TEFAF Maastricht closes with strong attendance and sustained market confidence
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TEFAF Maastricht closes with strong attendance and sustained market confidence
The 39th edition of TEFAF Maastricht has concluded with exceptional attendance and sustained market momentum, cementing its position as the world’s leading fair for art, antiques, and design.



MAASTRICHT.- The 39th edition of TEFAF Maastricht 2026 has come to a close with a clear message to the global art world: even in a complex geopolitical climate, the appetite for exceptional art remains not only intact, but thriving.

Over the course of eight days, more than 50,000 visitors passed through the fair’s halls, reinforcing TEFAF’s reputation as the most prestigious marketplace for fine art, antiques, and design. For many exhibitors, the tone was set early during preview days—and it never let up.

A global meeting point for museums and collectors

Institutional presence once again defined TEFAF’s unique position within the art ecosystem. More than 450 museums were represented, alongside 67 patron groups, making Maastricht a temporary hub for curators, scholars, and decision-makers shaping the future of collections worldwide.

Leading institutions in attendance included the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Rijksmuseum, the Louvre and its Abu Dhabi counterpart, the Musée d’Orsay, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, among many others.

Their presence translated directly into acquisitions, loans, and long-term relationships—underscoring TEFAF’s dual identity as both marketplace and intellectual forum.

A resilient market benchmark

Set against ongoing global uncertainty, TEFAF Maastricht proved once again to be a reliable barometer of the high-end art market. Dealers reported steady sales throughout the week, with some calling this edition one of their most successful in recent years.

The fair’s strength lies not only in its results but in its continuity: 25% of exhibitors have participated for more than two decades, reflecting a level of trust rarely seen in the art fair circuit.

Major transactions spanned categories—from rare books and Old Masters to modern and contemporary works. Highlights included:

A CHF 5 million medieval manuscript sold by Dr. Jörn Günther Rare Books

A €20 million pair of Claude Monet paintings placed on reserve for a private collector

A €1.5 million 14th-century marble sculpture acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Multiple seven-figure sales across galleries specializing in modern and contemporary art

These results point to a market that is not only active, but increasingly confident in long-term value.

Accessibility meets connoisseurship

Despite its reputation for museum-quality masterpieces, TEFAF continues to broaden its reach. Works at the fair ranged from €2,000 to multi-million-euro pieces, offering entry points for both seasoned collectors and newcomers.

A key initiative in this effort is the Emerging Collector Program, curated this year by Paul Arnhold. The program featured 96 galleries presenting works under €20,000, signaling a conscious effort to cultivate the next generation of buyers.

At the same time, TEFAF maintained its commitment to scholarship. In partnership with Maastricht University, the fair hosted a five-day Curator Course, welcoming ten international curators and reinforcing its educational mission.

Shifting tastes and collecting trends

Across booths and conversations, several clear trends emerged, offering insight into the evolving priorities of today’s collectors:

A renewed demand for smaller-scale works, prized for their intimacy

Increased interest in cross-category collecting, blending periods and disciplines

Strong emphasis on provenance and rarity

Growing recognition of historically overlooked artists, particularly women

A heightened appreciation for materiality and craftsmanship

Together, these tendencies suggest a more nuanced and research-driven collector base—one that values context as much as aesthetics.

Culture, policy, and economic impact

Beyond sales, TEFAF also positioned itself as a platform for broader cultural dialogue. The TEFAF Summit, supported by AXA XL, brought together 250 international delegates from the worlds of art, academia, finance, and public policy.

Under the theme “Beyond Economic Impact: Rethinking Culture in Public Policy,” discussions explored how the arts intersect with social development, healthcare, and economic systems.

A major highlight was the release of TEFAF’s first Economic Impact Report, produced in collaboration with Deloitte. The findings were striking: the fair generates €86.4 million for the Dutch economy, including €37.9 million directly in Maastricht.

A fair that remains a cultural touchstone

For TEFAF leadership, the 2026 edition reaffirmed the fair’s broader significance.

Boris Vervoordt, President of the Executive Committee, described TEFAF as “not only a marketplace, but a cultural touchstone”—a place where 7,000 years of human creativity are brought into dialogue under one roof.

Exhibitors echoed that sentiment. Many pointed to strong engagement from both museums and private collectors, while others highlighted renewed interest in historical works, particularly Old Masters.










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