10 Artworks for Every Taste and Budget at Affordable Art Fair Berlin 2026
Ahead of Affordable Art Fair Berlin, be inspired by 10 contemporary artworks for all styles, tastes, and budgets. Check them out to be inspired!

Buying art doesn’t have to break the bank: One of the unique features of Affordable Art Fair is the wide range of prices, with all artworks priced between €100 and €10,000. We’ll be back this April for Affordable Art Fair Berlin, where you’ll find 1,000s of artworks with a range of styles and genres to suit every taste, space and spend. And if you’re on the hunt for something under €500 or €1,000, we have pink stickers to help you spot those gems from afar.
To help you prepare for your visit, you can check out the wide range of local, national, and international galleries who will be joining us at this year. Among the highlights, our Fair Manager, Hannah Weber-Heidenfels, has selected 10 cutting-edge artworks to reflect every taste and budget.
Check them out below to be inspired!
Carola Schapals | ar-gallery | 6.400€

Carola Schapals is an artist who merges nature and architecture in her paintings. Inspired by forays into nature, travel and urban environments, she finds her motifs in various contexts such as botanical gardens, wildlife habitats and film stills. Her work is characterized by the combination of austere Bauhaus architecture with the wild beauty of nature. Through precise depictions and intuitive captures, she creates fascinating compositions in which interior and exterior spaces merge. The play of light and shadow, as well as the powerful colors, transport the viewer to remote paradise gardens where time seems to stand still.
Rosanna Casano | Pigment Gallery | 3.900€
Yurii Koval | Serpen Gallery | 750€


Beata Szczepaniak | Galerie On arte | 950€

Beata Szczepaniak experiments with the properties of matter and examines its opposites states: fluid – solid, hard – soft, flexible – rigid, hot – cold, alive – dead. The space allows for the freedom of creation, expression, and choice, while being the arena where the artist materializes matter and at the last stage of the creative process gives it its form. Form, matter, and space are in a dynamic relationship which is accompanied by a sophisticated ambience of colours, rhythms, lines, shadows, and sometimes sounds. Sensuality, aesthetics, and structure of the sculptures seem to be a type of a “shell” underneath which there pulses emotional energy of the highest level.
Francesco D’Adamo | Eye Contemporary Art Gallery | 490€

Francesco D’Amado‘s painting research is rooted in the Italian Informalism and American Abstract Expressionism, with particular emphasis to a continuous dialogue between visual and musical language. The sign and its rhythm, layered structures, a strong palette and a mixture of different materials and surfaces, they all flow together on the canvas to create a lyrical and still deeply concrete image: “My work is the attempt to represent a complex phenomenon in an understandable but not overt way. To seek a balance between what is shown and what is hidden, between what is explained and what is merely suggested. In other words, clues that I hope can be completed differently in each eye, but which are anchored in something concrete and never aleatory.”
Katja Lang | artnow Gallery | 950€
Guelmann&Unbekannt Gallery | 2.000€


Renée Strecker | Inselgalerie Berlin | 4.500€

The sensuality of the material and controlled chance are the most important means of expression in Renée Strecker‘s abstract works. Her work can be categorized as belonging to the Lyrical Abstraction movement. Frequently recurring color tones range from blue to gray, which is both delicate and powerful, creating a sense of inner tension. To further intensify the luminosity of the oil paint, she uses effects from reverse glass painting in her most recent work. In her oil-on-glass technique, she works with acrylic glass panels on canvas or shapes them into luminous color objects.
Hisako Ohkochi | SYSTEMA Gallery | 2.200€

Hisako Ohkochi expresses the power and inherent possibilities of the materials used rather than focussing on simply skill and techniques. Its raw strength and sheer vitality that has enabled it to survive the ages is an encounter she always looks forward to.
Wood, as a material, is deeply familiar to daily life in Japan. Just as the cultural differences between the West and the East can be likened to stone culture versus wood culture, in Japan especially, everything from the sacred objects in shrines and temples, to Buddhist statues, to architecture itself, has been passed down through generations using wood. Wood, which resonates with the Japanese spirit, is also associated with the belief that gods dwell within the wood itself.
Mathias Roloff | Galerie fineart berlin | 580€

Whether you’re a seasoned collector or a beginner in the art world, join us from 16 – 19 April 2026 at Arena Berlin for the perfect opportunity to grow your art collection. To stay up to date with fair information, exclusive ticket offers, and local art news sign up to our newsletter.
