‘Are You Happy?’ Stefan Sagmeister Wants To Know.

Stefan Sagmeister's 'The Happy Show' on exhibition in Vienna
Stefan Sagmeister’s ‘The Happy Show’ on exhibition in Vienna

What makes us happy? That’s the existentially crushing question posited by design maven Stefan Sagmeister in his new show at Vienna’s MAK.

The result of a full decade of ongoing investigation into the neurotic notion of happiness, the show – which has already been staged in North America and in Paris – is a multifaceted sensory wonderland, reflecting a playful approach by Sagmeister inviting us to delve into the question – ‘Are you happy?’

Stefan Sagmeister's 'The Happy Show' on exhibition in Vienna
Stefan Sagmeister’s ‘The Happy Show’ on exhibition in Vienna

The show has its roots in a lecture, ‘Design and Happiness’ that Sagmeister started giving ten years ago. This led to the conceiving of a film on the topic, for which the designer developed the ‘invasive’ research methods – engaging in medication and cognitive therapy, as well as taking the antidepressant Lexapro for three months – that form the basis of the research behind ‘The Happy Show’. (Funding for the film was completed via Kickstarter earlier this year.)

Sagmeister has staged interventions throughout the museum – through the main hall, Design Lab, across the permanent collection of contemporary art and around the institution’s stairwells, corridors and elevators. These are accompanied by texts written by the artist, explaining the work, and offering personal insights and ruminations on their conception.

Towering over the entrance hall are two monolithic inflatable apes, holding placards that together read ‘EVERYBODY ALWAYS THINKS / THEY ARE RIGHT’. ‘This is as true for all the little crap fights in my life, as it is for all the big conflicts in the world,’ Sagmeister writes of the sentiment. ‘I – and I suspect everybody else, too – was born a giant egoist.’

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Elsewhere, a bicycle is set up in front of a neon wall installation encouraging the public to follow through on the things they think they should do or try throughout their lives (the installation various flashes the statements ‘Actually doing the things / I set out to do increases / My overall level of satisfaction’ and ‘Seek discomfort’). A note of guidance on the bike states the rider should ‘Pedal slow and steady. Do not go crazy’ – salient advice in anyone’s book.

Stefan Sagmeister's 'The Happy Show' on exhibition in Vienna
Stefan Sagmeister’s ‘The Happy Show’ on exhibition in Vienna

A series of numbered gum ball dispensers require the observer to take a sweet in accordance with how happy they are on a scale of one to ten, while a plethora of arms sticking out from a wall offer Indonesian ginger candies (no task here – they’re just Sagmeister’s favourites).

Record cover designs for Lou Reed and David Byrne are also on display; representing the creative development of Sagmeister’s design career, lest we forget that this is a show based around his personal conceptions of happiness.

‘Above all,’ he explained to MAK/ZINE, the museum’s own art and design journal, of his experiences researching the concept, ‘I learned that happiness cannot be pursued; it has to come about on its own.’ The exploded aphorisms that comprise the exhibition’s collected works could, in the hands of less intuitive artist, come across as twee or patronizing.

‘The Happy Show’ is on view until 28 March 2016
MAK – Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art
Stubenring 5
1010 Vienna
Telephone 43 171 1360

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Nichelle Cole is the founder & editor-in-chief of The Fashion Plate magazine. A respected writer, stylist and influencer, she has been published in fashion magazines around the world.

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