From Seoul to Abu Dhabi, the world’s most influential art fairs have become cultural waypoints — brief but heightened moments when cities reveal themselves at their most expressive. Art and gastronomy share a common language: composition, contrast and a touch of audacity, and during fair week that dialogue extends well beyond the exhibition halls. It unfolds in hotel bars, restaurant kitchens and late-night tables where collectors, chefs and curators cross paths.
This guide follows the global art calendar across 10 major fairs, from Paris and London to Asia and the Middle East, mapping where to stay and where to eat when the art world descends. More than a list of addresses, it’s a way to plan a long weekend that satisfies both the eye and the appetite — an itinerary for travelers who come to look, and stay to linger.
1. Art Basel Qatar — Feb. 5-7, 2026
Doha’s Basel art fair debut is here: The Gulf’s creative ambitions are no longer emerging — they’ve arrived. The fair unfolds amid mosques, museums and futuristic skylines that make every walk feel like a site-specific installation.
Where to Eat
● IDAM by Alain Ducasse (One Star) – Perched atop the Museum of Islamic Art, this dining room is modern majesty: soaring arches, arabesque lattices and Ducasse’s haute-meets-hospitality brilliance.
● Hakkasan (MICHELIN selected) – A labyrinth of carved screens and shadowed alcoves where Cantonese classics — dim sum, Peking duck — meet design precision.
● Morimoto (MICHELIN selected) – Part gallery, part gastronomic spectacle, this restaurant brings together Japanese ritual and Qatari flair, with signature omakase beneath sculptural lights.
Where to Stay
● Mondrian Doha (MICHELIN selected) – A fever dream of curves, mirrors and color by Marcel Wanders. Every hallway is a fantasy sequence, perfect for those who treat their hotel as muse.
● Banyan Tree Doha at La Cigale Mushaireb (MICHELIN selected) – Minimalist luxury with botanical calm, its interiors are a study in symmetry and scent.
● The Ritz-Carlton Doha (MICHELIN selected) – Classic, marble-clad and meticulously curated, it’s where international collectors retreat after the private art viewing at the vernissage.
2. Frieze Los Angeles — Feb. 26-March 1, 2026
Frieze L.A. captures the city’s peculiar alchemy — half film set; half think piece. At the Santa Monica Airport, the art crowd mingles with Hollywood’s creative elite, proving that no city blurs high and low quite like this.
Where to Eat
● Kato (One Star) – Jonathan Yao’s serene tasting room transforms L.A.’s cultural diversity into a narrative: Taiwanese techniques, Californian produce, Japanese restraint. It’s art direction you can eat.
● Providence (Three Stars) – The seafood tasting menus are a study in precision: local fish rendered with the elegance of Japanese calligraphy. Chef Michael Cimarusti’s plating is as contemplative as any installation.
● République (MICHELIN selected) – Inside Charlie Chaplin’s former studio, sunlight spills through cathedral windows over marble counters. Every croissant, steak frites and pastry is a sculptural moment.
Where to Stay
● Hotel Per La (MICHELIN selected) – A reimagined 1920s bank dressed in marble, terrazzo and contemporary art. Downstairs, cocktails flow among the city’s quiet power players.
● The Aster (One Key) – Equal parts hotel and members’ club, it’s the fairgoer’s home base with rooftop screenings, creative networking and impeccable lighting for your next portrait.
● The West Hollywood EDITION (MICHELIN selected) – John Pawson’s minimalism meets L.A.’s golden-hour glow in a hotel designed like a gallery, with skyline views that feel cinematic.
3. TEFAF Maastricht — March 14-19, 2026
TEFAF is art’s most understated spectacle, where the wealthy whisper and the details matter. Maastricht’s culinary and hotel scene reflect that same composure.
Where to Eat
● Beluga Loves You (One Star) – Light-filled, modern and inventive — local produce sculpted into visual poetry.
● Onglet (MICHELIN selected) – A butcher’s shop turned fine-dining temple: playful, industrial, deeply original.
● Tout à Fait (MICHELIN selected) – Elegant, softly lit and quietly luxurious — the culinary version of a Vermeer.
Where to Stay
● Kruisherenhotel Maastricht (MICHELIN selected) – Stained glass meets steel in a 15th-century monastery reborn through modern architecture.
● Château Neercanne (Two Keys) – Perfect for a stay in the quiet of the country just outside the city, this sublime 1698 château carved into a hillside is home to a MICHELIN-Starred restaurant and a Bib Gourmand bistro, though its newest chapter includes seven elegantly restored suites in the 17th-century lodgment.
