Sophie Aigner

Alright, it means something to me

2023

“I want to carve the message in stone”—a statement that echoes the desire to preserve the ephemeral. But what message is meant remains unclear: are they the contours of body parts etched into red clay? Or simple calculations like 2+1-1-1? In her publication, Sophie Aigner explores the idea of voids and losses—ranging from literal holes dug into the ground to irretrievable moments of life.

Through a combination of unglazed ceramic objects, aphoristic texts, and digital photomontages, Aigner creates connections between the material and the immaterial. Whether it’s a brick that reappears in ever-changing forms or deeply personal relics like a piece of umbilical cord, a strand of an ex-lover’s hair, or the bone of a living mother, these fragments speak of relationships, memory, and the longing to hold on in a world that is constantly in flux.

Hanne Loreck

Sample page from the artist's book
Published by Verlag für Moderne Kunst Wien, Financially supported by Cultural Ministry of Austria and VG Bild-Kunst, Offsetprint, 76 pages, 32x24.5 cm, edition of 500, ISBN 978-3-99153-105-0

Sample page from the artist's book
Published by Verlag für Moderne Kunst Wien, Financially supported by Cultural Ministry of Austria and VG Bild-Kunst, Offsetprint, 76 pages, 32x24.5 cm, edition of 500, ISBN 978-3-99153-105-0

Sample page from the artist's book
Published by Verlag für Moderne Kunst Wien, Financially supported by Cultural Ministry of Austria and VG Bild-Kunst, Offsetprint, 76 pages, 32x24.5 cm, edition of 500, ISBN 978-3-99153-105-0