Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Curator Marjorier Ding and art collector Louis Jacquier launch Tiderip, a new London gallery
  • Out & About: Art gallery hosts two shows until August 2025
  • Uncertainties Fade, Opening Door To New Investments
  • Cryptocurrency Can Make Recognised Money Untraceable: HC
  • Castlegar’s Kootenay Gallery of Art purchases downtown building
  • Trump to unveil $90 billion in US AI and energy investments
  • Trump to announce $70 billion in AI and energy investments
  • 8 Art Exhibitions Not To Miss Closing August 2025
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Art Gallery»Zurich Art Weekend Is Fostering Gallery Collaborations, Drawing Crowds
Art Gallery

Zurich Art Weekend Is Fostering Gallery Collaborations, Drawing Crowds

June 10, 20246 Mins Read


The stereotypical view of Zurich’s art scene is that it is straitlaced and business-centric. “That’s how I felt when I left 15 years ago,” said dealer Fabian Lang, who grew up in the Swiss city before moving to London, where he worked at Victoria Miro for nearly a decade and ran a project space in the Islington neighborhood.

But Lang returned to his hometown in 2019 to start his own eponymous gallery and is part of a coterie of dealers that are energizing the city’s Old Town district. “It is so much more lively here now, and much more international,” he said.

Although the city has been wealthy for generations, thanks to its banking industry, it has also “maybe been a bit insular,” according to Lang. That has changed with the influx of multinational tech giants like Google and Apple in recent years, and the city’s population is the largest it has been since the 1960s. Its arts scene is beginning to reflect this shift.

Of course, Zurich has long boasted a roster of exceptional mid-sized regional galleries, and savvy collectors have been stopping off on their way to Basel for decades, but many others in the art world seem to have caught on to this trick. That’s due in part to Zurich Art Weekend, which hosted its seventh edition this past weekend. Founded by the art consultant and philanthropist Charlotte von Stotzingen in 2017, the event boasted around 100 exhibitions, events, and collaborations in over 65 locations across the city, and brought in roughly 35,000 visitors.

From Secret to Must-See

Lang said that the art weekend used to be small and “more of a secret for curators and collectors before Art Basel,” but now it has turned into “a must.” This year he showed new works by the Spanish artist Elena Alonso, including her signature gouache and pencil paintings, priced around CFH 17,0000 ($19,000), that abstract the human body into architectural shapes. A new series of flexible floor-based sculptures made out of leather and metal are priced between CFH 7,000 and CHF 12,000 ($7,700–$13,400).

Installation view of Nora Turato’s “the next big thing is YOU” at Galerie Gregor Staiger in Zurich. Photo: Margaret Carrigan.

“It used to be that, in a biennial year, people would go straight to Basel from Venice,” said Gregor Staiger, who co-founded his eponymous gallery with Marie Lusa in 2010. It is a founding member of Zurich Art Weekend, and Staiger said that the influx of visitors it brings is welcome. 

During the weekend, Staiger showed a series of large-format text-based pastels by Nora Turato. Featuring common turns of phrase and internetisms, such as “who hurt you? :(” and “the truth is, I’m still a baby,” the works, priced in the five figures, are an extension of the Croatian artist’s performance-based and graphic design–influenced practice.

Such internationalism is a hallmark of the programming of the participating galleries. Bernheim, for instance, has mounted a two-part show of Russian artist Ebecho Muslimova’s works in tandem with Mendes Wood DM in São Paolo. Featuring a suite of new paintings that follow the shifting persona of Muslimova’s signature character, Fatebe, the first half of the exhibition, “Rumors,” opened at Mendes Wood last week before the second half, “Whispers,” opened at Bernheim.

Gallery owner Maria Bernheim said that Zurich’s art weekend has fostered a sense of collaboration among local galleries, but added that it is imperative for both artists and galleries to collaborate on a larger scale, too.

Installation view of Ebecho Muslimova’s “Whispers” at Bernheim. Photo: Annik Wetter. Courtesy of Bernheim.

“There is incredible local [collector] support in Zurich, and in Switzerland in general, which makes it very easy to sell regionally,” she said. “Ultimately, I want to be able to offer broader visibility to my artists and provide more opportunities for exchange.” Last fall, she opened a space in London to provide exactly that.

