Don’t just like it, live it!

5 – 8 May

An invitation to an artistic passage, this project transforms a strategic underpass into a painted fresco and links to a shore-side signal installation. The tunnel mural is realised by the Artmur collective (Julien Scalabrino, Tiffany Sibra and Celestin Tanari), while the Signal installation was conceived by Max Bondu with architects Charles Bouscasse and Marion Mouny as part of the Veiller au grain project, self-built in the Bermuda workshops. The works explore movement, thresholds and dialogue with the riverside.

Tuesday 5 May, 19:30

Conductor Zofia Kiniorska leads the AMAA Symphony Orchestra through a programme balancing Italian lyricism and Romantic drama. Pianist Zijian Wei, Geneva Competition 2022 laureate, features in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.2, delivering poised virtuosity, while Andreas Bottaro brings lyrical intensity on violin in selected works. Excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Puccini’s symphonic prelude weave orchestral color with balletic textures, complemented by dancers from CPMDT — Emilie Meeus and Luca Scaduto — who add a visual, kinetic layer to the musical narrative.

Tuesday 5 May, 14:30

Danièle Holweger leads this adults’ writing workshop, guiding playful exercises and short writing games that encourage free expression and creative risk-taking.

The session explores spontaneous composition through timed prompts and imaginative exercises, examining the notion of a ‘plurdelire’ — a pen that captures wild, unfiltered thoughts. Participants investigate techniques to loosen style, generate material, and rediscover writing as playful discovery.

In French.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Elizabeth Mesok (University of Basel), Nuala Caomhanach (Geneva Graduate Institute) and Constanza Bonadonna (University of Geneva) discuss scholarship on women’s participation in science. Moderated by Agnieszka Fal‑Dutra Santos (Geneva Graduate Institute), the conversation examines uneven distribution of care labour, structural barriers and forms of prejudice and discrimination often compounded by race, sexuality, age or class. Speakers will reflect on experiences across career stages and explore strategies for solidarity, mentorship and networks to support women in Swiss academia. Organised by the Gender Centre.

In English.

2 – 10 May

Follow Ugly, a plucky duckling who leaves the farmyard, meets quirky characters and discovers the value of being different in this witty, tuneful musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale. Student actors bring colourful characters to life with songs, movement and gentle humour, creating a warm family theatre experience that celebrates diversity, empathy and belonging.

In English. Kids ages 5 and up.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Panelists Edward Mandry (Paulette publisher), Mathilde Petit (Lesbian Archives, Paris), Aurore Turbiau (UNIL) and Agnès Vannouvong (UNIGE) bring curatorial, archival and academic perspectives; moderated by Taline Garibian (UNIGE).

This roundtable examines LGBTQIA+ written production in French-speaking Switzerland since the 1970s, exploring mechanisms of invisibilization in literary scholarship and criticism. Panelists investigate archival traces, map cultural histories and discuss methodological tools to reveal norms, prohibitions and social changes reflected in marginalized literary practices.

In French.

5 – 8 May

An invitation to an artistic passage, this project transforms a strategic underpass into a painted fresco and links to a shore-side signal installation. The tunnel mural is realised by the Artmur collective (Julien Scalabrino, Tiffany Sibra and Celestin Tanari), while the Signal installation was conceived by Max Bondu with architects Charles Bouscasse and Marion Mouny as part of the Veiller au grain project, self-built in the Bermuda workshops. The works explore movement, thresholds and dialogue with the riverside.

Tuesday 5 May, 19:30

Conductor Zofia Kiniorska leads the AMAA Symphony Orchestra through a programme balancing Italian lyricism and Romantic drama. Pianist Zijian Wei, Geneva Competition 2022 laureate, features in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.2, delivering poised virtuosity, while Andreas Bottaro brings lyrical intensity on violin in selected works. Excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Puccini’s symphonic prelude weave orchestral color with balletic textures, complemented by dancers from CPMDT — Emilie Meeus and Luca Scaduto — who add a visual, kinetic layer to the musical narrative.

Tuesday 5 May, 14:30

Danièle Holweger leads this adults’ writing workshop, guiding playful exercises and short writing games that encourage free expression and creative risk-taking.

The session explores spontaneous composition through timed prompts and imaginative exercises, examining the notion of a ‘plurdelire’ — a pen that captures wild, unfiltered thoughts. Participants investigate techniques to loosen style, generate material, and rediscover writing as playful discovery.

In French.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Elizabeth Mesok (University of Basel), Nuala Caomhanach (Geneva Graduate Institute) and Constanza Bonadonna (University of Geneva) discuss scholarship on women’s participation in science. Moderated by Agnieszka Fal‑Dutra Santos (Geneva Graduate Institute), the conversation examines uneven distribution of care labour, structural barriers and forms of prejudice and discrimination often compounded by race, sexuality, age or class. Speakers will reflect on experiences across career stages and explore strategies for solidarity, mentorship and networks to support women in Swiss academia. Organised by the Gender Centre.

In English.

