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Switzerland Destination Travel Agents Boston MA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Switzerland Destination Travel Agents. You will find the following informative article about visiting Switzerland, which is titled "Switzerland". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Boston, MA that can help answer your questions about Switzerland Destination Travel Agents.

Boston Neighborhoods

This page also contains providers and other information for the following Boston neighborhoods: Back Bay, South End, South Boston, Downtown, Charlestown and for the following zipcodes: 02129 02128 02113 02114 02108 02111 02210 02118 02127 02116 02115

Jacky Keith
617-266-7465
160 Commonwealth Ave Ste U1A
Boston, MA
Shannon Lee
617-622-6704
300 A St 5Th Fl
Boston, MA
Mark Desimone
617-622-6728
300 A St 5Th Fl
Boston, MA
Thomas Scully
617-622-6200
300 A St 5Th Fl
Boston, MA
Elizabeth Parry
617-622-6671
300 A St 5Th Fl
Boston, MA
Katherine Urekew
617-622-6200
300 A St 5Th Fl
Boston, MA
Jose Azevedo
617-354-4499
777 Cambridge St
Cambridge, MA
J Gray
617-958-9582
Suite 3100
Boston, MA
Al Gillis
617-951-4040
One India St
Boston, MA
Carlos Zucher
617-868-0902
1103 Cambridge Street
Cambridge, MA
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Switzerland

Credit: Gary Singh (writer)   Throughout the ages, Switzerland has bubbled with productivity: It’s where psychologist Carl Jung articulated the collective unconscious, the Dada antiart movement began in 1916, and 450 varieties of cheese are currently produced. It’s also where macabre surrealist H.R. Giger acquired the Château St. Germain and opened a museum to showcase his art on a permanent basis.

Located in Gruyères, a quaint mountain village known primarily for cheese, and commendably staffed by Swiss goth hotties, the facility covers the entire span of Giger’s career, including airbrushes of wicked Baphomet imagery, Lovecraftian nightmarescapes, bald women whose nether regions morph into weapons and latex creatures from the movie Alien. If you go, don’t miss the wall of Giger tattoo photos and—behind the 18-and-over curtain—”Penis Landscape”, the infamous artwork that got Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys arrested and tried on obscenity charges.

“Most people travel to Gruyères for the castle and the cheese factory,” says Aurore Sierro, one of the museum’s tour guides. “And when they come in here, they get disgusted.” With an angelic French accent, she can discuss all things Giger, from the time as a teenager that he set his dad’s pharmacy on fire by trying to melt lead, to the detractors who blamed him for his first wife’s depression and subsequent suicide. “He is definitely a Swiss artist,” Sierro enthuses, pointing out traditional Swiss doily textures disguised in a Giger airbrush work. “He also painted aliens eating fondue.”

Across a cobblestone path from the museum, in the same building as an old folks’ home, sits the Giger Bar, featuring concrete vertebrae ceilings and biomechanical furniture. (There’s another Giger Bar, circa 1992, in Giger’s hometown, Chur. Diehard fanatics might take a pilgrimage there to Storchengasse 17, where the artist grew up.)

A short trip from Gruyères is the town of Fribourg, home to Espace Jean Tinguely–Niki de Saint Phalle, a museum dedicated to Tinguely’s moving scrap metal sculptures and de Saint Phalle’s crackpot feminine figurines. And a train ride brings you to Lugano, a city in the southern tip of the country that hosts the annual Ti-Tattoo Convention, which occurs August 28–30 this year.

One tip: The country can be expensive—even the cheapest hotels are $70—but cost-cutting schemes do exist. An absolute must for those lingering more than a few days is a Swiss Rail Pass, which provides un...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Inked Magazine