Museum
〈 Architecture
〈 Collection
—Highlights
—Paintings
—Drawings
—Works by other artists
〈 Venue hire
〈 Showroom
Collection
The museum which was primarily the initiative of the citizens of St. Moritz, friends and devotees of Segantini’s art was aimed at providing a permanent place in which to exhibit the master’s works. However, when it first opened, the museum had to be content with only exhibiting paintings that were on loan. The first attempts to purchase paintings of its own were undertaken in 1911, when the necessary funds to purchase the two side pictures of the Alpine Triptych were raised by means of a public subscription. Subsequently, the museum also succeeded in acquiring the middle picture from a private owner in Paris, thus finally reuniting the three original panels of this monumental painting. This achievement required considerable effort, and it was only thanks to the support and assistance of the Society for the Segantini Museum|, the municipality and tourist office of St. Moritz, and above all the Gottfried Keller Foundation that Segantini’s main work was finally secured for the museum. Since then, the magnificent triptych, «La vita – La natura – La morte» (Life – Nature – Death) has been the museum’s main attraction.
Over the following years, the museum continued to purchase significant works, either at its own initiative or with the assistance of the Gottfried Keller Foundation, the Swiss Confederation, the municipality of St. Moritz or private collectors. Other paintings were acquired as gifts or loans.
In 2001, the portfolio of works was augmented in an exceptional and unparalleled way; the nine magnificent paintings and three drawings owned by the Otto Fischbacher/Giovanni Segantini Foundation came to St. Moritz as a permanent loan.
The collection, which in the meantime has grown to a respectable size of 37 paintings, is supplemented by an impressive inventory of 26 drawings, which is unequalled in terms of both concentration and quality. With this outstanding ensemble of major works, including the famous “Ave Maria Crossing the Lake” and “Midday in the Alps”, the Segantini Museum is home to the most comprehensive and significant collection of works by one of the world’s great masters of Alpine painting.