Continuing our high-altitude stint at Elevation 1049, Swiss photographer and ECAL student Benoît Jeannet captures the Swiss art summit and the landscape that inspired it. “Gstaad is a peculiar place where Switzerland offers a real view of its economical power,” explains Jeannet. “Everything’s well taken care of, clean and luxurious—the town is a kind of showroom.” As a counterpoint to the expensive hotels, groomed ski runs, designer boutiques and celebrity sightings, the artists have tried to engage with the geography of the area, installing artwork that embraces not only its peaks, but also issues like climate change and inequality. “All the works are engaging in very distinct ways,” says Neville Wakefield, who curated the site-specific exhibition with his partner, the artist Olympia Scarry. “Ugo Rondinone’s tower, for example, sang its single blue note into the landscape, but its presence could be felt everywhere.” London-based artist Christian Marclay took his inspiration from an unexpected source: Bollywood. For decades, Indian directors have come to Switzerland to film elaborate dream sequences in which the romantic leads typically frolic on hillsides, covered in snow or buttercups: his 17-minute montage piece, “Bollywood Goes to Gstaad,” is being shown in a cable car that travels halfway up the Gondelbahn Glacier.