Don’t just like it, live it!

14 – 18 April

CHRONOPOLIS gathers twenty independent watchmakers presenting wristwatches that combine mechanical ingenuity and contemporary design. The fair foregrounds artisanal techniques—manual finishing, small-scale production and micro-mechanical innovation—across objects, prototypes and limited editions.
Themes of independence, authenticity and dialogue recur as makers prioritise accessibility and exchange over commercial spectacle. The presentation reveals how craft, material choice and design language shape personal timekeeping, inviting close encounters with the processes and values that sustain independent watchmaking.

17 – 18 April

This international conference at the University of Geneva reflects on thirty years of research into drawing and painting in 15th–16th-century France. It revisits the impact of key earlier scholarship, especially the 1993–94 exhibition Quand la peinture était dans les livres, and considers how the field has evolved since then. The event highlights new methodologies, recent discoveries, and changing perspectives on artistic practices, production contexts, and networks in Renaissance France.

14 – 20 April

Watchmaking maisons including Audemars Piguet and other new entrants present contemporary horological practice through mechanical timepieces, prototypes and design studies. The programme foregrounds artisanal craftsmanship, complications and material innovation, juxtaposing heritage movements with experimental technologies showcased in a LAB incubator. Through a mix of object-focused displays and technical demonstrations, the exhibition interrogates timekeeping’s aesthetic and industrial languages, revealing how tradition and cutting‑edge engineering redefine notions of luxury, function and cultural identity.

Friday 17 April, 18:30

The Romand Eloquence Competition brings together talented speakers from across French-speaking Switzerland for a dynamic contest of public speaking and rhetoric. Participants showcase their ability to persuade, inspire, and captivate an audience through carefully crafted speeches on a variety of themes. Blending creativity, critical thinking, and performance, the event highlights the art of eloquence while offering a platform for emerging voices to express their ideas with confidence and authenticity.

In French.

Friday 17 April, 20:00

Lina_ revisits the poems of Luís de Camões in Fado Camões, a concert-poem where traditional fado is reshaped with blues and electronic textures. Her expressive voice inhabits Camões’s lyrical intensity, moving between fervour, tenderness and dramatic power. Accompanied by a small ensemble of multi-influenced musicians, the performance blends heritage and modern soundscapes to create an intimate, haunting journey that traces the emotional core of the poet’s verses.

14 – 18 April

Watches and Wonders Geneva: The Montreux Jazz Club settles in Geneva for a temporary residency.

The spirit of the Montreux Jazz Festival takes over Geneva as part of the “In The City” program of the Watches and Wonders Geneva watch show. For five consecutive evenings, a pop-up Montreux Jazz Club will open its doors at Quai du Général-Guisan to offer a free, intimate, immersive musical experience.

14 – 18 April

CHRONOPOLIS gathers twenty independent watchmakers presenting wristwatches that combine mechanical ingenuity and contemporary design. The fair foregrounds artisanal techniques—manual finishing, small-scale production and micro-mechanical innovation—across objects, prototypes and limited editions.
Themes of independence, authenticity and dialogue recur as makers prioritise accessibility and exchange over commercial spectacle. The presentation reveals how craft, material choice and design language shape personal timekeeping, inviting close encounters with the processes and values that sustain independent watchmaking.

17 – 18 April

This international conference at the University of Geneva reflects on thirty years of research into drawing and painting in 15th–16th-century France. It revisits the impact of key earlier scholarship, especially the 1993–94 exhibition Quand la peinture était dans les livres, and considers how the field has evolved since then. The event highlights new methodologies, recent discoveries, and changing perspectives on artistic practices, production contexts, and networks in Renaissance France.

