The Segentini Gallery is located on the steep mountainside of St. Moritz, overlooking Lake St. Moritz, and was built in 1908 to commemorate the late 19th century European symbolist, Giorgiovan Segentini (Giovanni Segantini). The Lombardy-inspired master of art, who is good at depicting the ordinary working life and pastoral scenery of the countryside, lived in many places throughout his life, and moved to the Engardin Valley in his later years. His most important paintings of late the large Alpine triads Nature, Life, and Death are now on display in the museum’s Kuppelsaal.