St. Moritz

Hauser & Wirth St. Moritz presents a dynamic program of art exhibitions and events which connect with the local community and landscape of the Engadin valley.

The gallery is currently closed

Plan your visit

The gallery is open Tue – Sat, 11am – 7pm.

stmoritz@hauserwirth.com

On Foot  Hauser & Wirth St. Moritz main entrance is located on Via Serlas. A further entrance is located on La Serletta.

Free entry. No booking necessary.

Public parking is available in the nearby car park Serletta.

Hauser & Wirth St. Moritz is wheelchair-accessible. The gallery aims to be as accommodating as possible – if you or member(s) of your group require any special accommodations due to a disability, please contact the gallery in advance of your visit to discuss your requirements.

Small dogs on leashes are welcome on site.

Roth Bar

Following its first iteration in our St. Moritz spaces in 2022, we are delighted to bring back ‘Roth Bar’ this summer. Designed by Björn, Oddur and Einar Roth, son and grandsons of German-born Swiss artist Dieter Roth (1930 – 1998), the fully-functional bar is a hub for the St. Moritz community to meet. First conceived by Dieter Roth in the late 1970s, ‘the bar’ is a dynamic and changing installation and is a continuing element in the Roths’ cross-generational practice.

Roth Bar Opening Hours
Tue – Thu, 11am – 7pm
Fri and Sat, 11am – 11pm

rothbarstmoritz.com

Operated by Art Farm

About St. Moritz

Hauser & Wirth St. Moritz occupies the Palace Galerie space in the centre of St. Moritz in December 2018. In the heart of the Engadin Valley, this 4,400 sq foot exhibition space spans three floors of a building owned by Badrutt’s Palace Hotel and is a natural extension of the gallery’s activities in its native Switzerland. Architect Luis Laplace lead on the interior remodeling of the site. Laplace has worked on numerous Hauser & Wirth projects, including the interior design of Le Vieux Chalet in Gstaad, and the restoration and conversion of Hauser & Wirth Somerset’s 18th-century farm buildings into a series of contemporary exhibition spaces.

St. Moritz has long been an enclave of creativity. The surrounding area was home to the Giacometti family and Alpine painter Giovanni Segantini. Over the course of the past two centuries, a range of cultural and intellectual figures have visited and been inspired by the Upper Engadine region, from philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, writer Thomas Mann and dancer Vaslav Nijinsky, to a host of artists including Gerhard Richter, Julian Schnabel, Richard Long, and Joseph Beuys. Legendary connoisseur Bruno Bischofberger was the first gallerist to establish a space in St. Moritz in 1963, and the region is now home to a number of modern and contemporary galleries.