Rendering: Cross-section from Hanover Street through galleries and workspaces © Jamie Fobert Architects News Announcing Plans for London Expansion Opening in Mayfair's Hanover Square in Fall 2021 (opens in a new window) As Reported in The Financial TimesThursday, November 19 The Hanover Square space represents a new phase for Pace in London, and the gallery looks forward to developing a more robust exhibition schedule building on its reputation for seminal historical presentations and ambitious contemporary exhibitions.Pace’s new London gallery will open in fall 2021 following a significant renovation by architect Jamie Fobert Architects. Fobert enjoys a longstanding relationship with Pace and was responsible for designing their original London gallery on Lexington Street in 2011. For this project, Fobert will completely transform the interior architecture of the existing building to incorporate a number of flexible gallery spaces. Fobert’s refurbishment will include two elegant galleries on the first floor and will open up the basement level to create an additional 1,000-sq-ft public gallery. The basement and entry level will be connected by a feature staircase rendered in black steel, giving the impression of a fully integrated space. The new modular layout will allow for dynamic presentations and will accommodate installations of works ranging from intimate to monumental in scale. The space will also be reconfigured to include two substantial private viewing rooms.Pace first opened in London on Lexington Street before moving to its current home at 6 Burlington Gardens, inside the storied Royal Academy building, in 2012. During its tenure at Burlington Gardens, Pace has mounted landmark exhibitions for Adam Pendleton (2012, 2015, and 2018); Robert Irwin (2013); James Turrell (2014 and 2020); Lee Ufan (2015; Louise Nevelson (2016); Jean Dubuffet (2017); Loie Hollowell (2018); Song Dong (2018); and Jo Baer, Mary Corse, and Agnes Martin (2019), among others, and was the first gallery to show the work of Ruth Asawa (in Mingei: Are You Here?), Sam Gilliam, and Ed Clark in a commercial setting in the UK (as part of the group presentation Impulse).Pace will also use the expanded platform to engage with more European artists and continue to grow its contemporary program, which has recently seen the additions of Sonia Gomes, Torkwase Dyson, Beatriz Milhazes, and Trevor Paglen, whose critically-acclaimed first show in London was on view in fall 2020. The flexibility of the refurbishment lends itself to live and experimental programming; Pace will stage its first Pace Live event outside of New York at Hanover Square in 2021.Pace’s new gallery space is located in the heart of historic Mayfair among several other prominent galleries and international auction houses. Hanover Square is currently undergoing major regeneration, which includes plans for a new Mandarin Oriental hotel, the development of the principal Crossrail station linking central London to Heathrow airport, and a re-landscaping project to create a bio-diverse garden.The Hanover Square gallery will replace Pace’s current space at 6 Burlington Gardens, which will continue to program exhibitions through summer 2021. In addition to its London presence, Pace operates a gallery space at Quai des Bergues in Geneva and in seven other locations worldwide: two in New York’s Chelsea, as well as in Palo Alto, Hong Kong, and Seoul. In 2020 Pace opened seasonal gallery spaces in East Hampton, New York and Palm Beach, Florida. Read More Journal View All Films Hank Willis Thomas on The Spirit that Unites Us All Dec 03, 2024 News Public Art Fund Announces 2025 Exhibition by Torkwase Dyson Nov 19, 2024 News Yto Barrada to Represent France at La Biennale di Venezia in 2026 Nov 19, 2024 Essays The Elegiac Genius of Robert Frank, by Ocean Vuong Nov 14, 2024 News — Announcing Plans for London Expansion, Nov 19, 2020