Gabriella Sá is a cultural liaison based between Lisbon and São Paulo, mediating partnerships and developing contemporary art projects for artists and cultural entities alike since 2017.

She supports independent and emerging artists at various stages of their trajectory, develops international initiatives, and facilitates institutional relations.

She also contributes to the development of programmes for artistic residencies and galleries, and has collaborated with notable entities including Galeria Raquel Arnaud (BR–PT), 3+1 Arte Contemporânea (PT), Galeria Madragoa (PT), Appleton (PT), Villa Villa (UK) — an arts programme focused on climate and regeneration — and Pela Terra (PT), a biennial gathering of art and ecology organised by ACAM – Associação Cultural Armando Martins¹ and in partnership with Idanha-à-Vida ² , to explore regenerative culture through artistic interventions.

Working across development and outreach, Sá supports artists, galleries, foundations, and institutions in navigating the strategic, operational, and relational demands of contemporary artistic production.

Drawing on her experience in gallery operations, institutional relations, and international project coordination, she offers personalised assistance to foster cultural visibility and build effective partnerships—locally and internationally.

With a strong commitment to deep ecology and environmentally sustainable cultural practices, she contributes to the development of regenerative practices and politically engaged projects. She holds a degree in Design from the European Design Institute (SP–MI) and furthered her studies in Art History (Rodrigo Naves, SP), Phenomenology (The Nature Institute, NYC), as well as postgraduate coursework in Curatorship and Art Market & Collecting at NOVA University (LX).

¹ ACAM – Armando Martins Cultural Association is connected to the cultural work of Armando Martins, collector and founder of MACAM – Museum of Contemporary Art Armando Martins, in Lisbon.

² Idanha-à-Vida is a 1,600-hectare regeneration project in Idanha-a-Velha, fostering ecological and social resilience through a holistic, community-led approach.