14 – 20 April

Watchmaking maisons including Audemars Piguet and other new entrants present contemporary horological practice through mechanical timepieces, prototypes and design studies. The programme foregrounds artisanal craftsmanship, complications and material innovation, juxtaposing heritage movements with experimental technologies showcased in a LAB incubator. Through a mix of object-focused displays and technical demonstrations, the exhibition interrogates timekeeping’s aesthetic and industrial languages, revealing how tradition and cutting‑edge engineering redefine notions of luxury, function and cultural identity.

Friday 17 April, 18:30

The Romand Eloquence Competition brings together talented speakers from across French-speaking Switzerland for a dynamic contest of public speaking and rhetoric. Participants showcase their ability to persuade, inspire, and captivate an audience through carefully crafted speeches on a variety of themes. Blending creativity, critical thinking, and performance, the event highlights the art of eloquence while offering a platform for emerging voices to express their ideas with confidence and authenticity.

In French.

Friday 17 April, 20:00

Lina_ revisits the poems of Luís de Camões in Fado Camões, a concert-poem where traditional fado is reshaped with blues and electronic textures. Her expressive voice inhabits Camões’s lyrical intensity, moving between fervour, tenderness and dramatic power. Accompanied by a small ensemble of multi-influenced musicians, the performance blends heritage and modern soundscapes to create an intimate, haunting journey that traces the emotional core of the poet’s verses.

14 – 18 April

Watches and Wonders Geneva: The Montreux Jazz Club settles in Geneva for a temporary residency.

The spirit of the Montreux Jazz Festival takes over Geneva as part of the “In The City” program of the Watches and Wonders Geneva watch show. For five consecutive evenings, a pop-up Montreux Jazz Club will open its doors at Quai du Général-Guisan to offer a free, intimate, immersive musical experience.

14 – 18 April

CHRONOPOLIS gathers twenty independent watchmakers presenting wristwatches that combine mechanical ingenuity and contemporary design. The fair foregrounds artisanal techniques—manual finishing, small-scale production and micro-mechanical innovation—across objects, prototypes and limited editions.
Themes of independence, authenticity and dialogue recur as makers prioritise accessibility and exchange over commercial spectacle. The presentation reveals how craft, material choice and design language shape personal timekeeping, inviting close encounters with the processes and values that sustain independent watchmaking.

17 – 18 April

This international conference at the University of Geneva reflects on thirty years of research into drawing and painting in 15th–16th-century France. It revisits the impact of key earlier scholarship, especially the 1993–94 exhibition Quand la peinture était dans les livres, and considers how the field has evolved since then. The event highlights new methodologies, recent discoveries, and changing perspectives on artistic practices, production contexts, and networks in Renaissance France.

14 – 20 April

Watchmaking maisons including Audemars Piguet and other new entrants present contemporary horological practice through mechanical timepieces, prototypes and design studies. The programme foregrounds artisanal craftsmanship, complications and material innovation, juxtaposing heritage movements with experimental technologies showcased in a LAB incubator. Through a mix of object-focused displays and technical demonstrations, the exhibition interrogates timekeeping’s aesthetic and industrial languages, revealing how tradition and cutting‑edge engineering redefine notions of luxury, function and cultural identity.

Friday 17 April, 18:30

The Romand Eloquence Competition brings together talented speakers from across French-speaking Switzerland for a dynamic contest of public speaking and rhetoric. Participants showcase their ability to persuade, inspire, and captivate an audience through carefully crafted speeches on a variety of themes. Blending creativity, critical thinking, and performance, the event highlights the art of eloquence while offering a platform for emerging voices to express their ideas with confidence and authenticity.

In French.

Friday 17 April, 20:00

Lina_ revisits the poems of Luís de Camões in Fado Camões, a concert-poem where traditional fado is reshaped with blues and electronic textures. Her expressive voice inhabits Camões’s lyrical intensity, moving between fervour, tenderness and dramatic power. Accompanied by a small ensemble of multi-influenced musicians, the performance blends heritage and modern soundscapes to create an intimate, haunting journey that traces the emotional core of the poet’s verses.

