Don’t just like it, live it!

Monday 13 July, 21:00

Led by Swedish saxophonist Otis Sandsjö, Berlin-based quartet Y‑OTIS blends jazz, hip‑hop and electronic textures into a hybrid sound. Looping melodic motifs and fragmented structures collide with deep basslines and shimmering synth layers, creating an ever-shifting musical mosaic. On stage the four musicians favour open, conversational interplay and a driving groove, alternating between introspective textures and propulsive group improvisation to generate a warm, kinetic atmosphere that invites attentive listening and physical response.

7 – 15 July

Bellerive Festival presents a programme of chamber and orchestral music exploring repertoire from Classical to late Romantic and early 20th-century voices. Evenings feature works by Beethoven, Dvořák, Schubert, Mahler and Mendelssohn alongside evocative programmes centred on Grieg, Tchaikovsky and American classics. A New York-themed matinée offers lighter, rhythmic contrasts. A concurrent photographic exhibition by Michel Juvet creates a visual dialogue with the music. The festival highlights refined ensemble playing, expressive phrasing and an intimate atmosphere.

7 – 20 July

Charlotte Qin and Tessel van der Putte present an exhibition of porcelain installation and paintings that treats water as both element and metaphor. Curated by Frédéric Elkaïm, the works shift the focus from control and extraction toward ecological, emotional and feminine inquiry. A central porcelain installation evokes aquatic creatures and the fluid forms of coral and blossom, while paintings explore the body as a permeable landscape, probing materiality, vulnerability and collective care.

Opening: Thursday 7 July, 18:00 – Performance of Charlotte Qin

20 June – 30 August

Join the community for an open‑air summer programme of free cultural and botanical activities in a beautiful alpine garden setting. Across the season, families and neighbours can take part in exhibitions, botanical and arts workshops for all ages, dance and yoga sessions, story readings and a mobile library. Activities invite hands-on discovery, shared learning and creative exchange — welcoming everyone to spend time together, explore nature and connect with neighbours.

8 July – 6 September

FAAB G collective presents an exhibition centred on FLINTA* figures connected to Asia, bringing together works by Jeanne Tara, Juli Sando, Sayaka Mizuno, Camille Farrah Buhler, Anaïs Nariman Aïk, Fhunyue Gao and Li Chaolin. Through installation, photography, sculpture and mixed-media, the project interrogates dominant narratives that invisibilize or simplify identities and memories. Nourished by anticolonial and transfeminist perspectives, the show explores political, historical and intimate forms of resistance and proposes encounters between personal testimonies and collective histories.

Opening: Tuesday 7 July, 18:00

1 – 31 July

The exhibition highlights Geneva’s remarkable trees and the men and women who care for them. It explores stewardship, memory and urban ecology, revealing how individual trees anchor community histories and daily practices of care. Combining documentary and artistic perspectives, the presentation considers cultural and environmental dimensions of urban trees, inviting reflection on our relationship with living monuments and the labour that sustains them.

Monday 13 July, 21:00

Led by Swedish saxophonist Otis Sandsjö, Berlin-based quartet Y‑OTIS blends jazz, hip‑hop and electronic textures into a hybrid sound. Looping melodic motifs and fragmented structures collide with deep basslines and shimmering synth layers, creating an ever-shifting musical mosaic. On stage the four musicians favour open, conversational interplay and a driving groove, alternating between introspective textures and propulsive group improvisation to generate a warm, kinetic atmosphere that invites attentive listening and physical response.

7 – 15 July

Bellerive Festival presents a programme of chamber and orchestral music exploring repertoire from Classical to late Romantic and early 20th-century voices. Evenings feature works by Beethoven, Dvořák, Schubert, Mahler and Mendelssohn alongside evocative programmes centred on Grieg, Tchaikovsky and American classics. A New York-themed matinée offers lighter, rhythmic contrasts. A concurrent photographic exhibition by Michel Juvet creates a visual dialogue with the music. The festival highlights refined ensemble playing, expressive phrasing and an intimate atmosphere.

7 – 20 July

Charlotte Qin and Tessel van der Putte present an exhibition of porcelain installation and paintings that treats water as both element and metaphor. Curated by Frédéric Elkaïm, the works shift the focus from control and extraction toward ecological, emotional and feminine inquiry. A central porcelain installation evokes aquatic creatures and the fluid forms of coral and blossom, while paintings explore the body as a permeable landscape, probing materiality, vulnerability and collective care.

Opening: Thursday 7 July, 18:00 – Performance of Charlotte Qin

20 June – 30 August

Join the community for an open‑air summer programme of free cultural and botanical activities in a beautiful alpine garden setting. Across the season, families and neighbours can take part in exhibitions, botanical and arts workshops for all ages, dance and yoga sessions, story readings and a mobile library. Activities invite hands-on discovery, shared learning and creative exchange — welcoming everyone to spend time together, explore nature and connect with neighbours.

