VIENNA.- Kunsthalle Wien opened the second in its series of annual public art commissions in the Museumsquartier. Sophie von Hellermann (b. 1975, Munich) has created an extensive new work on canvas for the 62-metre vitrine on the south-west wall of the Kunsthalles building.
Von Hellermanns paintings quote fact and fiction, drawing diversely from history and culture to develop expansive, narrative compositions. Using broad-brushes to apply acrylic and raw pigment on unprimed canvas, her images are imbued with a luminosity and a sense of movement and weightlessness that contributes to their fleeting, dream-like or cinematic quality. Get Your Head Around It pays tribute to the writer, cybernetician, language theorist and musician Oswald Wiener (b. 1935, Vienna; d. 2021, Steiermark) with whom von Hellermann studied Erkenntnistheorie (epistemology) while at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in the 1990s. The work is inspired by a conversation between the artist and her tutor, referring to Wieners theory that the mind functions like a machine processing mental imagery in programmed sequences that guide the movement of signs or information. According to von Hellermann, Wiener maintained that there is nothing in our heads, asking her if she could see something in her mind, to which she replied yes, Ive painted it.
Von Hellermanns commission combines subjects from natural sciences with references to the history of philosophy and culture informed in part by the works proximity to institutions such as Viennas Natural History Museum. Images of planets, the sun, moon and stars are accompanied by a proliferation of animals including deer, horses, birds and dolphins. A pair of black and white swans make a passing reference to the Viennese philosopher Karl Popper and his theory of Kritischer Rationalismus while other motifs include the Baum der Erkenntnis (Tree of Knowledge); the cave paintings at Lascaux and Platos speleological allegory. The frieze ends with a string of telegraph poles, an explosion, darkness, blue sky and a red sunset referencing Wieners concept for a Bio-Adapter that would integrate humans within cybernetic apparatus. First described in his novel die verbesserung von mitteleuropa (The Improvement of Central Europe), it would facilitate the transfer of consciousness to electronic circuits while allowing the body to decompose, offering a complete solution of all world problems.
The commission is von Hellermanns first solo exhibition in Austria.
Sophie von Hellermann (b. 1975, Munich) has held solo exhibitions at Space K, Seoul (2025); Turner Contemporary, Margate (2021); Kunstverein Hannover (2017); Firstsite, Colchester (2013); Le Consortium, Dijon (2009); Chisenhale Gallery, London; Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen (both 2006) and Saatchi Gallery, London (2001). Her work has also been exhibited at Brücke Museum, Berlin; Langen Foundation, Neuss (both 2024); Milwaukee Art Museum (2023); Hayward Gallery, London (2021); Jerwood Visual Arts, London; Kunsthalle Bielefeld (both 2015); Gallery Met, Metropolitan Opera, New York (2014); Tate Britain, London (2011) and Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2002). She lives and works in London and Margate.