Matthias Bildstein: Social Sculpture as Practice
From Site-Specific
Works to Institutional Ecosystems
An event
by the Department of TransArts.
Drawing on 25 years of collaborative
practice—from the roots of Hip Hop to the duo Bildstein | Glatz and the founding of independent offspaces like PFERD
— with Halle 5 Matthias Bildstein redefines Social Sculpture as a practice of Administrative Intervention. By
"remixing" institutional frameworks—from DIY culture to institutional systems—he demonstrates how statutes, community-building,
and organizational "care" function as raw sculptural materials. This talk explores the artist's role as an architect of autonomous
ecosystems, positioning the construction of infrastructure as a vital form of artistic praxis.
Sculpture
as Institutional Form-Giving
Bildstein conceives the design of institutions and infrastructures as a consequent
extension of sculptural practice. His work dissolves the artificial separation between the autonomous artistic object and
the social processes of its creation. Deeply rooted in the physical experience of monumental interventions, he treats administrative
and legal frameworks as plastic material. Scale, materiality, and the movement of the body serve as direct reference points
for the shaping of complex structures.
In this process, organizational forms, statutes, and governance models do
not appear as bureaucratic accessories, but as tools of a space-constituting form-giving. Projects such as the 1,100 m² independent
production space Halle 5 or the Vienna-based offspace PFERD are not merely venues for art, but sculptural
manifestations in themselves. They transform the ephemerality of temporary happenings into the permanent construction of autonomous
production ecosystems.
Bildstein does not provide illustrations of social themes; he builds functioning prototypes
that conceive space, society, and organization as an inseparable plastic unity. His work establishes a practice that does
not merely proclaim artistic freedom, but realizes it through the active design of its own structural foundations as a paradigmatic
practice of contemporary art.
Matthias Bildstein (b. 1978, Hohenems) lives and works in Vienna and Dornbirn. He
studied at the University of Applied Arts Vienna under Erwin Wurm and at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. He gained international
recognition as part of the duo Bildstein | Glatz, realizing monumental interventions in public space. His practice
has evolved from sculptural works toward the development of complex, autonomous production and infrastructure spaces.