2 – 10 May

Follow Ugly, a plucky duckling who leaves the farmyard, meets quirky characters and discovers the value of being different in this witty, tuneful musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale. Student actors bring colourful characters to life with songs, movement and gentle humour, creating a warm family theatre experience that celebrates diversity, empathy and belonging.

In English. Kids ages 5 and up.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Panelists Edward Mandry (Paulette publisher), Mathilde Petit (Lesbian Archives, Paris), Aurore Turbiau (UNIL) and Agnès Vannouvong (UNIGE) bring curatorial, archival and academic perspectives; moderated by Taline Garibian (UNIGE).

This roundtable examines LGBTQIA+ written production in French-speaking Switzerland since the 1970s, exploring mechanisms of invisibilization in literary scholarship and criticism. Panelists investigate archival traces, map cultural histories and discuss methodological tools to reveal norms, prohibitions and social changes reflected in marginalized literary practices.

In French.

5 – 8 May

An invitation to an artistic passage, this project transforms a strategic underpass into a painted fresco and links to a shore-side signal installation. The tunnel mural is realised by the Artmur collective (Julien Scalabrino, Tiffany Sibra and Celestin Tanari), while the Signal installation was conceived by Max Bondu with architects Charles Bouscasse and Marion Mouny as part of the Veiller au grain project, self-built in the Bermuda workshops. The works explore movement, thresholds and dialogue with the riverside.

Tuesday 5 May, 19:30

Conductor Zofia Kiniorska leads the AMAA Symphony Orchestra through a programme balancing Italian lyricism and Romantic drama. Pianist Zijian Wei, Geneva Competition 2022 laureate, features in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.2, delivering poised virtuosity, while Andreas Bottaro brings lyrical intensity on violin in selected works. Excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Puccini’s symphonic prelude weave orchestral color with balletic textures, complemented by dancers from CPMDT — Emilie Meeus and Luca Scaduto — who add a visual, kinetic layer to the musical narrative.

Tuesday 5 May, 14:30

Danièle Holweger leads this adults’ writing workshop, guiding playful exercises and short writing games that encourage free expression and creative risk-taking.

The session explores spontaneous composition through timed prompts and imaginative exercises, examining the notion of a ‘plurdelire’ — a pen that captures wild, unfiltered thoughts. Participants investigate techniques to loosen style, generate material, and rediscover writing as playful discovery.

In French.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Elizabeth Mesok (University of Basel), Nuala Caomhanach (Geneva Graduate Institute) and Constanza Bonadonna (University of Geneva) discuss scholarship on women’s participation in science. Moderated by Agnieszka Fal‑Dutra Santos (Geneva Graduate Institute), the conversation examines uneven distribution of care labour, structural barriers and forms of prejudice and discrimination often compounded by race, sexuality, age or class. Speakers will reflect on experiences across career stages and explore strategies for solidarity, mentorship and networks to support women in Swiss academia. Organised by the Gender Centre.

In English.

2 – 10 May

Follow Ugly, a plucky duckling who leaves the farmyard, meets quirky characters and discovers the value of being different in this witty, tuneful musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale. Student actors bring colourful characters to life with songs, movement and gentle humour, creating a warm family theatre experience that celebrates diversity, empathy and belonging.

In English. Kids ages 5 and up.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Panelists Edward Mandry (Paulette publisher), Mathilde Petit (Lesbian Archives, Paris), Aurore Turbiau (UNIL) and Agnès Vannouvong (UNIGE) bring curatorial, archival and academic perspectives; moderated by Taline Garibian (UNIGE).

This roundtable examines LGBTQIA+ written production in French-speaking Switzerland since the 1970s, exploring mechanisms of invisibilization in literary scholarship and criticism. Panelists investigate archival traces, map cultural histories and discuss methodological tools to reveal norms, prohibitions and social changes reflected in marginalized literary practices.

In French.

7 – 16 May

Faites l’apéro pas la guerre invites audiences into a compact, provocative performance that blends satire, music and physical theatre to examine conviviality and conflict in contemporary life. The staging favors intimate gestures, rhythmic pacing and inventive use of space to create moments that oscillate between humour and unease. The production foregrounds ensemble interplay and sensory detail, offering a thoughtful, often playful reflection on how social rituals mask deeper tensions.

In French.

5 – 10 May

Presented by Les AMAZONES à la Julienne, this satirical comedy upends fairy-tale logic to expose social conventions. A distinguished lecturer’s attempt to rehabilitate classic tales unravels as a sarcastic Witch dismantles founding myths, and heroines from Cinderella to Snow White rebel, bore themselves or awaken sexually. Mixing social satire, dark comedy and biting poetry, the piece stages wild reversals where prey become predators, yielding a hilarious yet cruel portrait of a post–fairy‑tale world that unsettles as it amuses.

Free entry, donations welcome.
Information and reservations: 078 799 02 36 / lesamazones10@gmail.com

In French.

7 – 10 May

GemGenève presents an exhibition curated by Pauline d’Abrigeon, exploring the interplay between artisan hands and rare mineral and organic materials. The show brings together over a hundred loaned objects — jade, coral, onyx, agate, amber, tortoiseshell and more — alongside nearly forty works from the Baur Foundation.

