Jetzt bewerben! /ecm – educating, curating, making 2025–28 mehr > >
Der Lehrgang für kuratorische Praxis nimmt ab sofort Bewerbungen entgegen für den nächsten Durchgang mit Start im Oktober 2026.
PODCAST Monica Titton im Ö1-Gespräch ‘betrifft: Geschichte‘ mehr > >
Colonial Chic (1) Expansion der Mode – Ausstrahlung und Podcast zum Thema italienische Mode und koloniale Erinnerung. Monica Titton, Modetheoretikerin an der Angewandten, im Gespräch.
PREISE Alumni der Angewandten erhalten den ersten Austrian Art Alumni Award mehr > >
Anahita Asadifar (Abteilung Angewandte Fotografie und zeitbasierte Medien) und Paul Takuda Chiwona (Abteilung Social Design), erhalten den ersten Austrian Art Alumni Award und ein Stipendium, das sie bei der Umsetzung von Kunstprojekten im In- und Ausland unterstützt.

Sophie Pasteur May 2026

She met Louis Pasteur in 1849. At the time, Louis was a 27-year-old physics professor at the University of Strasbourg and a newly appointed dean of the faculty of sciences. He was described by his peers as intense, myopic, and utterly consumed by his research into crystallography. Sophie, then 17, was noted for her calm demeanor, sharp intellect, and pragmatic approach to life.

But the emotional toll was immense. Louis became a global celebrity. Thousands of letters arrived daily from Russia, America, and Europe requesting the vaccine. Sophie set up a triage system in their dining room. She answered the correspondence, organized the shipment of spinal cord samples from infected rabbits, and managed the finances of the clinic before the formal creation of the Pasteur Institute. sophie pasteur

In a letter to his son, Louis wrote: "Without your mother, I would have died in my study ten years ago. She lends me her hands and her eyes. I am merely the idea; she is the execution." Louis Pasteur died in 1895. Sophie survived him by nearly 15 years, passing away in 1910. During those years, she meticulously curated his legacy. She donated their personal correspondence to the National Library of France, but she famously edited it first. She removed letters that showed Louis’s moments of doubt or anger, protecting the myth of the infallible scientist. She met Louis Pasteur in 1849

When we hear the name "Pasteur," the immediate association is Louis Pasteur—the towering French chemist and microbiologist who gave us pasteurization, vaccines for rabies and anthrax, and the germ theory of disease. However, behind every great scientist, there is often a figure of silent strength, logistical genius, and unwavering support. For Louis Pasteur, that figure was Sophie Pasteur . Sophie, then 17, was noted for her calm