Patrick J. Gyger is a Swiss historian and writer. In the 1990s he specialised in medieval studies and in 1998 published the book, L'Épée Et La Corde: Criminalité Et Justice À Fribourg on the topic of crime and justice. One of Gyger's recent publications is the history of the flying car, with Les voitures volantes, Souvenirs d'un futur rêvé, published in English as Flying Cars: The Extraordinary History of Cars Designed for Tomorrow's World. From 1999 to 2010, he was the director of Maison d'Ailleurs, museum of utopia in Switzerland. In late 2010, Gyger was appointed as the director of Le Lieu unique, French national cultural center in Nantes. In 2014, the Swiss Federal Council appointed him Honorary Consul of Switzerland in Nantes.
Maison d’Ailleurs
From 1999 to 2010, he was the director of Maison d'Ailleurs, a museum housing one of the world's largest collections of literature relating to science fiction, utopia, and extraordinary journeys. Maison d’Ailleurs is located in Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland. It was founded by the French encyclopedist Pierre Versins in 1976 and now owns over 90,000 books and thousands of pulp magazines, as well as many other items related to science fiction and its imagery. It is also a gallery showing temporary exhibitions exploring the main themes of the field. In 2008, Gyger opened the "Espace Jules Verne", a wing of Maison d'Ailleurs dedicated to Jules Verne and extraordinary journeys. This extension also houses a science fiction pulps collection. In 2009, Patrick Gyger was a keynote speaker at the Lift Conference in Geneva.
Space
In the early part of the 21st Century, Gyger was one of the co-managers of the European Space Agency's Innovative Technologies from Science Fiction for Space Applications study, a research and educational project looking into science fiction to find ideas for space engineers.
In January 2011, Gyger became the director of le lieu unique, the National Center for Arts in Nantes, a venue dedicated to contemporary and performing arts. It houses several exhibition and performance spaces, a restaurant, a boostore, a hammam, a bar/club, a kindergarten, etc. Gyger stated that the concept of utopia was a guideline in his programme.
Into the Unknown
In 2017, Gyger curated "Into the Unknown: a Journey through Science Fiction" a major travelling exhibition about science fiction, produced by the Barbican Centre in London.