● Cousins Boutique Hotel – A lovely little spot right in the heart of town. The muted palette of cream, brown and touches of black make it a contemporary but restful abode to set your bags down during the fair.
4. Venice Biennale — May 9-Nov. 22, 2026
The Biennale is the art world’s pilgrimage destination — a surreal network of pavilions, palazzi and prosecco. Nowhere else does creativity shimmer quite like this.
Where to Eat
● Oro Restaurant (One Star) – Hotel Cipriani’s lagoonside masterpiece, where tasting menus resemble Renaissance paintings in composition and decadence.
● Local (One Star) – A minimalist lagoonside restaurant translating Venetian tradition into poetic simplicity.
● Quadri (One Star) – Centuries-old grandeur and dishes that blend history with high technique.
Where to Stay
● Aman Venice (Three Keys) – Quiet opulence behind a 16th-century facade. Frescoes and Murano glass meet unshowy modern comfort.
● Il Palazzo Experimental (One Key) – A Memphis Group-inspired hotel where each color and curve is curated. A creative haven for design lovers.
● Madama Venice – A small, intimate upscale hotel of just eight rooms, it’s tucked in the bohemian northern neighborhood of Cannaregio, and it feels sealed off from the bustle thanks to its small leafy garden.
5. Frieze Seoul — Sept. 2-5, 2026
Seoul has become art’s most electric frontier, where street wear, sculpture and fine dining all share a common rhythm.
Where to Eat
● Buchon Yukhoe (Bib Gourmand) – An essential spot to taste the city, it delivers impeccably fresh, locally sourced raw beef in the heart of Gwangjang Market. It’s a real Seoul institution since 1965 and the perfect counterpoint to a day of looking at art.
● Onjium (One Star) – A research-based restaurant preserving royal Korean recipes with obsessive beauty. Part atelier, part temple.
● Zero Complex (One Star) – Experimental, architectural cuisine served in stark, gallery-white rooms. One of Asia’s most exciting dining experiences.
Where to Stay
● Hotel Cappuccino (MICHELIN selected) – Stay here during Frieze Seoul for a Gangnam base close to the fair venue that feels plugged into the art world itself. It mixes design-forward rooms, social energy and rooftop views with the kind of creative, community-minded spirit that suits the art set perfectly.
● Signiel Seoul (Two Keys) – Located high above the city in Lotte Tower, the interiors are as rarefied as the skyline views.
● Four Seasons Hotel Seoul (One Key) – Sleek and sensual, filled with curated Korean art and the city’s most civilized cocktail bar.
6. Art Basel Paris — Oct. 23-25, 2026
Paris remains the art world’s eternal capital: Even its cobblestones feel curated. Art Basel Paris unfolds under the Grand Palais’ soaring glass nave — and throughout the city, where fashion, design and fine dining merge seamlessly into a living museum of taste and style.
Where to Eat
● Le Clarence (Two Stars) – Dining inside an 18th-century hôtel particulier feels like stepping into a still life, with silver service and sauces that border on spiritual.
● Septime (One Star) – The city’s minimalist masterpiece: raw wood, seasonal ingredients and a calm that feels almost monastic.
● Comice (One Star) – Run by an art-collecting couple, it feels like dining in a painter’s studio. Color, balance and quiet refinement.
Where to Stay
● Cheval Blanc Paris (Three Keys) – Contemporary couture translated into hospitality. Marble, glass and museum-level art overlooking the River Seine.
● Mandarin Oriental Lutetia, Paris (Two Keys) – The Left Bank’s grande dame hotel — or “Lulu,” as the locals call it — was once the haunt of artists and performers like Pablo Picasso and Josephine Baker. Art deco glamour meets intellectual cool.
● Hôtel de Crillon (Two Keys) – A rococo icon reborn with gallery-grade lighting and a modern edge. It’s where Marie Antoinette, who apparently took piano lessons at the hotel, might have stayed post-Basel.
7. 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair, London — October 2026
Held at Somerset House, 1-54 injects London’s art scene with global vibrancy and grounded perspective. It’s less about spectacle and more about dialogue — the kind of fair that reshapes culture’s vocabulary.
Where to Eat
● Akoko (One Star) – Creative interpretations of classic West African dishes in a soothing setting. The jollof rice is divine.
● Spring (MICHELIN selected) – Located inside Somerset House, it serves unfussy, Italian-influenced and ingredient-led food that’s good for your body and your palate.
● Chishuru (One Star) – Homestyle cooking from self-taught Adejoké Bakare, with joyous West African flavors bursting from every plate.
