Active Women in the Art Market: 1950–2020. Mapping Gallerists, Collectors, Maecenas, Auctioneers, Curators in Emerging Markets

A special issue of Arts (ISSN 2076-0752).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 30 June 2026 | Viewed by 9208

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Art History Institute, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa – School of Social Sciences and Humanities/IN2PAST–Associate Laboratory for Research and Innovation in Heritage, Arts, Sustainability and Territory, 1069-061 Lisboa, Portugal
Interests: art markets; collecting; art fairs and biennials; contemporary art history

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Guest Editor
Independent Researcher, 28028 Madrid, Spain
Interests: the contemporary art market; artistic and cultural management

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Research on active women in the art market is gaining growing interest within academia, encouraged by gender studies, history of art, and art market studies. This Special Issue aims to highlight the role women have played as intermediaries in exhibiting, promoting, valuing, and trading art objects, as well as the challenges they face in advancing the development of the global art market and its impact on both the primary and secondary art markets. Our focus will be placed on the second half of the 20th century and the first decades of the 21st, moments of extensive development in emerging art markets.

Our purpose is to shed light on women who have distinguished themselves as intermediaries in the art market throughout their lives. Gallerists, collectors, maecenas, auctioneers, and curators have been building culturally engaging work that, in many circumstances, has remained socially invisible. Their innovative approaches have only recently started receiving attention compared to their male peers. We wish to make enhance the visibility of the contributions of women who have supported the birth of art market infrastructures, internationalized artists, supported exhibitions, collected, commissioned, and curated.

The timeframe for this Special Issue is from 1950 onward, a period when these roles became more pronounced. While we have a particular interest in contributions from countries belonging to the Global South, we also welcome submissions from Southern Europe, and their relationships with the Americas, Africa, and Asia, emphasizing their common positioning on the margins of the art market.

We invite proposals that explore, but are not necessarily limited to, the following themes:

  • The role active women from the Global South and Southern Europe have played in the art market, particularly in their connections with the Americas, Africa, and Asia.
  • The business models and strategies women use to overcome social obstacles imposed on their gender to perform their roles.
  • The networks created among intermediaries, gallerists, collectors, and other agents, and their contribution to the development of the métier and to change the cultural landscape.
  • Patterns identified in the behavior of women in the art market.
  • The work of art historians in the visualization and assessment of these women, and their incorporation into a new history of art with a gender perspective.

Dr. Adelaide Duarte
Prof. Dr. Marta Pérez-Ibáñez
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • art market
  • Global South
  • feminism
  • female studies
  • women gallerists
  • women art dealers
  • women collectors
  • women artists
  • women curators
  • gender equality

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Published Papers (4 papers)

