup not only showcases the dynamic range of work being produced today, but it also reinforces Dallas’ momentum as a major destination for art, culture, and meaningful collector relationships.”
Participating galleries from outside the U.S. include Blouin Division from Montreal, Galerie Nicolas Robert from Montreal and Toronto, Galería Ethra and OMR from Mexico City, Galería de las Misiones from Menorca and Montevideo, Kerlin Gallery from Dublin, Sorry We’re Closed from Brussels, Modern Animals from Zurich, Tezukayama Gallery from Osaka and Koki Arts from Tokyo, Zidoun-Bossuyt with locations in Dubai, Luxembourg and Paris, and Perrotin, with multiple locations around the world. The full list of exhibitors is below.
General admission prices for the fair range from $40 for a one-day ticket to $84 for a three-day pass.
A key component of the fair for Dallas artists is the Dallas Art Fair Foundation’s Art Acquisition Fund. Started in 2016, the fund has annually supported the purchase of artworks from the fair for local institutions including the Dallas Museum of Art, which has acquired more than 70 works for its permanent collection.
The Dallas Invitational will host two Texas galleries among its 22 venues: Gallery 12.26 and James Cope, the fair’s organizer and a member of its advisory council. Participating venues from other locations include Galerie Lelong and Susan Inglett Gallery from New York, Good Weather from Chicago and Little Rock, Arkansas, Anna Erickson Presents from Nashville, Nina Johnson from Miami, and international galleries Vardaxoglou from London, Gathering from London and Ibiza, Gió Marconi from Milan, and Galeria Mascota from Mexico City.
The Dallas Invitational, which started in 2023 with 13 galleries, will take place Thursday, April 16, through Saturday, April 18, at the Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek hotel. Learn more about the fair on its website. The full list of Dallas Invitational exhibitors is below.
2026 Dallas Art Fair Exhibitors
ACA Galleries (New York)
Alexander Berggruen (New York)
Alisan Fine Arts (Hong Kong and New York)
Anat Ebgi Gallery (Los Angeles and New York)
Andrew Reed Gallery (Miami and New York)
Avery Galleries (New York and Pennsylvania)
Baker-Hall (Miami)
Beatriz Esguerra Art (Bogotá and Miami)
Bienvenu, Steinberg & C (New York)
Blouin Division (Montreal)
CADOGAN (London)
CANADA (New York)
Carpenters Workshop Gallery (London, Los Angeles, New York and Paris)
Carvalho (Brooklyn)
Conduit Gallery (Dallas)
Cris Worley Fine Arts (Dallas)
Cristin Tierney Gallery (New York)
David B. Smith Gallery (Denver)
Erin Cluley Gallery (Dallas)
Franklin Parrasch Gallery (New York)
Galería de las Misiones (Menorca and Montevideo)
Galería Ethra (Mexico City)
Galerie Nicolas Robert (Montreal and Toronto)
Galleri Urbane (Dallas)
Gerald Peters Gallery (New York and Santa Fe)
Hales Gallery (London and New York)
Hesse Flatow (New York)
Hollis Taggart (New York)
Inman Gallery (Houston)
Ivester Contemporary (Austin)
Jacob Arthur Gallery (Los Angeles)
James Fuentes Gallery (New York and Los Angeles)
James Harris Gallery (Dallas)
Jody Klotz Fine Art (Abilene)
Josh Lilley Gallery (London)
Kerlin Gallery (Dublin)
Koki Arts (Tokyo)
Library Street Collective (Detroit)
Louis Stern Fine Arts (Los Angeles)
LUCE Gallery (Torino)
Luis De Jesus Gallery (Los Angeles)
Make Room (Los Angeles)
McClain Gallery (Houston)
Meliksetian Briggs (Dallas)
Michael Kohn Gallery (Los Angeles)
Mindy Solomon Gallery (Miami)
Modern Animals (Zurich)
Morgan Lehman Gallery (New York)
Nature of Things (Dallas)
Nicholas Metivier Gallery (Toronto)
Nino Mier Gallery (New York)
OMR (Mexico City)
Patel Brown (Toronto)
Pencil on Paper Gallery (Dallas)
Perrotin (Los Angeles, Paris, London, Hong Kong, Seoul, Tokyo, Shanghai, Dubai and New York)
Philip Martin Gallery (Los Angeles)
PIERMARQ (Sydney)
Piero Atchugarry (Miami)
RONCHINI (London)
RULE Gallery (Denver and Marfa)
Saenger Galería (Mexico City)
Sapar Contemporary (New York)
Sears-Peyton Gallery (New York)
SECCI (Milan)
Seizan Gallery (New York and Tokyo)
Seven Sisters (Houston)
Sheet Cake Gallery (Memphis)
SOCO Gallery (Charlotte)
SOLOS Gallery (Digital gallery)
Sorry We’re Closed (Brussels)
Spinello Projects (Miami)
Sputnik Modern (Dallas)
Sundaram Tagore Gallery (New York)
TAI Modern (Santa Fe)
Tezukayama Gallery (Osaka)
The Fridge (New York)
Turner Carroll Gallery (Santa Fe)
Ulterior Gallery (New York)
Vallarino Fine Art (New York)
Valley House Gallery (Dallas)
Westwood Gallery (New York)
William Campbell Gallery (Fort Worth)
Wishbone Gallery (Montreal)
Yossi Milo (New York)
Zidoun-Bossuyt (Dubai, Luxembourg and Paris)
