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Art Basel Hong Kong 2026 Unveils New Sectors, Digital Art Program, and Family Tours

  • Mar 20
  • 2 min read

Tickets for Art Basel Hong Kong 2026 are selling quickly as the fair prepares to anchor the city’s Art Month with expanded programming and new curated sectors.



This year’s edition introduces bold experiences, including monumental works in the Encounters sector, the Asia debut of the digital art initiative Zero 10, and Echoes, a presentation of works created within the last five years. These will be accompanied by an onsite and city-wide public program designed to energize Hong Kong.


Tickets can be purchased on the Art Basel website and are required for access to all fair sectors and ticketed events.


The Art Basel Shop will return to Hong Kong with artist-designed products, brand collaborations, limited-release collectibles, and fair-exclusive merchandise. The offer includes the AB by Artist Collection featuring a special capsule by Hong Kong-based artist Chan Wai Lap, available exclusively at the fair. The shop is located on Level 1 Concourse near Entrance 1D and is accessible to ticket holders only.



Art Basel Hong Kong and the Hong Kong Tourism Board will present a digital art projection on the facade of The Hong Kong Club Building in Central, featuring work by AOTM artist DeeKay from the Zero 10 project. Screenings are scheduled on March 24 from 7:30pm to 11pm, and from March 25 to 29 every evening from 7pm to 11pm.


For younger visitors, Art Kids will offer fully supervised art tours for children aged 5 to 12, led by educators from Colour My World. Through structured activities, participants will explore selected works across the fair. Capacity is limited, and private tours are available on request via email inquiry.



Guided tours for general visitors will focus on key highlights of the fair, including the new Echoes and Zero 10 sectors, offering structured introductions to contemporary art from across the region and beyond. Advance booking is required and can be completed online.


By ML. Photo(s)/Art Basel

 
 
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