Swiss Modernities (1890-1914)

Autoportrait
© Musées d'art et d'histoire, Ville de Genève / Bettina Jacot-Descombes
These painters and this productive moment for art in Europe are little known outside Switzerland. The only previous exhibitions in France devoted to the Swiss painting scene were in 1934 and 1960, and then, more recently, two ambitious retrospectives: for Ferdinand Hodler (in 2007 at the musée d’Orsay) and Félix Vallotton (in 2014, at the Galeries nationales du Grand Palais). However, painters like Paul Gauguin and van Gogh, and locations like Paris and Pont-Aven, were determining influences for leading artists of the period such as Cuno Amiet.
This exhibition is part of a program reflecting the artistic profusion that typifies this transitional moment in the birth of Modernity from the second half of the 19th to the beginning of the 20th century. It aims above all to give an insight into artworks that have never been shown in France. It will bring together around 70 masterpieces of the period, mainly from Swiss public and private collections. It will present the great figures and milestones in the development of the avant-garde movements, open to major European movements and yet deeply rooted in a Swiss cultural and intellectual landscape. Rather than an exhaustive overview, the exhibition will invite the visitor to discover artistic figures as yet unknown in France, and to take delight in exceptional paintings.
The exhibition will comprise ten sections, alternating monographic approaches with creating dialogues between painters. The exhibition catalogue will re-establish the development of Swiss painting in the 1900s in its historical context, and will highlight its protagonists along with the collectors, art critics, mediators and art dealers.
With the generous support of Swiss Life Asset Managers, l'Ambassade de Suisse and Pro Helvetia, Swiss Foundation for Culture.
The exhibition is now over.
See the whole program