14 – 18 April

Watches and Wonders Geneva: The Montreux Jazz Club settles in Geneva for a temporary residency.

The spirit of the Montreux Jazz Festival takes over Geneva as part of the “In The City” program of the Watches and Wonders Geneva watch show. For five consecutive evenings, a pop-up Montreux Jazz Club will open its doors at Quai du Général-Guisan to offer a free, intimate, immersive musical experience.

Saturday 18 April, 14:00

The Quartier des Bains presents an immersive musical journey through its galleries, bringing together 30 musicians in 11 spaces. Through improvised performances in dialogue with the artworks, visitors are invited to wander freely between venues, following a rhythm that alternates live sessions and breaks. The event reflects an ongoing effort to expand beyond traditional exhibitions and strengthen connections with audiences and the local cultural scene.

Saturday 18 April, 15:00

Stroll beneath a cathedral of leaves, moving through tree-lined historic streets and an urban park where canopies dapple the path with shifting light. The walk invites close attention to bark, branching patterns and seasonal scents while local tree experts share natural history and surprising stories. The pace is gentle and social, favoring curious observation and shared discoveries. It’s a chance to reconnect with urban nature, learn to read the landscape, and appreciate the living heritage of the city.

In French.

17 – 26 April

FURTHER AFIELD

Visions du Réel, founded in 1969, showcases bold and singular works rooted in past, present, and future realities. For ten days, the festival transforms Nyon into a hub where generations of filmmakers and artists from around the world connect with an engaged audience. Recognized as one of the leading international festivals dedicated to documentary and “cinéma du réel,” it premieres many films globally and serves as a key platform for professional exchange and creative collaboration.

14 – 18 April

Directed by Joël Pommerat, this new creation imagines the encounter of two very young girls who defy the laws of the real world and adult authority to preserve their pact of friendship. Positioned between theatre and novel, the piece combines grave and naive episodes, where the supernatural becomes a means to confront inconceivable realities. The staging favours intimate, unsettling atmospheres and a precise ensemble work. Includes accessible formats: relaxed performance, audiodescription and tactile visit.

In French.

Saturday 18 April, 10:00

An exploratory walking workshop that invites participants to listen creatively to the hidden sounds of trees, soils and grass. The session introduces the unconventional instrument Subterraneum and guides attendees to record vibrant environmental noises, compare recordings, and practice describing and naming what they hear. Participants experiment with attentive listening, field recording techniques and collaborative sound-making, developing skills in sonic observation and ecological awareness.

In French.

Saturday 18 April, 14:00

Raphaël Fiammingo, from the City of Geneva’s Parks and Gardens Department (SEVE), oversees care and development of the city’s trees and urban forests, managing over 40,000 trees and 70 hectares of public forest.

This lecture presents a curated selection of 40 notable trees found in Geneva, exploring seasonal changes, species diversity (more than 400 varieties), ecological roles, and urban forestry practices. Fiammingo examines identification, conservation challenges, and why urban tree heritage matters for biodiversity, climate resilience, and community well-being.

In French.

14 – 18 April

CHRONOPOLIS gathers twenty independent watchmakers presenting wristwatches that combine mechanical ingenuity and contemporary design. The fair foregrounds artisanal techniques—manual finishing, small-scale production and micro-mechanical innovation—across objects, prototypes and limited editions.
Themes of independence, authenticity and dialogue recur as makers prioritise accessibility and exchange over commercial spectacle. The presentation reveals how craft, material choice and design language shape personal timekeeping, inviting close encounters with the processes and values that sustain independent watchmaking.

17 – 18 April

This international conference at the University of Geneva reflects on thirty years of research into drawing and painting in 15th–16th-century France. It revisits the impact of key earlier scholarship, especially the 1993–94 exhibition Quand la peinture était dans les livres, and considers how the field has evolved since then. The event highlights new methodologies, recent discoveries, and changing perspectives on artistic practices, production contexts, and networks in Renaissance France.

