7 Notable Paintings in Switzerland

verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style

Swiss cultural life shows strands of German, Italian, and French influence, among others, but its uniqueness is particularly apparent in its art and artists and its museums and other art venues. Here are just seven paintings from that milieu.

Earlier versions of the descriptions of these paintings first appeared in 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die, edited by Stephen Farthing (2018). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.

  • Interior of St. Bavo in Haarlem (1636)

    The Thirty Years’ War (1618–48) signaled the decline of the Holy Roman Empire and saw Catholic churches across Europe stripped of their ornament to reveal pale, austere interiors. Pieter Saenredam traveled extensively through the Netherlands making precise and accurate drawings documenting the interiors of numerous churches. The church of St. Bavo, where Saenredam would eventually be buried, was one that he painted frequently. Saenredam was acquainted with the architect Jacob van Campen, and it is thought that the artist learned the techniques of architectural drawing from him. Saenredam would make drawings on site, which would then be worked into full-size, mathematically accurate construction drawings in the studio. Often the actual paintings were begun years after the initial drawings were made. Though his work was fundamentally true, he would on occasion, and especially in the latter part of his career, stretch his perspectives to exaggerate the height and magnitude of the interiors for pictorial effect. In Interior of St. Bavo in Haarlem, the wide angle of the choir stalls and the towering height of the dome is greater than the eye can perceive from a single viewpoint. The whitewashed interior flooded with pale light is designed for reflection and contemplation, with human figures to emphasize the scale of the building. Saenredam’s style was often copied but never truly emulated—his manipulation of space can be sensed in the Modern movement. Interior of St. Bavo in Haarlem is part of the Zürich-based Emil Bührle Collection. (Tamsin Pickeral)

  • The Boy in the Red Waistcoat (1888/90)

    The Boy in the Red Waistcoat could only be by Paul Cézanne. He mixed Impressionism with classicism and an intense intellectualism. The Boy in the Red Waistcoat is a straightforward portrait that, on closer study, dissolves into something very different. Cézanne produced several paintings of this red-vested model. This one is a strikingly modern essay in color and form, with distinctive blocks of red, brown, blue or blue-green, and white with clear-cut, simple shapes. The limited palette creates harmony, borrowing colors from one area to use on another. Blue-green shadows on the skin and shirt unify the picture and place the boy and his surroundings on the same plane. A series of diagonals intersect and echo each other: the curtain on the left, the boy’s bent back, his left arm, and the right arm resting on a surface that tips away from the picture plane. Cézanne has dismantled an ordinary scene and rebuilt it from scratch. The Boy in the Red Waistcoat (in the Emil Bührle Collection) shows two of the artist’s main preoccupations: first, exploring the underlying structure of the world around him, and, second, solving the puzzle of representing a three-dimensional world on a flat, painted surface that still says something about the forms being depicted. Cézanne has succeeded here. His painting works as a whole while paving a way to the Cubist work of Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso, who famously called Cézanne the father of modern painting. (Ann Kay)

  • Titania Awakes, Surrounded by Attendant Fairies (1793–94)

    One of the leading figures of the Romantic movement, Henry Fuseli created pictures that explored the darker side of the human psyche. This image is in a similar vein to The Nightmare (1781), which blends horror and eroticism, though it also focuses on another of the Romantics’ favorite themes: fairies. Fuseli drew much of his inspiration from literary sources, most notably Shakespeare, Milton, and Dante. Fortunately for him, there was a major revival of interest in the former at the time. In 1789 John Boydell, a future lord mayor of London, decided to promote the cause of British art by opening a purpose-built Shakespeare Gallery, devoted solely to paintings of scenes from the plays. Then, four years later, James Woodmason set up a similar gallery in Dublin. Fuseli contributed paintings to both these projects—nine to Boydell and five to Woodmason. A Midsummer Night’s Dream provided material for two of Fuseli’s chief interests: fairies and dreams. This picture comes from the Woodmason series, and the fairies are considerably less sinister than those in the Boydell paintings. While Titania dotes on Bottom, Peaseblossom massages his donkey’s head. To the right, Cobweb has donned a suit of armor and is killing a bee, to steal its honey-sack for the queen’s lover. In the foreground, other fairies dance and sing, among them one with an insect’s head, who was borrowed from a figure in the commedia dell’arte. In the top right-hand corner, Puck surveys the scene, prior to releasing Titania from her enchantment. Titania Awakes, Surrounded by Attendant Fairies is in the Kunsthaus Zürich. (Iain Zaczek)

  • War (1964–66)

