As a collector, UZH alumnus Uli Sigg has shaped the course of Chinese contemporary art like no other. Equally pioneering was his work as an entrepreneur and diplomat. He is now passing on his knowledge as a visiting professor at UZH.
Once an elite athlete, journalist and diplomat, and now international businessman, castle owner and advisor to key contemporary art museums, Uli Sigg has worn many hats. But he’s best known as one of the world’s foremost experts on Chinese society and the most influential collector of Chinese contemporary art. Asked what lies behind such an unusual career path, Uli Sigg admits: it wasn’t long-term planning. “It was more a matter of opportunities presenting themselves – and me seizing them.”
His eagerness to accept new challenges has always been a driving force throughout his life. “So that I keep learning and don’t grow complacent,” he says. The opportunity that would shape his life most profoundly came in the 1970s. At the time, the Ringier media group had hired him as a business journalist because of his contacts in the Middle East – despite his lack of experience in journalism.
He then came to the notice of Lucerne-based elevator manufacturer Schindler, who were hoping to expand in the Middle East after the oil crisis. “No one really understood the region back then,” Sigg recalls, “so my knowledge was in demand.”
Art as a way into society
At the time, China was completely unknown territory to Sigg. “To be honest, I didn’t know a thing about China.” He quickly realised that the Chinese approached problems in a very different way than he was used to. “In the first negotiations, my Western colleagues often assured me I’d made brilliant arguments,” he says. “But I noticed the Chinese weren’t following my line of thought. They were coming from a different angle, focusing instead on the people involved, and how each of them was connected to the problem.”
In his attempts to understand Chinese society beyond the negotiating table, Sigg turned to contemporary art – a passion he had first discovered as a student at UZH. Art intrigued him because it always explores the society of its time. “I was looking for ways to learn more about China, and I thought that connecting with Chinese artists might help,” he explains.
But that hope was initially dashed. “I soon realised that what I knew as contemporary art didn’t exist in China.” The country had only just begun opening up, and artists had little room to work autonomously or gain access to contemporary Western art.
At the time, it was also unthinkable for Sigg to meet artists privately. “I was constantly under surveillance and always accompanied by Party officials.” As the businessman negotiating China’s first joint venture with a Western company – a matter of enormous importance for both sides – any contact with artists would have jeopardised the deal.
One Man Market
Only in the 1990s, after serving 10 years as vice president of the China Schindler Elevator Co., was he able to move more freely and seek contact with artists. “By then, I felt Chinese artists had developed their own language and were no longer producing art that merely echoed Western ideas.”
Sigg was one of the first to take an interest in this art, and he began buying up works. His only chance was directly from the artists themselves. There were no galleries, no museums, and no market for contemporary art – except for him. “For a time, I was the market,” he told Der Bund newspaper in 2016, on the occasion of an exhibition of his collection at the Kunstmuseum Bern.
But there was another reason these encounters mattered: “The artists passed on to me their understanding of China. And that went far beyond what their works alone could tell.” After all, it was China itself, Sigg says, that was always his true “subject of study.” Art was his way of gaining a better understanding of its society.
In his role as businessman and diplomat, he mostly met members of China’s establishment. The artists, however, gave him entry into an entirely different world. “They lived in the humblest conditions, at the very bottom of society. Art was no way of making money,” he explains. Few people know China across all its social strata the way Sigg does – not only an observer, but also as a participating actor.
This, he says, enables him a completely different approach to understanding and evaluating contemporary Chinese art. It’s also what distinguishes him from other collectors, curators or art historians. “Because I engage with China’s business world and political system, I have a different perspective of their art.”
A nose for new trends
Now, approaching 80, Sigg is taking on a fresh challenge: teaching as a visiting professor at UZH. “I first had to ask how lectures even work these days,” he admits. He isn’t just a great collector of Chinese art – he’s also keen that the West engages with it. “Whatever you feel about China, this art matters.” He’s delighted that UZH has chosen to devote a course to it.