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Research

18 pages, 278 KB  
Article
Women Art Collectors and Legacy: Two Case Studies Examining the Legacy-Building Strategies of Australian Women Art Collectors of Contemporary Art
by Catherine Asquith
Arts 2026, 15(6), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15060123 - 1 Jun 2026
Viewed by 249
Abstract
This paper examines two Australian women art collectors of contemporary art, Sydney-based Gene Sherman, and Melbourne-based Naomi Milgrom, each of whom is subject to case study analysis, interrogating their role and participation in arts-related scenarios, to highlight collector behaviour and discern legacy building [...] Read more.
This paper examines two Australian women art collectors of contemporary art, Sydney-based Gene Sherman, and Melbourne-based Naomi Milgrom, each of whom is subject to case study analysis, interrogating their role and participation in arts-related scenarios, to highlight collector behaviour and discern legacy building strategies and mechanisms. Using observations from these trajectories and case study scholarship of historically significant women collectors as a category of evidence, in addition to theoretical concepts to frame the analysis, I argue that women collectors hold inherent ambitions to construct a legacy. By employing strategic mechanisms in the form of publishing and archiving protocols, collaborative exhibitions with museums and institutions, and philanthropic initiatives, women collectors advance legacy building. Further, women collectors develop innovative and unorthodox programs incorporating multi-disciplinary approaches to facilitate legacy. Finally, I assert that women collectors leverage their positions, connections, and collections to support these legacy-building aspirations. Through a consideration of the women collectors’ active engagement with the art market, together with a comparative analysis of historical collector behaviour present within the relevant literature, this study has revealed several key findings. Collector behaviours discerned in the case studies comprise clearly articulated and intentional legacy building, sustained archival practices to preserve histories, innovation, collaboration with actors to facilitate legacy, and assertive leveraging of position, status and collections to strengthen legacy objectives. Full article
20 pages, 359 KB  
Article
Curatorial Strategies to Resist Gender Asymmetries in Portugal: Two Women-Only Landmark Exhibitions
by Rita Cêpa
Arts 2026, 15(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15010017 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1341
Abstract
This article adopts a comparative approach to two women-only landmark exhibitions in Portugal—Portuguese Women Artists (1977) and All I Want. Portuguese Women Artists from 1900 to 2020 (2021–2022)—to explore how curatorial strategies can function as tools of resistance to gender asymmetries in [...] Read more.
This article adopts a comparative approach to two women-only landmark exhibitions in Portugal—Portuguese Women Artists (1977) and All I Want. Portuguese Women Artists from 1900 to 2020 (2021–2022)—to explore how curatorial strategies can function as tools of resistance to gender asymmetries in the art field. Spanning 45 years, these initiatives reflect distinct historical, institutional, and cultural contexts: the former emerged in a post-revolutionary country as a bold, politically charged intervention, foregrounding female creativity within an established institution and promoting international visibility, while the latter offered a thematically structured survey that, albeit belatedly, engaged with more complex and globally informed debates. Both exhibitions converge in celebrating Portuguese women’s creative production, exposing persistent structural challenges and adopting critical yet defensive curatorial frameworks that reveal an ambivalent feminist gesture and certain limitations. By analysing these case studies, this research further emphasises the ongoing need for initiatives that foster discussion, awareness, visibility, and equity. Full article
20 pages, 2422 KB  
Article
The Legacy of Helga de Alvear: The Gallery, the Collection, the Museum—A Curatorial and Museographic Approach
by Marta Perez-Ibanez
Arts 2025, 14(4), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040092 - 7 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3337
Abstract
This article examines the significant contributions of Helga de Alvear as a gallerist, collector, and patron, a pivotal figure in the evolution of the Spanish and international contemporary art market. Her legacy is particularly notable through the establishment of the Helga de Alvear [...] Read more.
This article examines the significant contributions of Helga de Alvear as a gallerist, collector, and patron, a pivotal figure in the evolution of the Spanish and international contemporary art market. Her legacy is particularly notable through the establishment of the Helga de Alvear Museum in the city of Cáceres, intended to share her vast collection of over 3000 works and foster exhibition, research, conservation, and education. The study analyzes her art collection, highlighting its substantial international minimalist art component, contextualizing its development with her personal and professional journey. Furthermore, it explores the institutionalization of her legacy, from the Helga de Alvear Foundation to the creation and evolution of the museum, its innovative architecture and museography, and its impact on Cáceres’s urban landscape. Full article
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24 pages, 1367 KB  
Article
The Buades Gallery: A Tube of Oil Paint Open to the World Mercedes Buades and Her Support for Spanish Conceptualism, 1973–1978
by Sergio Rodríguez Beltrán
Arts 2025, 14(4), 80; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040080 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1343
Abstract
The Buades Gallery (1973–2003) was not merely a commercial space in Madrid. In the history of art in Spain, it served as a professional and political node for Spanish conceptualism, an art form which, due to its idiosyncrasies, required its own channels of [...] Read more.
The Buades Gallery (1973–2003) was not merely a commercial space in Madrid. In the history of art in Spain, it served as a professional and political node for Spanish conceptualism, an art form which, due to its idiosyncrasies, required its own channels of distribution. This article seeks to examine the trajectory of Mercedes Buades in alignment with this movement, re-evaluating her role from a feminist perspective and highlighting the importance of certain agents who have traditionally been invisibilised. To this end, a theoretical approach is adopted, following the sociology of art and the social history of art, paying particular attention to the contributions of Enrico Castelnuovo, Pierre Bourdieu and Núria Peist. These frameworks enable an analysis of the role of the gallerist as a structuring agent within the artistic field, capable of generating symbolic capital and establishing dynamics of production, circulation and consumption in the context of post-Franco Spain, a country that lacked a consolidated museum infrastructure at the time. Even so, Mercedes Buades established a model of gallery practice that, beyond its commercial dimension, contributed decisively to the symbolic configuration of contemporary art in Spain and formed part of a network of artistic visibility that promoted experimental art. Full article
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