The 2023 Swiss Grand Prix for Art/Prix Meret Oppenheim went to Uriel Orlow. Born in 1973 in Zurich, Orlow studied at Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design and the Slade School of Art in London, and at the University of Geneva, before receiving his PhD from the University of the Arts in London. He now lives and works in Lisbon, London and Zurich. Orlow, who has presented his work at numerous international survey exhibitions, including the 54th Venice Biennale, Manifesta 9 and 12, Genk/Palermo, and biennials in Berlin, Dakar, Taipei, Sharjah, Moscow, Kathmandu and Guatemala, enjoys an excellent reputation in the world of art. His work has been shown at many museums and art venues internationally, including the Tate Modern, Tate Britain, Whitechapel Gallery and the ICA in London; the Palais de Tokyo in Paris; Les Complices, Helmhaus and Shedhalle in Zurich; as well as in Geneva, Ramallah, Marseille, Cairo, Istanbul, Mexico City, Dublin, New York, Toronto, Melbourne and elsewhere.
The successes of Swiss cinema on the international stage underline Switzerland’s cultural diversity and its ability to tell stories that will resonate in other countries.
Sophie Hunger, Jossi Wieler and Uriel Orlow, as well as Frédéric Pajak (resides in Arles, France; Swiss Grand Award for Literature 2021) and Etienne Delessert (lives and works in Lakeville, Connecticut, USA; Swiss Grand Award for Design 2023), are just some of the many Swiss Culture Award winners who are unequivocally Swiss but whose activities have taken them far and wide.
(FOC)
The Swiss arts council Pro Helvetia
Through involvement in events, projects and translation work, the Swiss arts council Pro Helvetia helps to showcase Swiss cultural practitioners abroad. This includes funding public presentations, organising promotional events for international hosts, appearing at international exhibitions and networking events (e.g. Venice Biennale and Avignon Theatre Festival), and producing promotional material. The six Pro Helvetia liaison bases in Cairo, Johannesburg, Moscow, New Delhi, Shanghai and South America foster relations with local partners and cultural institutions, act as intermediaries on the ground, and offer residential, research and exchange programmes that allow artists and cultural practitioners from Switzerland to gain a foothold and engage with international audiences.
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