Since 2020, the global mass of human-made
materials has surpassed that of all living biomass – around 90 percent of it consists of construction materials. In the project
Reverse Imagining Vienna, two sculptors and nine writers used a Viennese Gründerzeit building and a highway bridge
over the Danube as anchors for material investigation and speculation. Their goal: to explore sustainable relationships with
inanimate matter and thus expand the scope for future action.
The first volume features eight short prose texts about
the two objects, set in four imagined futures. The second volume places these chosen moments in the broader context of the
Anthropocene and examines the significance of these emblematic Viennese structures through the lens of urban planning. Key
anthropogenic materials are introduced from both historical and environmental perspectives. Sculptures developed through the
artistic–scientific process are described in detail and presented through numerous views of the exhibition at AIL in Otto
Wagner’s Postsparkasse.
Contributing authors:
Ann Cotten, Elias Hirschl, Jakob Pretterhofer, Julia Grillmayr,
Fiston Mwanza Mujila, Neslihan Yakut, Nika Pfeifer, Veronika Franz, Severin Fiala
Contributing scientists:
Angelika Psenner, Barbara Laa, Filipa L. Sousa, Fridolin Krausmann, Jan Zalasiewicz, Johannes Weber, Josepha Edbauer,
Michael Wagreich, Peter Fichtinger, Sebastian Hafner, Tanja Traxler, Tess Posch
Christoph Weber,
sculptor, University of Applied Arts Vienna
Nikolaus Eckhard, artist, University of Applied Arts Vienna
BOOK PRESENTATION
Reverse Imagining Vienna will be presented to the public on Monday,
November 24, 2025. More information in our event
calendar Book Presentation