Contact
37 Dover Street
London W1S 4NJ
+44 0 203 813 8400
london@ropac.net
7 Rue Debelleyme
Fr-75003 Paris
+33 1 42 72 99 00
paris.marais@ropac.net
69 Avenue du Général Leclerc
Fr-93500 Pantin
+33 1 55 89 01 10
paris.pantin@ropac.net
69, Avenue du Général Leclerc
93500 Pantin
+33 1 55 89 01 10
cafebleu@ropac.net
Mirabellplatz 2
A-5020 Salzburg
+43 662 881393 0
salzburg@ropac.net
Vilniusstrasse 13
A-5020 Salzburg
+43 662 876246
Piazza Belgioioso, 2
20121 Milan
+39 02 40701 728
milan@ropac.net
1-2F, 122-1 Dokseodang-ro,
Yongsan-gu, Seoul 04420
+82 2 6949 1760
seoul@ropac.net
ropac.net
Instagram
About the Gallery
Founded in 1983, Thaddaeus Ropac has galleries across Europe and Asia, located in London, Paris, Salzburg, Milan and Seoul.
Specialising in contemporary art and representing over 70 artists, the gallery supports and showcases the careers of some of the most influential artists today with a wide-ranging programme of over 40 exhibitions curated at the seven extensive and historic gallery spaces each year.
Thaddaeus Ropac also represents a number of renowned artist estates and continues to build on their legacy, as well as providing curatorial expertise, acting as consultant to major museums and public institutions and advising private and corporate collections. Active in both the primary and secondary markets, the gallery also represents its artists at all major international art fairs. We run our own publishing house, producing catalogues and books to accompany exhibitions, contributing to new scholarship and a wider art-historical discourse by inviting prominent art historians, curators and writers to collaborate.
Thaddaeus Ropac's galleries, which span a total of 12,000 square metres, are located in London at Ely House, a five-floor listed mansion in Mayfair that was formerly the Bishop of Ely’s London residence; in Paris both in the Marais and an extensive early 20th-century ironworks factory in Pantin, which was redeveloped to accommodate the display of large-scale artworks; in Salzburg at the Villa Kast, a 19th-century townhouse in the Mirabell Gardens in the historic centre and Salzburg Halle, a converted industrial space close to the city centre; in Seoul, in the heart of the thriving cultural district of Hannam-dong, occupying the ground and first floors of an outstanding architectural landmark: the Fort Hill building; and in Milan, where it spans across 400 square metres of the historic Palazzo Belgioioso, designed by Giuseppe Piermarini in 1772.