Edmund von Hellmer


Edmund Ritter von Hellmer, born Edmund Hellmer and ennobled in 1912, was an Austrian sculptor who worked in the styles of Historicism and Art Nouveau.

Life

Hellmer studied architecture at the Polytechnikum in Vienna. At the same time, he received his first artistic training from his uncle, the sculptor Josef Schönfeld. In 1866, Hellmer decided to study sculpture full-time at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. While there, he also worked in the studio of Hanns Gasser, who helped him to finance a short stay in Paris. In 1869, at the age of 19, he presented a statue of Prometheus at the International Art Exhibition in Munich. He won a prize that included a scholarship, enabling him to spend almost two years in Italy.
In 1870, he returned to Vienna and worked as a freelance sculptor. In 1879, he was appointed a Professor at the Academy and, from 1882 to 1892, was a member of the faculty there. Emil Fuchs was one of Hellmer's most prominent students. In 1897, he was one of the founders of the Vienna Secession. From 1901 to 1922 he was an associate dean, then a full dean at the Academy. During the last year of his life, he used a wheelchair.

Major works

Franz Joseph I Gives His People a Constitution, Pediment at the Austrian Parliament Building, 1879Malerei, Sculpture at the facade of the Natural History Museum at Maria-Theresien-Platz, Vienna, 1880Schindler Monument in the Stadtpark, Vienna. Marble, 1895Die Macht zu Lande, fountain at the Hofburg in Vienna. Marble, 1897Goethe Monument, at the Opera Ring in Vienna. Bronze, 1900.Empress Elisabeth Monument, Salzburg, 1901Castalia Fountain at the University of Vienna, 1910Johann Strauß Monument in the Stadtpark, Vienna. Bronze with marble reliefs, 1921