Skip to main content

Previous special exhibitions

The Swiss Customs Museum does more than just tell the story – it reveals how borders influence our daily lives. COVID-related closures, counterfeiting, tourism in the Belle Époque: each exhibition offers a unique insight into the challenges of the past and present. Discover a captivating panorama of special exhibitions on the role of the customs service.

Ausser-Ordentlich (2020)

Im Frühling 2020 war die Schweizer Grenze aufgrund der Corona-Pandemie weitgehend geschlossen. Das Zollmuseum widmet diesem historischen Ereignis nun die digitale Ausstellung “Ausser-Ordentlich”.

Der freie Personenverkehr mit den Nachbarländern ist für die Schweizerinnen und Schweizer selbstverständlich. In Regionen wie Genf, Basel, Kreuzlingen oder dem Tessin leben, lieben und arbeiten die Menschen Tag für Tag über die Landesgrenze hinweg. Als der Bundesrat zwischen dem 13. März und dem 15. Juni 2020 die Reisefreiheit aufgrund der Corona-Lage einschränkte, bedeutete dies nicht nur für die Bevölkerung eine massive Veränderung. Auch die Arbeit der EZV wurde davon stark beeinflusst.

Für das Zollmuseum war klar, dass dieses Ereignis dokumentiert werden muss. Angesichts der fortdauernden Pandemie haben wir aber vorerst von einer Ausstellung im Museum in Cantine die Gandria abgesehen. Stattdessen haben wir eine digitale Ausstellung kreiert, die unter ausser-ordentlich.ch via Computer oder Smartphone zugänglich ist und die Arbeit der EZV während der Grenzschliessungen in 17 Episoden mit Texten, Fotos, Grafiken und Videos schildert. Blicken Sie mit uns zurück auf drei Monate, in denen an der Grenze alles anders war.

Poster for the digital exhibition "Ausser Ordentlich" by the Swiss Customs Museum. It focuses on customs during Corona times.

Exhibition “100 years of the Switzerland Liechtenstein customs treaty” (2024)

Poster for the special exhibition "100 years of the Switzerland Liechtenstein customs treaty" at the Swiss Customs Museum. The exhibition runs from April 2, 2023, to October 22, 2023, and from March 31, 2024, to October 20, 2024.

On 29 March 1923, Switzerland and Liechtenstein signed a treaty that was a landmark for Liechtenstein; it came into force on 1 January 1924.

Belle Epoqué (2020)

A historical poster shows a man and a woman on a terrace overlooking Lake Maggiore. A dog sits beside the woman, and boats are visible on the lake in the background.
Poster for the "Belle Époque" special exhibition at the Swiss Customs Museum. A woman in historical attire looks at a lake with a building in the background.

Twenty large posters from the Swiss National Library recount the charm of tourism in the Lake Lugano and Lake Maggiore region during the Belle Époque (1880-1915). A journey through time, when going on holiday was still a privilege for the few.

Beguiling appearance - murky shadows?

Poster of the exhibition "Beguiling appearance - Murky Shadows?" at the Swiss Customs Museum, extended until 18.10.2020. The exhibition addresses counterfeiting and piracy.

We have all heard of counterfeit products. People who deliberately choose a counterfeit product, however, often do not think of the consequences of their action and the background behind counterfeiting and trademark piracy. But what is hidden behind the supposed bargain?

The exhibition leads visitors into the world of counterfeiters. They find out who and what are behind counterfeits, how to recognise them and why it pays to buy the original.

Video: Impressions of the temporary exhibition and the Customs Museum

Bern Museum Night 2015

Poster for the 2015 Bern Museum Night featuring the Swiss Customs Museum. It shows a mountain panorama at sunset and provides information about a live act at the Hotel Bellevue Palace.

The Swiss Customs Museum in Cantine di Gandria, on the shore of Lake Lugano, is an institution of the Confederation and, just like the Bellevue Palace Hotel in Bern, is part of the Federal Department of Finance (FDF).

For one time only, the “Smugglers' Museum” will be a guest exhibit at the 2015 Bern Museum Night and will present the tasks performed by Customs and the Border Guard in spectacular surroundings.

Refuge - protection - humanity, about the work ot the UNHCR

Poster of the special exhibition at the Swiss Customs Museum about the work of UNHCR. Extended until October 2015, it shows tents in a refugee camp.

Worldwide there are some 68.5 million people in search of refuge. They are fleeing from persecution, war and violence. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) works to ensure protection for refugees and ensures that the human rights of refugees are upheld worldwide.

The first person that refugees arriving in Switzerland encounter is often a border guard. The exhibition portrays what it is like to be a refugee, what the UNHCR does for people in crisis zones and how Switzerland, traditionally a haven for refugees, fulfils its humanitarian role.

For sale? Smuggling of cultural property and customs

An ancient Benin bronze relief depicting three figures, including one on a horse. The figures are detailed and artistically crafted.

Cultural property is valuable, fascinating - and is acutely under threat worldwide. The extent of the theft of cultural assets in many countries is frightening: the prospect of rapid profit and modern satellite search methods have opened the door to organised crime for looting of immense proportions.

Art treasures from all over the world astonish young an old alike

Switzerland has long had the reputation of being a hub for the illegal trade in cultural property. This has changed since the Cultural Property Transfer Act came into force on 1 June 2005: with impressive pictures and selected exhibits, the special exhibition shows how the Swiss authorities - in particular the Federal Office of Culture and Customs - take action against the criminal trade in cultural property and how a fair cultural exchange can be guaranteed by Switzerland.

In the second exhibition room, children and adults get to know the work of Swiss customs in a playful way and using multimedia. They experience the significance of cultural property for a society's identity, self-image and social cohesion. And some people will suddenly fall silent when they stand in front of the mural about which the exhibition organisers provide information about the damage that thoughtless tourists can cause on their sightseeing tours of cultural property.