Brussels Forecast

1. A Long-Awaited Institutional Turning Point

“Brussels didn't have a major collecting institution dedicated to contemporary and modern art… it was clearly an omission. So we're going to inhabit this institutional void.”

For a city with an exceptional density of artists, collectors, and art schools, the absence of a major contemporary art museum has been a defining gap in Brussels’ ecosystem. The opening of Kanal–Centre Pompidou marks a structural shift, bringing institutional weight to a scene historically shaped by private initiatives and dispersed structures.

2. Kanal: A Museum Built on Publicness and Urban Complexity

Kanal is conceived not just as a museum, but as a civic platform embedded in a socially and economically complex urban context. Its emphasis on accessibility, inclusivity, and public space reflects a broader rethinking of what a museum should be post-2020, balancing global ambition with local responsibility in one of the most diverse cities in the world.

3. A City Built on Collaboration

What defines Brussels is not a single dominant institution or event, but the interplay between many actors: galleries, fairs, institutions, and private foundations. Moments like Art Brussels activate the entire city, aligning programming and audiences, and reinforcing a culture of collaboration between the private and non-profit sectors.

4. Art Brussels: A Discovery Fair with a Distinct Identity

Rather than competing on scale, Art Brussels has maintained a strong identity as a discovery-led fair. It encourages exploration across generations and practices, and its loyal audience reflects a deeper level of engagement, positioning it as both a gateway for emerging artists and a key meeting point within the European art calendar.

5. From Objects to Experiences: A Shift in Collecting Culture

“The art collector community… is very much becoming almost like a lifestyle.”

Collecting is evolving from object-based acquisition toward experience-driven engagement. Today’s collectors are increasingly motivated by travel, immersion, and direct connection to artists and their environments.

6. Beyond Painting: Expanding Artistic Practices

The market is moving beyond its historical focus on painting, with growing attention toward textiles, ceramics, and large-scale or immersive practices. This reflects broader changes in artistic production, as well as a collector base that is more open to multidisciplinary and material-driven work.

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