Meet the Artnet Innovators, class of 2022. Photo collage: Jonathan Myers.

Click here to view the full list

 

The term “innovation” is often used to describe the dressing-up of an old idea in a new outfit. True innovation—the kind that comes from rejecting business as usual and building something from the ground up—is hard to find. In the art world, which is so often shaped by the weight of history, tradition, and entrenched power structures, it’s particularly rare.

That doesn’t mean it’s not happening. In 2020, Artnet News published its first-ever Innovators List, a celebration of the artists, dealers, tastemakers, and entrepreneurs driving forward every sector of the art market. Two years later, we’re launching the second edition in a very different world. The merry-go-round of global events is powering back to life, fears of a recession loom, and a crypto winter has brought a distinct chill to the NFT boom. Priorities are shifting—fast.

Our 2022 list spotlights 35 innovators whose work is built to navigate these choppy waters. They are cultivating the market centers of the future, integrating new media into dusty museums, and building institutions that the artists of today don’t even realize they will need in 50 years.

This list deliberately does not conform to the conventions of the genre. There is no age limit: the innovators range from 28 to 73 years old. It is not bound by geography: they hail from traditional art centers like New York, London, and Hong Kong, but also Cape Town, Bangkok, Nairobi, and Guatemala City. Some have made headlines in international newspapers; others you will be learning about for the first time.

To guide the selection process, we reached out to 50 art-world leaders for recommendations. Sources ranged from Innovators List alumni such as Transfer gallery founder Kelani Nichole and David Zwirner online sales global head Elena Soboleva, to seasoned experts like Serpentine artistic director Hans Ulrich Obrist, Christie’s deputy chair Xin Li-Cohen, gallerist Jeffrey Deitch, Gagosian director Antwaun Sargent, and Metropolitan Museum of Art director Max Hollein. Then, we narrowed down a long list of more than 110 names to 35 innovators doing unique, game-changing work that will help chart a future for the sector.

The results are in. This year’s list includes a pioneering digital artist born in the metaverse, the head of a collecting DAO that is buying up pieces of Internet history, a gallerist who is devising sales models that deliberately eschew money, and a K-pop star whose art obsession is bringing a wave of new fans to museums around the world.

They are all quite different from one another. But they share an openness to new ideas, a willingness to collaborate, and a commitment to a less gate-kept art world. Now, we get to watch them build it.

The list is broken into five categories: the Disruption Artists, the Institutional Change-Agents, the Next-Gen Dealers, the Web3 World-Builders, and the Investors. Get to know them all.

 

Click here to view the full list


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