8 July – 6 September

FAAB G collective presents an exhibition centred on FLINTA* figures connected to Asia, bringing together works by Jeanne Tara, Juli Sando, Sayaka Mizuno, Camille Farrah Buhler, Anaïs Nariman Aïk, Fhunyue Gao and Li Chaolin. Through installation, photography, sculpture and mixed-media, the project interrogates dominant narratives that invisibilize or simplify identities and memories. Nourished by anticolonial and transfeminist perspectives, the show explores political, historical and intimate forms of resistance and proposes encounters between personal testimonies and collective histories.

Opening: Tuesday 7 July, 18:00

1 – 31 July

The exhibition highlights Geneva’s remarkable trees and the men and women who care for them. It explores stewardship, memory and urban ecology, revealing how individual trees anchor community histories and daily practices of care. Combining documentary and artistic perspectives, the presentation considers cultural and environmental dimensions of urban trees, inviting reflection on our relationship with living monuments and the labour that sustains them.

Monday 13 July, 21:00

Led by Swedish saxophonist Otis Sandsjö, Berlin-based quartet Y‑OTIS blends jazz, hip‑hop and electronic textures into a hybrid sound. Looping melodic motifs and fragmented structures collide with deep basslines and shimmering synth layers, creating an ever-shifting musical mosaic. On stage the four musicians favour open, conversational interplay and a driving groove, alternating between introspective textures and propulsive group improvisation to generate a warm, kinetic atmosphere that invites attentive listening and physical response.

7 – 15 July

Bellerive Festival presents a programme of chamber and orchestral music exploring repertoire from Classical to late Romantic and early 20th-century voices. Evenings feature works by Beethoven, Dvořák, Schubert, Mahler and Mendelssohn alongside evocative programmes centred on Grieg, Tchaikovsky and American classics. A New York-themed matinée offers lighter, rhythmic contrasts. A concurrent photographic exhibition by Michel Juvet creates a visual dialogue with the music. The festival highlights refined ensemble playing, expressive phrasing and an intimate atmosphere.

7 – 20 July

Charlotte Qin and Tessel van der Putte present an exhibition of porcelain installation and paintings that treats water as both element and metaphor. Curated by Frédéric Elkaïm, the works shift the focus from control and extraction toward ecological, emotional and feminine inquiry. A central porcelain installation evokes aquatic creatures and the fluid forms of coral and blossom, while paintings explore the body as a permeable landscape, probing materiality, vulnerability and collective care.

Opening: Thursday 7 July, 18:00 – Performance of Charlotte Qin

20 June – 30 August

Join the community for an open‑air summer programme of free cultural and botanical activities in a beautiful alpine garden setting. Across the season, families and neighbours can take part in exhibitions, botanical and arts workshops for all ages, dance and yoga sessions, story readings and a mobile library. Activities invite hands-on discovery, shared learning and creative exchange — welcoming everyone to spend time together, explore nature and connect with neighbours.

8 July – 6 September

FAAB G collective presents an exhibition centred on FLINTA* figures connected to Asia, bringing together works by Jeanne Tara, Juli Sando, Sayaka Mizuno, Camille Farrah Buhler, Anaïs Nariman Aïk, Fhunyue Gao and Li Chaolin. Through installation, photography, sculpture and mixed-media, the project interrogates dominant narratives that invisibilize or simplify identities and memories. Nourished by anticolonial and transfeminist perspectives, the show explores political, historical and intimate forms of resistance and proposes encounters between personal testimonies and collective histories.

Opening: Tuesday 7 July, 18:00

1 – 31 July

The exhibition highlights Geneva’s remarkable trees and the men and women who care for them. It explores stewardship, memory and urban ecology, revealing how individual trees anchor community histories and daily practices of care. Combining documentary and artistic perspectives, the presentation considers cultural and environmental dimensions of urban trees, inviting reflection on our relationship with living monuments and the labour that sustains them.

15 – 26 July

Directed by Valeria Bertolotto, Faire Hamlet! stages a company wrestling with performance and truth as rehearsals of Shakespeare’s prince unravel private tensions. Pierre Banderet, Dylan Poletti and an intergenerational ensemble confront doubt, jealousy and shifting identities while Angèle Colas provides artistic collaboration. Sound by Fred Jarabo, scenography by Fanny Courvoisier, lights by Alessandra Domingues and costumes by Eléonore Cassaigneau shape an intimate, unstable world where fiction bleeds into life.

In French.

9 – 31 July

Inner Light is a Swiss artistic collective founded by Kim Coussée, Eliott Villars and Gaia Vincensini that works at the intersection of contemporary art, fashion and publishing. Their transdisciplinary practice combines printmaking, textile, sculpture and performance to question the circulation of printed images across unconventional supports. For this project they invited artist Lyna Azwaw to stage an edition inspired by documents and publications found in archives. The presentation includes performances and contributions by Js Donny, Rosalie Dubois and Leandro Russo.