    Marc Chagall was born in Belarus, the eldest of nine children in a close-knit Jewish family. This was a happy though impoverished period in his life. He moved to Paris when he was 23; there he was enthused by what he saw at the Louvre. Mixing those ideas with inspiration from his early life, he began painting biblical themes using thick, colorful paint. He became involved with avant-garde currents in Paris, including Cubism and Fauvism, but he never wholly surrendered his style. During World War I, he was called to military service, but, to avoid serving at the Front, he worked in an office in St. Petersburg. In 1922 he returned to Paris, and by World War II he had become a French citizen, although he spent most of the war in America. Themes of flight and exile appear in this painting, which Chagall began almost 20 years after World War II. It took him two years to complete. A rickety and overloaded cart is slowly leaving the burning city. A man is plodding along behind the cart, a sack over his shoulder, saving his worldly goods from the flames. Most of the people cling to each other in despair, while the people and animals that have remained in the city are helplessly at the mercy of the intense blaze. Jesus is on the Cross to the right of the painting and a huge white lamb emerges from the ground, representing the sacrifice of both Jesus and the innocent people. Chagall, who often used animals as symbols in his work, is portraying blameless people’s dreadful plight during the war, bestowing on them the status of martyrs. War is in the Kunsthaus Zürich. (Susie Hodge)

  • Garden Restaurant (1912)

    Although he wrote an essay titled “Masks” for the Blue Rider Almanac, August Macke was a non-theorist whereas Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc, the founders of Der Blaue Reiter (the Blue Rider) formed in Munich, Germany, thrived on theoretical debate. Macke exhibited with the group and shared many of their concerns, particularly the importance of the “primitive” in painting. His paintings are filled with people shopping, sitting in cafes, and strolling through parks. Although he was an Expressionist—the angst of Die Brücke (the Bridge) in Berlin and the spiritual strivings of Der Blaue Reiter did not form part of his visual vocabulary—he was essentially a colorist. Heat bounces out of the image, while the people in Garden Restaurant relax with tea and newspapers under the shade of overarching trees. Rather than living beings, however, the figures are mere shapes. The pattern of whites in the composition, the red and orange swirling ground, and the rhythm of hats show that Macke is very close to pure abstraction, but he never fully engaged with it, preferring the Orphism of Robert Delaunay. Macke clearly absorbed his ideas on color relationships and the breaking down and interpenetration of form. In April 1914 he visited Tunisia with Paul Klee. The color and light revolutionized Klee’s work and confirmed Macke’s. On his return he was conscripted and died in September 1914 on the front line, age 27. Garden Restaurant is in the collection of the Kunstmuseum Bern. (Wendy Osgerby)

  • Three Women and One Little Girl Playing in the Water (1907)

    Born in Lausanne, Félix Edouard Vallotton left Switzerland when he was 17 to become a painter in Paris. He studied at the Académie Julian and became associated with the Post-Impressionist Les Nabis (“prophets” in Hebrew) group of artists that included Pierre Bonnard and Édouard Vuillard. They were influenced by the work of Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, and the Symbolists. In addition to the fine arts, Les Nabis worked in a variety of media including printmaking, illustration, textiles, furniture, and theater design. Vallotton’s work is also diverse, comprising drawing, painting, sculpture, and writing. He regularly exhibited, and the Modernism of his work, particularly his woodcuts, brought him much attention. Toward the turn of the century, he chose to concentrate on painting, especially nudes and landscapes. The stylized, simple lines of Three Women and One Little Girl Playing in the Water (in the Kunstmuseum Basel) reveal Vallotton’s interest in Symbolism and Art Nouveau as well as the influence of Japanese woodcuts. Its figures depict several ages of femininity, from childhood to womanhood and middle age. (Oscar Rickett and Carol King)

  • Ta Matete (The Market ) (1892)

    By the time Paul Gauguin reached his “paradise” in 1891, French colonialists and Christian missionaries had destroyed much of the culture. The Tahiti described in his preparatory reading no longer existed. In some works he attempted to reconstruct Tahiti through invented gods and myths, often drawing on other sources to do so. It was unusual for him to depict contemporary social reality as he does in Ta Matete (The Market), which shows a group of sex workers. The title alludes to a flesh market, and the women are shown holding their certificates of health. As if to emphasize the infiltration of Western decadence, he shows one woman with a cigarette in her hand. The women are seated in a row and are not making themselves available; soliciting seems to be the last thing on their minds. In spite of the small procession of fishermen in the background, the painting is as flat as an Egyptian frieze, probably inspired by a photograph of an Egyptian tomb that Gauguin took to Tahiti. The most striking feature of this colorful painting is the dancelike hand gestures of the women, and it is likely that Gauguin was drawing on the dance movements of Javanese dancers that he had seen at the Exposition Universelle, Paris, in 1889, which impressed him greatly at the time. Dance was an activity that was strongly discouraged by the colonialists. Gauguin frequently depicted song and dance as the last remnants of authentic culture, yet his support for the indigenous people and their culture did not prevent an eclectic attitude to his painting. Ta Matete (The Market) is part of the collection of the Kunstmuseum Basel. (Wendy Osgerby)