Where to Stay
● The NoMad London (One Key) – A Victorian courthouse reborn with cinematic richness: grand drapery, moody lighting and a creative clientele.
● The London EDITION (MICHELIN selected) – Ian Schrager’s study in warmth and modern design, with every detail calibrated for the culturally fluent traveler.
● Dorset Square Hotel, Firmdale Hotels (MICHELIN selected) - If you want to avoid traipsing across town in between meetings while at the fair, then this townhouse hotel is a good option to book as it’s within walking distance.
8. Frieze London — October 2026
Frieze London is an annual pilgrimage for the art world’s elite: half intellectual, half spectacle — and entirely addictive.
Where to Eat
● Core by Clare Smyth (Three Stars) A masterclass in refinement, with dishes like miniature landscapes where flavor and form coexist in perfect tension.
● The Ledbury (Three Stars) – Modern British elegance at its peak: elegant service, artistic plating and quiet confidence.
● Evelyn’s Table (One Star) – A chef’s counter hidden beneath Soho. Intimacy and ingenuity in 12 seats.
Where to Stay
● Claridge’s (Three Keys) – A temple to taste, its art deco bones have hosted artists from Francis Bacon to Banksy.
● The Dorchester (Two Keys) – Old Hollywood glamour, but the collection of British art on its walls grounds it in sophistication.
● The Standard London (MICHELIN selected) – Stay here during Frieze for a front-row seat to London’s Brutalist revival, where 1970s-Modernist bones, art-forward interiors, and the buzzy restaurant, bar and rooftop feel perfectly attuned to the fair’s mix of cultural edge and late-night energy.
9. Frieze Abu Dhabi — November 2026
Saadiyat Island is culture’s latest address, making it a hot destination in 2026 with the Louvre, the Guggenheim and now Frieze all expanding to Abu Dhabi. This fair mirrors the city’s ethos of contemporary calm framed by grandeur.
Where to Eat
● La Petite Maison Abu Dhabi (MICHELIN selected) – Riviera ease under soft light, where Niçoise salads and roasted chicken feel like love letters to modern French cuisine.
● Coya Abu Dhabi (MICHELIN selected) – With color-saturated walls, hand-carved wood and bold Peruvian flavors, the restaurant hums like a gallery at full capacity.
● Hakkasan (One Star) – Dramatic latticework and moody blue tones set the stage for refined Cantonese — an intersection of architecture and appetite.
Where to Stay
● Jumeirah at Saadiyat Island Resort (One Key) – Sandstone minimalism and natural textures meet local art. A hotel for those who prefer serenity over show.
● Park Hyatt Abu Dhabi (MICHELIN selected) – Ocean-facing modern design with curated Emirati art — equally suited to curators and collectors.
● The St. Regis Saadiyat Island Resort (MICHELIN selected) – Classical columns, private terraces and an art-filled wine cellar. This is luxury for the aesthete who never truly switches off.
10. Art Basel Miami Beach — Dec. 5-7, 2025
Art Basel Miami Beach is where high-concept art meets high-gloss spectacle — and where the line between installations and influencer backdrops grows increasingly thin. Still, between the beachside pavilions and late-night parties, Miami’s dining scene holds its own: bold, sensory and unafraid of a little drama.
Where to Eat
● Boia De (One Star) – A minimalist strip-mall hideaway whose bold, playful flavors — crispy polenta, beef tartare with giardiniera — feel like edible pop art. It’s the anti-South Beach, and that’s its charm.
● Ariete (One Star) – Chef Michael Beltran fuses Cuban nostalgia with French technique. The space glows with warm wood and brass and every dish feels like storytelling through flavor.
● The Surf Club Restaurant (One Star) – Chef Thomas Keller’s retro-glam dining room evokes midcentury Miami — shrimp cocktail, Dover sole, martinis — executed with art-gallery precision.
Where to Stay
● Faena Hotel Miami Beach (Two Keys) – A living fantasy with spaces designed by movie director Baz Luhrmann and costume designer Catherine Martin, where velvet, gold and a 24-karat mammoth skeleton by Damien Hirst create theater out of hospitality.
● The Miami Beach EDITION (MICHELIN selected) – Sleek and modern, it’s the blank canvas of your art week: minimalist suites, ocean light and quiet luxury.
● The Betsy South Beach (One Key) – A cultured refuge that doubles as a creative salon, hosting poetry readings, photography exhibits and impromptu art talks in its colonnaded lobby.
Hero image: The Grand Palais during Art Basel Paris, under the venue’s glass nave. © Art Basel