© Musée d’art de Pully, donation Nane Cailler / Cuno Amiet, «Neige au crépuscule», 1950. Lithographie, 38,6 x 57 cm

Cuno Amiet - The Four Seasons

Where?
Musée d'art de Pully
When
From 18.09.2026 to 10.01.2027
Price
From
10 CHF

The Musée d'art de Pully is devoting an exhibition to the Solothurn painter Cuno Amiet (1868-1961), a major figure in Swiss art at the turn of the 20th century, exploring his landscape work through the prism of the four seasons. Some sixty paintings and numerous works on paper - including some from the museum's collections - retrace the richness of his landscape work.

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Address

Musée d'art de Pully
Chemin Davel 2
1009 Pully

How to get there

Schedules

From 18.09.2026 to 10.01.2027
Tuesday
14:00 - 18:00
Wednesday
14:00 - 18:00
Thursday
14:00 - 18:00
Friday
14:00 - 18:00
Saturday
11:00 - 18:00
Sunday
11:00 - 18:00

Full price (from 16 years old)

14 CHF

Reduced (students, AVS, AI, unemployed)

10 CHF

Lausanne Transport Card

10 CHF

Admission for children under 16

Free

Combined rate Pully Art Museum / La Muette - espaces littéraires

20 CHF

Free admission on the first Saturday of the month.

Access from Lausanne
Bus 8, 25 and 47: «Pully-Gare» stop
Bus 9: «Pully-Clergère» stop
By train: «Pully» stop

More info

Throughout seven decades of creative work, the diversity of forms and colours in nature has been an inexhaustible source of inspiration for Cuno Amiet, and the setting for bold formal experiments. From dazzling spring to subtle, silent winter, he modulates his palette, renews his pictorial expression and captures variations in light and matter. Whether he's painting the blossom, the harvest or the snow, he captures the metamorphoses of nature with an ever-reinvented freedom.

Nature, which he observes and transposes almost daily from his garden in Oschwand, becomes for him a language as intimate as it is universal. This exhibition sheds new light on an artist who is still too rarely exhibited in French-speaking Switzerland. The Musée d'art de Pully, both open to its garden and facing the lake, offers a sensitive setting for these landscapes bathed in light.

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