The art weekend, after all, is just a few short days of concentrated activity. “We could still do with more visitors throughout the year,” Lang said. To that end, Zurich Art Weekend has entered into a three-year collaboration with the private bank Julius Baer to help fund year-round programming. Yet, Lang said, Zurich “is not like New York or London—you still have to kind of kick people in the butt to come to things.”

The Old Made New

That’s precisely why Lang launched a community initiative in 2022 called Zurich 1 that helps organize regular events and exhibition openings throughout the year with the growing cluster of galleries in Old Town, near the Kunsthaus Zurich, whose 2021 David Chipperfield-designed expansion helped redefine the area as a cultural destination.

“You know, we are a very Protestant city in that there is nothing too flashy or big, so the opening of this monumental space was a big deal,” Lang said. Established local galleries like Urs Meile and Mai 36 had been stalwarts of Old Town prior to the museum’s expansion, but much of the historic district had taken over by high-street chains and tourist traps.

Fabian Lang. Photo: Mark O’Flaherty. Courtesy Galerie Fabian Lang.

In the last couple of years, galleries have been reclaiming the area’s retail spaces, among them Bernheim as well as Steiger, who relocated earlier this year from the Löwenbraü complex, a 19th-century brewery facility that has been a hub for commercial and nonprofit enterprises since the late 1990s.

“When we launched Zurich 1, there were maybe five or six galleries; now we are 16,” Lang said, noting that its members range from younger outfits like his to more established dealers like Eva Presenheuber.

Galleries coalescing in an area is, of course, nothing new, but as mid-tier dealers battle rising overheads and predatory high-end dealers on the hunt for new talent, sticking together may be a key means of survival, as further evidenced by the recent uptick in joint representation of artists by mid-sized galleries.

Working with other dealers is “the only way I want to do business,” Bernheim said. “Artists need mid-sized galleries to help nurture their careers, and I think [collaboration] is the only way for galleries like mine to continue to exist in the face of the big ones that keep gobbling up all the artists.”

Follow Artnet News on Facebook:

Want to stay ahead of the art world? Subscribe to our newsletter to get the breaking news, eye-opening interviews, and incisive critical takes that drive the conversation forward.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Curator Marjorier Ding and art collector Louis Jacquier launch Tiderip, a new London gallery

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery

Out & About: Art gallery hosts two shows until August 2025

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery

Castlegar’s Kootenay Gallery of Art purchases downtown building

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery

8 Art Exhibitions Not To Miss Closing August 2025

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery

5 art shows you need to see around Denver this summer

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery

Enjoy new exhibitions at Bundaberg Art Gallery – Bundaberg Now

July 13, 2025 Art Gallery
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Curator Marjorier Ding and art collector Louis Jacquier launch Tiderip, a new London gallery

July 14, 2025 Art Gallery 2 Mins Read

London has no shortage of new galleries, but few open with as little fanfare or…

Out & About: Art gallery hosts two shows until August 2025

July 14, 2025

Uncertainties Fade, Opening Door To New Investments

July 14, 2025

Cryptocurrency Can Make Recognised Money Untraceable: HC

July 14, 2025
Our Picks

Curator Marjorier Ding and art collector Louis Jacquier launch Tiderip, a new London gallery

July 14, 2025

Out & About: Art gallery hosts two shows until August 2025

July 14, 2025

Uncertainties Fade, Opening Door To New Investments

July 14, 2025

Cryptocurrency Can Make Recognised Money Untraceable: HC

July 14, 2025
Our Picks

Verlinvest to double annual India investments to $200 million, up its average cheque size

July 14, 2025

5 art shows you need to see around Denver this summer

July 14, 2025

Bitcoin hits $120,000 milestone as US Congress readies for ‘crypto week’

July 14, 2025
Latest updates

Curator Marjorier Ding and art collector Louis Jacquier launch Tiderip, a new London gallery

July 14, 2025

Out & About: Art gallery hosts two shows until August 2025

July 14, 2025

Uncertainties Fade, Opening Door To New Investments

July 14, 2025
Weekly Updates

Amid Challenges, Small New York City Museums Are Closing Their Doors

June 30, 2024

Saudi Arabia holds investment summit in Brazil, plans to invest $15B

June 13, 2024

Tether co-founder Brock Pierce teases possible return to Hong Kong, says China will open to cryptocurrencies

June 2, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2025 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.