Galerie Orlando
Zurich

Artists
Works Available By
- Yaacov Agam
- Cuno Amiet
- Alexander Archipenko
- Jean (Hans) Arp
- George Barbier
- Ernst Barlach
- Rudolf Bauer
- Max Beckmann
- Jacoba Heemskerck van Beest
- Anna Beothy-Steiner
- David Bill
- Max Bill
- Umberto Boccioni
- Sándor Bortnyik
- Serge Brignoni
- André Bucher
- Gustave Buchet
- Erich Buchholz
- Heinrich Campendonk
- Carlo Carrà
- Marc Chagall
- Gaston Chaissac
- Jean (Louis) Chauvin
- Giorgio de Chirico
- Geneviève Claisse
- Sonia Delaunay
- Fortunato Depero
- Adolf Dietrich
- Nora Dumas
- Ignaz Epper
- Elisabeth Epstein
- Erté
- Lyonel Feininger
- Conrad Felixmüller
- Alfred Forbat
- Alfréd (Fred) Forbath
- Otto Freundlich
- Kunibert Fritz
- Robert Salomon Gessner
- Augusto Giacometti
- Werner Gilles
- Fritz Glarner
- Hans Jörg Glattfelder
- Camille Graeser
- Lily Greenham
- Brion Gysin
- Peter Hächler
- Erich Heckel
- Jean Hélion
- Auguste Herbin
- Hermann Hesse
- Andre Gaston Heurtaux
- Gottfried Honegger
- Rudolf Hurni
- Alexej von Jawlensky
- Béla Kádár
- Wassily Kandinsky
- Edmund Kesting
- Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
- Paul Klee
- Imre Kocsis
- Jiri Kolář
- Ferenc Kömives
- Yves Laloy
- Le Corbusier
- Leo Leuppi
- Jacques Lipchitz
- Verena Loewensberg
- Richard Paul Lohse
- Thilo Maatsch
- Alberto Magnelli
- Franz Marc
- Robert Marc
- Henri Matisse
- Philip Metmann
- Kurt Laurenz Metzler
- Jose Maria Mijares
- Gustave Miklos
- László Moholy-Nagy
- Louis René Moilliet
- Ernst Morgenthaler
- Edvard Munch
- Hans-Dieter Nieländer
- Lars-Gunnar Nordström
- Max Olderock
- Enrico Prampolini
- Domingo Ravenet
- Hilla Rebay
- Hans Reichel
- Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
- Lothar Schreyer
- Kurt Schwitters
- Gino Severini
- Ivo Soldini
- Jürg Spiller
- Günther Uecker
- Henry Valensi
- Varlin
- Victor Vasarely
- Marcel Vertès
- Nell (Anna-Charlotta) Walden
- William Wauer
- Marianne von Werefkin
- Sascha Wiederhold
- Jan Wiegers
- Ossip Zadkine
- Zig (Louis Gaudin)
Béla Kádár
(Hungarian, 1877 – 1955)
Béla Kádár was a Hungarian painter and one of the most famous members of the early 20th-century Hungarian avant-garde. He notably employed aesthetics from a range of movements, such as Constructivism, Cubism, and German Expressionism, and focused on traditional Hungarian folklore to inspire his imagery. Whether depicting scenes of abstracted figures, objects, landscapes, or interiors, his work features bright, jewel-toned palettes and a fractured approach to rendering space. Born on April 7, 1877 in Budapest, Hungary to a working-class Jewish family, Kádár was forced to work from a young age after his father’s death. He initially assisted a mural painting company before visiting Berlin and Paris, where...
