In Switzerland

Zurich Art Weekend: a high-quality programme from museums, galleries and non-profit venues

With 65 exhibitions and 150 events across some 70 venues, the city attracts a wide audience of visitors and collectors

by Silvia Anna Barrilà

La bandiera dello Zurich Art Weekend 2026. Fotografia di Flavio Leone

4' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

Key points

4' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

Over the weekend when Switzerland chose pluralism and voted against the proposal by the right-wing nationalist Swiss People’s Party to cap the resident population at ten million, Zurich showcased the vibrancy and quality of its arts and cultural scene. From 12 to 14 June, the ninth edition of the Zurich Art Weekend took place, an event bringing together more than 65 exhibitions and 150 events across some 70 venues in the city, including not only galleries but also institutions and non-profit spaces.
Zurich, in fact, is a city that boasts major museums such as the Kunsthaus, which is currently hosting a major retrospective exhibition dedicated to the Venezuelan-born sculptor Marisol (1930–2016), but also numerous alternative spaces for emerging art, and a thriving art market, with galleries and auction houses sustained by the city’s wealth and the collecting community.

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La mostra di Rosa Barba al Museum Haus Konstruktiv in occasione dello Zurich Art Prize 2026

Rosa Barba’s exhibition

The Art Weekend attracts 45,000 visitors every year, with a significant international presence thanks to the strategic decision to hold the event immediately following Art Basel. The exhibitions in the city are predominantly solo shows, offering an in-depth look at the work of both emerging and established artists. Among those most talked about is the Italian artist based in Germany Rosa Barba, who has a solo exhibition at the Haus Konstruktiv, within the former industrial area of the Löwenbräukunst Areal, for winning the 19th Zurich Art Prize 2026, awarded by the museum in cooperation with Zurich Insurance Company Ltd. The artist, who is represented by the Italian gallery Vistamare and by Esther Schipper in Berlin (prices undisclosed), was also celebrated with the launch of a new publication by Phaidon and an event organised by the Zurich-based Turkish collectors Bilge and Haro Cumbusyan, who specialise in video art and media art, at their modernist villa designed by Hans Fischli, father of the well-known artist Peter Fischli. 

Nosik Lim, mostra “Things that hold” presso sothu Zurich, fotografie di Sabina Bösch, Courtesy sothu

Exhibitions at the Löwenbräukunst Areal

At Peter Fischli’s home, meanwhile, there is a pop-up space run by the American gallery Reena Spaulings, which is not taking part in Art Basel this year and is in Zurich until 21 June, showcasing conceptual works by artists such as Klara Liden, Nora Schultz and Henrik Olesen (prices ranging from $6,500 to $75,000). Of the latter in particular, a Danish artist born in 1967 and represented in Italia by Noero, there is a crocodile sculpture that references his solo exhibition at the Kunsthalle Zürich, also in the Löwenbräukunst Areal (75,000 dollars), his first in the Swiss city for two decades. The nearby Migros Museum, meanwhile, is exhibiting the work of the Franco-Algerian photographer Mohamed Bourouissa, born in 1978, who is already highly regarded in France and beyond (he is represented by Mennour and Blum & Poe). Next door, the Swiss Institute is celebrating its 40th anniversary by restaging the historic exhibition “Regift”, featuring 50 artists reflecting on the themes of exchange and value in contemporary art. For the occasion, some works have been donated by the artists to the institute and are being sold through Hauser & Wirth to raise funds for the institution’s future.
This gallery is currently exhibiting the African-American painter Henry Taylor (currently also at the Musée Picasso), the post-internet artist Avery Singer, whilst at its premises on the elegant Bahnhofstrasse it is celebrating the Polish sculptor Alina Szapocznikow on the occasion of her centenary (1926–1973).

Marisol, La visita (Der Besuch), 1964, Museum Ludwig, Inv.-Nr. ML 01095, Gruppe (4-figurig), Holz, Gips, Leder und andere Materialien, 152,5 x 226 cm

Women in museums

To this end, the exhibition features one work for each year of the artist’s career, offering a comprehensive overview of his output, from the sculptures of the 1950s to his later works, including the “lamps” – luminous resin sculptures featuring casts of parts of the artist’s body – which are already well known and highly regarded by collectors (two are on display, priced at €800,000 and €850,000). “Her success is, above all, European, linked to her history, but now the market and interest are also growing in the US,” explained Madeline Warren, Senior Director & Partner at Hauser & Wirth, “since we began representing her in 2018, many more works have been offered at auction and have generated competition among collectors. In the 1960s, she was appreciated by artists such as Duchamp and Max Ernst; after her death, her legacy was carried on by her son, but the rediscovery took place in the new millennium thanks to Gisela Capitain and Galerie Loevenbruck, followed by the exhibition at MoMA in 2012. The works on display all come from the artist’s archive, which is managed by Loevenbruck, where there is also an exhibition currently taking place. Prices range from €300,000 to over €3 million, but works on paper start from as little as €30,000. In Italia, the market is not as developed, but Intesa Sanpaolo has an important sculpture in its collection.

Another museum exhibition dedicated to an artist deserving of renewed attention has also opened in recent days; this time, the artist is Italian: Mariuccia Secol, at the Muzeum Susch in Engadine, founded by the Polish entrepreneur and collector Grażyna Kulczyk, featuring works that also bear witness to her involvement with the Immagine Feminist Group in Varese and the collaborative and feminist practices developed from the 1970s onwards (prices range from €5,000 to €50,000).

Mohamed Bourouissa, Alyssia, 2022, courtesy of the artist and Galerie Mennour. ©

The galleries

Other galleries, as part of Zurich Art Weekend, have focused on Swiss artists, such as Valentin Carron at Eva Presenhuber and Marc Bauer at Peter Kilchmann (6,000–40,000 Swiss francs), both in the Maag Areal area, whilst on Rämistrasse – another gallery street leading up towards the Kunsthaus – Kilchmann exhibited new animations by Francis Alÿs. On the same street, Mai 36 staged an exhibition by Irma Blank that was very well received.

A real gem not to be missed is the solo exhibition by the Korean artist Nosik Lim at sothu, a gallery tucked away on the third floor of a residential building, inside a flat, where the paintings, created using ancient Eastern painting techniques, are like apparitions that slowly take shape and surround the viewer on all the walls, from

Marc Bauer, mostra “Side by Side” presso Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich, Switzerland, 2026, fotografia di Sebastian Schaub

but on the ground, creating an immersive environment (prices from 1,200 to 8,600 francs).

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