The current collection presentation focuses on works from the 1970s to the present day, bringing together both key pieces and a number of significant recent acquisitions. It offers a broader overview of artistic developments from the late twentieth century to the present, highlighting shifts in formal language, material exploration, and conceptual approaches across different generations of artists.

The upper floor is dedicated to painting and colour, creating a cohesive environment in which chromatic experimentation and abstraction take centre stage. In this space, visitors can encounter works by Joseph Egan, Marcia Hafif, and Verena Loewensberg, among others. Each artist engages with colour in a distinct way—whether through subtle tonal variations, geometric compositions, or meditative surfaces—inviting viewers to consider how colour can shape perception, mood, and spatial awareness.

In contrast, the basement level shifts the focus toward questions of space, perception, and the viewer’s physical experience. Artists such as Marie José Burki, Christian Megert, and the duo Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler present works that explore spatial relationships, reflection, and the construction of meaning through environment. Together, these works offer diverse and thought-provoking perspectives, encouraging visitors to engage more actively with the ways in which art can transform and redefine the spaces we inhabit.