It highlights lapidary and conservation techniques through live métiers d’art demonstrations, workshops, panel discussions, and guided tours on request, while a pop‑up bookshop and author signing complement the program.

8 – 10 May

P.A.G.E.S. brings together publishers, artists, designers and visual-communication students to showcase contemporary printed matter and graphic design. The programme features artist books, launches and editorial projects — including presentations of Agathe de Limoges’s Une clé qui n’ouvre rien and the publication Couriller Gribourir by Stanyslas Leray — alongside exhibitions (Bänziger‑Hug‑Kasper‑Florio, Spinorama), a student‑illustrated daily edition and publishing‑focused encounters. The fair foregrounds experimental formats, typographic practice and the objecthood of the book.

Saturday 9 May, 09:30

Sofie Dubs, choreographer and director of cie TransD, draws on over twenty years of research into body–environment relationships, developing movement-based tools that bridge somatic practice, ecology and interdisciplinary inquiry.

This workshop examines practical methods linking movement and landscape through Body-Mind Centering and Bodyweather–inspired exercises, reflective and poetic prompts, and outdoor sensory explorations. Participants investigate textures of public space, experiment with embodied research tools, and reflect on how somatic practice reveals territorial dynamics and environmental relationships.

In French.

Saturday 9 May, 10:00, 11:30 & 14:30

Jump into a bright world of color and pattern inspired by Marie Ducaté. Explore playful vases, soft watercolours, mischievous animals and big, colorful textiles. Touch fabrics, see bold shapes and try simple brush strokes. Then paint your own piece of fabric, mixing colors and feeling the texture with your hands. The session sparks curiosity and creativity through color, touch and movement, inviting little artists to experiment and make something they can proudly show.

In French. Kids ages 2–4.

5 – 8 May

An invitation to an artistic passage, this project transforms a strategic underpass into a painted fresco and links to a shore-side signal installation. The tunnel mural is realised by the Artmur collective (Julien Scalabrino, Tiffany Sibra and Celestin Tanari), while the Signal installation was conceived by Max Bondu with architects Charles Bouscasse and Marion Mouny as part of the Veiller au grain project, self-built in the Bermuda workshops. The works explore movement, thresholds and dialogue with the riverside.

Tuesday 5 May, 19:30

Conductor Zofia Kiniorska leads the AMAA Symphony Orchestra through a programme balancing Italian lyricism and Romantic drama. Pianist Zijian Wei, Geneva Competition 2022 laureate, features in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.2, delivering poised virtuosity, while Andreas Bottaro brings lyrical intensity on violin in selected works. Excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Puccini’s symphonic prelude weave orchestral color with balletic textures, complemented by dancers from CPMDT — Emilie Meeus and Luca Scaduto — who add a visual, kinetic layer to the musical narrative.

Tuesday 5 May, 14:30

Danièle Holweger leads this adults’ writing workshop, guiding playful exercises and short writing games that encourage free expression and creative risk-taking.

The session explores spontaneous composition through timed prompts and imaginative exercises, examining the notion of a ‘plurdelire’ — a pen that captures wild, unfiltered thoughts. Participants investigate techniques to loosen style, generate material, and rediscover writing as playful discovery.

In French.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Elizabeth Mesok (University of Basel), Nuala Caomhanach (Geneva Graduate Institute) and Constanza Bonadonna (University of Geneva) discuss scholarship on women’s participation in science. Moderated by Agnieszka Fal‑Dutra Santos (Geneva Graduate Institute), the conversation examines uneven distribution of care labour, structural barriers and forms of prejudice and discrimination often compounded by race, sexuality, age or class. Speakers will reflect on experiences across career stages and explore strategies for solidarity, mentorship and networks to support women in Swiss academia. Organised by the Gender Centre.

In English.

2 – 10 May

Follow Ugly, a plucky duckling who leaves the farmyard, meets quirky characters and discovers the value of being different in this witty, tuneful musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale. Student actors bring colourful characters to life with songs, movement and gentle humour, creating a warm family theatre experience that celebrates diversity, empathy and belonging.

In English. Kids ages 5 and up.

Tuesday 5 May, 18:30

Panelists Edward Mandry (Paulette publisher), Mathilde Petit (Lesbian Archives, Paris), Aurore Turbiau (UNIL) and Agnès Vannouvong (UNIGE) bring curatorial, archival and academic perspectives; moderated by Taline Garibian (UNIGE).

This roundtable examines LGBTQIA+ written production in French-speaking Switzerland since the 1970s, exploring mechanisms of invisibilization in literary scholarship and criticism. Panelists investigate archival traces, map cultural histories and discuss methodological tools to reveal norms, prohibitions and social changes reflected in marginalized literary practices.

In French.

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CoolBytes

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

Writer, interviewer, collector of conversations. Alain Elkann has sat across from presidents, cardinals, artists, and Nobel Prize winners — thousands of conversations spanning decades — and never once posed a question he wasn't willing to abandon. I met him at his home in Geneva to talk a bit about everything: the craft of the interview, the future of books, why common sense might be the most underrated virtue of our time, and the advice that has stayed with him since childhood.
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 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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