Annely Juda Fine Art will be moving to 16 Hanover Square in the autumn of 2025, after 35 years on nearby Dering Street. The move not only celebrates the gallery’s near 60-year legacy in London, it will also provide a new space to cultivate and showcase their roster of both eminent and early-career artists. The new space will continue to be led by co-Directors David Juda – who founded the gallery with his mother Annely in 1968 - and Nina Fellmann, who has been with the gallery since 2003.
The inaugural exhibition in the Hanover Square space this autumn will be a series of recent work by one of the gallery’s longest standing represented artists; David Hockney.
Annely Juda Fine Art will take over the lease on the whole Grade II listed Georgian townhouse on Hanover Square, with two large floors of exhibition space including an exceptional former ballroom with a glass-domed ceiling. The gallery will also include a dedicated spotlight area for new and emerging artists. The 300-year-old public square has recently undergone a transformation alongside the opening of the new Elizabeth Line underground station at Bond Street, opposite the building.
David Juda said: “I’m truly excited to be establishing the next chapter of the gallery in our new space on Hanover Square. Along with my co-Director, Nina Fellmann, we look forward to bringing a program of established and younger artists to a new and distinguished space, and to building on the legacy that my mother and I began here in London in the 1960s.”
Nina Fellman said: “As a young intern at the gallery more than 20 years ago, I’ve seen first-hand how the gallery has evolved, championed artists and held so many wonderful exhibitions. We’re thrilled to be moving to Hanover Square and I couldn’t be more excited about the possibilities ahead – the exhibitions we will stage, the partnerships we’ll forge and the stories we continue to tell.”
Founded in 1968 by Annely Juda (1914 – 2006) and her son David Juda, Annely Juda Fine Art has been instrumental in introducing and promoting modernist movements, including Russian Constructivism and De Stijl, to the international art world from its London home for nearly 60 years. The inaugural exhibition in 1968, ‘Now Open: Important Paintings of the 20th Century and Young Artists’ set the tone for a legacy of showcasing definitive works of the 20th Century alongside groundbreaking contemporary art – something they continue to platform through new voices such as Nicola Turner whose large-scale work will debut at Art Basel Unlimited this June and whose solo exhibition will be at the gallery in 2026.
The gallery represents British art icons David Hockney, Leon Kossoff, Anthony Caro and David Nash among many other artists who have shaped the direction of their field, earning a reputation for building, maintaining and supporting the legacy of their pioneering artist roster throughout their careers.
The move to Hanover Square will celebrate the gallery’s legacy in London, taking the opportunity to look toward the future in its new home.
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