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Price Range
$5,000 - $5,000,000+
Founded in 1983 by Thaddaeus Ropac in Salzburg, Austria, the gallery has grown into a major international presence with five locations across Europe and Asia: London (Ely House, a five-floor listed Mayfair mansion), Paris (Marais and Pantin — the latter a converted early 20th century ironworks factory for large-scale works), Salzburg (Villa Kast and Salzburg Halle), Seoul (Hannam-dong, opened 2021), and Milan (Palazzo Belgioioso, opened September 2025). The gallery represents over 70 artists and specialises in post-war and contemporary art, spanning painting, sculpture, photography, and installation. The roster bridges European heavyweights — Georg Baselitz, Anselm Kiefer, Arnulf Rainer — with international contemporary voices including Alex Katz, Robert Rauschenberg (estate), and Joseph Beuys (estate). Ropac is active in both primary and secondary markets, provides curatorial consulting to major museums and institutions, and participates in every major international art fair circuit. The gallery's dual emphasis on artist estates and living artists gives collectors access to both historical significance and contemporary momentum.
Operates in both primary and secondary markets
Ropac offers range across price points: editions and works on paper from established artists start in the low five figures, while major canvases by roster artists can reach seven figures. The Paris Pantin space is worth visiting for monumental works that need industrial scale. For collectors building a European-focused collection, Ropac's roster provides a coherent through-line from post-war to present. The gallery's secondary market expertise means they can also source works by artists outside their roster.
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One of Europe's most influential galleries, Ropac built his reputation by bridging the gap between Austrian/German post-war traditions and the international contemporary market. The five-location expansion (London, Paris, Salzburg, Seoul, Milan) positions the gallery as a truly global operation with particular strength in European art history. The estate program — Rauschenberg, Beuys, Sturtevant — provides art-historical gravitas that few contemporary galleries can match.