Opening: Thursday 9 July, 20:00 – 22:00

14 – 18 July

High-speed wheelchair tennis on clay delivers close, tactical rallies and constant motion as athletes power and pivot across the court. Players glide, slide and spin their way through bursts of speed and sudden changes of direction, feeling the textured surface under wheels. The outdoor atmosphere hums with focused intensity and mutual admiration, blending elite competition with an inclusive spirit. It’s an athletic showcase of strategy, endurance and skill, offering both exhilarating play and communal energy.

13 – 19 July

Chill O Lac returns for its third edition, a free week of community activities organised by the youth service. Open to everyone, the programme mixes live music, urban sports and creative workshops with playful group games. Expect basketball pick‑up, the urban game Zô‑Lanta, creative days for women, workout sessions, a concert by LGA and a friendly football tournament. The event fosters connection, inclusion and shared moments for neighbours, young people and families.

Saturday 18 July, 14:00

This workshop uses techniques from Theatre of the Oppressed to examine systemic oppression, gendered dynamics and power relations in the performing arts. Through physical exercises and situational improvisations contributed by participants, the session explores how power circulates on and off stage and offers practical tools to reclaim agency and transform everyday interactions. The workshop follows a chosen-mix policy and excludes cisgender heterosexual men to foster a safer, more expressive space.

In French.

Saturday 18 July, 09:30

Stroll into a storytelling journey inspired by “The Agglomerates.” Listen to lively tales that blend movement and poetry, then join a hands-on workshop to draw and create your own marks from the story. Feel the rhythm of spoken words, the scratch of pencils, and bright colors coming to life. The session invites children to slow down, imagine, move with the story, and make simple artworks that keep memory of the adventure.

Kids ages 5 and up.

Monday 13 July, 21:00

Led by Swedish saxophonist Otis Sandsjö, Berlin-based quartet Y‑OTIS blends jazz, hip‑hop and electronic textures into a hybrid sound. Looping melodic motifs and fragmented structures collide with deep basslines and shimmering synth layers, creating an ever-shifting musical mosaic. On stage the four musicians favour open, conversational interplay and a driving groove, alternating between introspective textures and propulsive group improvisation to generate a warm, kinetic atmosphere that invites attentive listening and physical response.

7 – 15 July

Bellerive Festival presents a programme of chamber and orchestral music exploring repertoire from Classical to late Romantic and early 20th-century voices. Evenings feature works by Beethoven, Dvořák, Schubert, Mahler and Mendelssohn alongside evocative programmes centred on Grieg, Tchaikovsky and American classics. A New York-themed matinée offers lighter, rhythmic contrasts. A concurrent photographic exhibition by Michel Juvet creates a visual dialogue with the music. The festival highlights refined ensemble playing, expressive phrasing and an intimate atmosphere.

7 – 20 July

Charlotte Qin and Tessel van der Putte present an exhibition of porcelain installation and paintings that treats water as both element and metaphor. Curated by Frédéric Elkaïm, the works shift the focus from control and extraction toward ecological, emotional and feminine inquiry. A central porcelain installation evokes aquatic creatures and the fluid forms of coral and blossom, while paintings explore the body as a permeable landscape, probing materiality, vulnerability and collective care.

Opening: Thursday 7 July, 18:00 – Performance of Charlotte Qin

20 June – 30 August

Join the community for an open‑air summer programme of free cultural and botanical activities in a beautiful alpine garden setting. Across the season, families and neighbours can take part in exhibitions, botanical and arts workshops for all ages, dance and yoga sessions, story readings and a mobile library. Activities invite hands-on discovery, shared learning and creative exchange — welcoming everyone to spend time together, explore nature and connect with neighbours.

8 July – 6 September

FAAB G collective presents an exhibition centred on FLINTA* figures connected to Asia, bringing together works by Jeanne Tara, Juli Sando, Sayaka Mizuno, Camille Farrah Buhler, Anaïs Nariman Aïk, Fhunyue Gao and Li Chaolin. Through installation, photography, sculpture and mixed-media, the project interrogates dominant narratives that invisibilize or simplify identities and memories. Nourished by anticolonial and transfeminist perspectives, the show explores political, historical and intimate forms of resistance and proposes encounters between personal testimonies and collective histories.

Opening: Tuesday 7 July, 18:00

1 – 31 July

The exhibition highlights Geneva’s remarkable trees and the men and women who care for them. It explores stewardship, memory and urban ecology, revealing how individual trees anchor community histories and daily practices of care. Combining documentary and artistic perspectives, the presentation considers cultural and environmental dimensions of urban trees, inviting reflection on our relationship with living monuments and the labour that sustains them.

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