14 – 20 April

Watchmaking maisons including Audemars Piguet and other new entrants present contemporary horological practice through mechanical timepieces, prototypes and design studies. The programme foregrounds artisanal craftsmanship, complications and material innovation, juxtaposing heritage movements with experimental technologies showcased in a LAB incubator. Through a mix of object-focused displays and technical demonstrations, the exhibition interrogates timekeeping’s aesthetic and industrial languages, revealing how tradition and cutting‑edge engineering redefine notions of luxury, function and cultural identity.

Friday 17 April, 18:30

The Romand Eloquence Competition brings together talented speakers from across French-speaking Switzerland for a dynamic contest of public speaking and rhetoric. Participants showcase their ability to persuade, inspire, and captivate an audience through carefully crafted speeches on a variety of themes. Blending creativity, critical thinking, and performance, the event highlights the art of eloquence while offering a platform for emerging voices to express their ideas with confidence and authenticity.

In French.

Friday 17 April, 20:00

Lina_ revisits the poems of Luís de Camões in Fado Camões, a concert-poem where traditional fado is reshaped with blues and electronic textures. Her expressive voice inhabits Camões’s lyrical intensity, moving between fervour, tenderness and dramatic power. Accompanied by a small ensemble of multi-influenced musicians, the performance blends heritage and modern soundscapes to create an intimate, haunting journey that traces the emotional core of the poet’s verses.

14 – 18 April

Watches and Wonders Geneva: The Montreux Jazz Club settles in Geneva for a temporary residency.

The spirit of the Montreux Jazz Festival takes over Geneva as part of the “In The City” program of the Watches and Wonders Geneva watch show. For five consecutive evenings, a pop-up Montreux Jazz Club will open its doors at Quai du Général-Guisan to offer a free, intimate, immersive musical experience.

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CoolBytes

Celebrating Geneva’s vibrant heartbeat and the stories shaping culture today

Chef Florian Le Bouhec shares his favorite Geneva spots — from his go-to café for inspiration to the cultural discoveries that spark his creativity.
Geneva gave the world the Red Cross, the United Nations, and — as it turns out — the modern comic strip. It's a part of the city's identity that often gets overlooked, but from a 19th-century teacher sketching picture stories by the lake to a new comics museum opening in the works, Geneva's relationship with the ninth art is deeper and more alive than most people realize.

Geneva Classics

Visiting for the first time? A quick guide to the city’s top attractions.

The MEG is a renowned museum dedicated to the exploration and presentation of cultural diversity from around the world. Located in the heart of Geneva, it houses an extensive collection of over 80,000 objects, including artifacts, textiles, and artworks that highlight the rich traditions and histories of various communities. The museum emphasizes interactive and immersive exhibitions, engaging visitors with contemporary issues related to culture and identity.

Cool fact: The e-MEG app serves as a digital twin of the permanent exhibition, providing an audio guide and detailed descriptions along with photographs of all displayed objects.

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– CLOSED FOR RENOVATION –

Since its opening in 1994, the MAMCO Geneva (Musée d’art moderne et contemporain)  has staged 450 exhibitions with works dating from the 1960s to the present day. Mamco’s holdings include works by Christo, Martin Kippenberger, Jenny Holzer, Dan Flavin, Sarkis, Franz Erhard Walther and Sylvie Fleury, among many others.

Cool fact: The MAMCO is the epicenter of the “Nuit des Bains”, held three times a year.  During this event, the district around the museum is transformed into a large gallery and attracts thousands of art lovers and sightseers each night.

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With a collection of 27,000 items from Switzerland, Europe and the Middle and Far East, and a witness to twelve centuries of ceramic art from the Middle Ages to modern times, the Ariana is one of Europe’s great museums specializing in glass and ceramics.

Cool fact: On the first Sunday of each month, the Ariana Museum opens its temporary exhibitions to the public.

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