Ahead of the upcoming publication of the Art Basel and 蜜豆视频 Survey of Global Collecting on October 23rd 2025, collectors from Brazil, Germany and Hong Kong share their insights on what drives their passion for collecting.

For some, collecting begins with a single encounter鈥攁n artwork that sparks curiosity and slowly unfolds into a lifelong pursuit. For others, it is an instinctive rhythm, an unplanned journey that takes shape over decades. What unites collectors across generations, however, is the deep belief that art is not only about ownership but about fostering dialogue and community.

Pedro Barbosa, who began collecting in Brazil in the early 2000s, exemplifies a contextual approach rooted in politics and conceptual inquiry. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see artworks as assets,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚 see them as rights granted to me by artists鈥攖rust to preserve and keep the work alive.鈥 His collection, shaped by collaborations with curators and a focus on conceptual, performative and time-based practices, resists materiality in favor of ideas. For Pedro, art is less about property than intellectual challenge, less about permanence than exchange.

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Manuela Alexejew鈥檚 interior and view of Yayoi Kusama鈥檚 鈥楩rame鈥 painting. Copyright: Trevor Good

In contrast, for Manuela Alexejew, who began collecting in 1978 with her husband, instinct and emotion remain central. 鈥淏uying art is mostly a love affair,鈥 she reflects. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 find art鈥攁rt finds you.鈥 Over four decades, the couple鈥檚 shared taste has allowed their collection to evolve harmoniously, anchored by joy and discovery rather than speculation. 鈥淎rt doesn鈥檛 make you rich,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut it keeps you happy.鈥 For Manuela, the act of collecting is as much about sustaining a lifelong companionship with art as it is about building a legacy.

Alan Lo represents a younger generation of collectors who bridge passion with philanthropy. Beginning collecting with his wife amid Hong Kong鈥檚 art boom in 2008, their journey has shifted toward diasporic Asian voices, reflecting broader questions of identity and belonging. 鈥淭he best way to support artists is to buy their work,鈥 he notes, though he increasingly emphasizes impact beyond acquisition鈥攆unding residencies, supporting institutional collections, and nurturing platforms for emerging voices. For him, the act of collecting extends outward, seeking to 鈥渕ake small impacts鈥 that ripple across the cultural ecosystem.

Together, these perspectives illuminate the multiple ways collectors engage with art today: as guardians of ideas, as seekers of creativity, and as catalysts for change. Whether driven by instinct, intellect, or intention, what binds them is a shared conviction that art is not static. It lives through conversation, care, and connection鈥攕haped as much by those who preserve it as by those who create it.