Helnwein ( presse )
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Gottfried Helnwein :
The Sunday Times
Cover story
Medb Ruane

Ireland

The disturbing Work of Helnwein comes to Ireland Helnwein is a headline artist who works in tight sound bites on a very large scale. The works brand themselves with proof of his technical know-how in various media and are endorsed by the coolest celebrities of his generation. So much for the cover-story, so what lies within? Headlines lure you into stories that make you want to cry, smile or help to change the world. But when they stop at your own skin, you can get a sinking feeling, a sense of the bigness and badness outside and the impossibility of change. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Installation and one-man show at the Kilkenny Art Festival 2001

Gottfried Helnwein :
Artweek
Celebrating 30 Years
Alicia Miller
Reviews
In 'The Darker Side of Playland', the endearing cuteness of beloved toys and cartoon characters turns menacing and monstrous. Much of the work has the quality of childhood nightmares. In those dreams, long before any adult understanding of the specific pains and evils that live holds, the familiar and comforting objects and images of a child's world are rent with something untoward. For children, not understanding what really to be afraid of, these dreams portend some pain and disturbance lurking into the landscape.
Perhaps nothing in the exhibition exemplifies this better than Gottfried Helnwein's 'Mickey'. His portrait of Disney's favotite mouse occupies an entire wall of the gallery; rendered from an oblique angle, his jaunty, ingenuous visage looks somehow sneaky and suspicious. His broad smile, encasing a row of gleaming teeth, seems more a snarl or leer. This is Mickey as Mr. Hyde, his hidden other self now disturbingly revealed.
Helnwein's Mickey is painted in shades of gray, as if pictured on an old black-and-white TV set. We are meant to be transported to the flickering edges of our own childhood memories in a time imaginably more blameless, crime-less and guiltless.
But Mickey's terrifying demeanor hints of things to come. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Gottfried Helnwein :
The Irish Times
Aiden Dunne
While it is a painting, Epiphany is typical in its almost interchangeable use of photography and painting: both played their part in the achievement of the eventual, quasi-photographic image. He is a fine photographer, and his photographic portraits of Kilkenny children (enlarged to an enormous scale) form one strand of his festival exhibitions. The careful adaptation of existing imagery is another trait, and his references extend back through fine art history as well as history itself... ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, ONE MAN SHOW, AN INSTALLATION IN KILKENNY, 2001

Gottfried Helnwein : The Irish Times
The Irish Times
frontpage
Workmen finish one of a series of prints measuring 9.3 metres by 6.2 metres by Austrian artist Gottfried Helnwein.The prints of Kilkenny children will hang on buildings in Kilkenny as parts of its arts festival beginning on August 10th. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Installation and one-man show at the Kilkenny arts festival

Gottfried Helnwein : Peinlich (Embarrassing)
Dazed and Confused
London
Mark Sanders
Helnwein, the controversial Austrian artist whose works is currently on show at the Robert Sandelson gallery in London, has always been a difficult personality to pin down.
He chose to exhibit all three "Epiphany" paintings alongside a series of photographs of 19th century stillborn foetuses in an exhibition entitled "Apokalypse". Hung together in a Dominican church in Weinstadt in Austria, the final effect was one of haunting beauty, each child framed magnificently within the high vaulted ceiling of the church. The juxtaposition of these serene yet poignant images of "beings that never were" placed next to paintings that recalled the ideological terrors of the past, created a synthesis of values as politically dynamic as they were aesthetically entrancing. Yet throughout his career as an artist Helnwein has never ceased to use his work as a way to question his immediate surroundings. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
San Jose Mercury News
Jack Fischer
Helnwein's Mickey: It's hard to imagine another contemporary symbol so perfectly balanced between beloved childhood icon and its day job as a corporate logo.
HEY, there's Mickey Mouse at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art!
Wait a minute. That's not my perky little pal from ''Steamboat Willie.'' This Mickey looks a little mean. This Mickey looks like Michael Eisner's id. Nice Mickey. Don't hurt me. Here's a dollar.
That's how it goes at ''The Darker Side of Playland: Childhood Imagery from the Logan Collection,'' perhaps the first show to suggest that there are indeed monsters under the bed, and you might as well get used to it.
SFMOMA curatorial associate Heather Whitmore Jain struck the perfect note by opening the show with Austrian painter Gottfried Helnwein's massive and menacing oil and acrylic ''Mickey.''
It's hard to imagine another contemporary symbol so perfectly balanced between beloved childhood icon and its day job as a corporate logo. Helnwein chooses an earlier Mickey, with the smaller, darker eyes and the longer, more ratlike nose to help make his point. With his pasted-on smile and forward lunge, this Mickey looks more ready to negotiate cable and Web rights than to comfort a preschooler. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :  Angel sleeping
Kleine Zeitung Graz
Frido Hütter
Helnwein, der Meister des Grauens auf den zweiten Blick, zeigt bei einer Personale in Krems verstörend intensive Grossformate. Estmals wieder seit fast zehn Jahren.
Es mag paradox scheinen: Aber Helnweins historisches Verdienst liegt hinter der - meist irrwitzig attraktiven - Oberfläche seiner Bilder:
Der zweite, dritte Blick offenbart dem Betrachter das psychologische.
Großtalent Helnwein, das Stimmungen und Zustände detailgenau erkennt und durchleuchtet.
Das war in Frühen Motiven wie "Leid macht stark" oder "Die Tochter des Schlurfs" erkennbar und ist auch hier nicht anders. Man nehme das oben abgebildete Motiv als Beispiel.
Wolfgang Bauer sagt: "Helnwein hält sich gerne an diversen Grenzen auf. Wer hier durch will, wird von ihm genau geprüft. Er ist einer der magischen Zöllner der Kunst."
Die Zollformalitäten in Krems seien somit ausdrücklich empfohlen. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : The Rake's Progress
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
Julia Spinola
Aus dem Reich der Verstümmelten und der bandagierten Köpfe: Strawinskys "Rake's Progress" an der Hamburgischen Staatsoper.
Das Eindringen des Horrors in den Alltag hat wohl kaum jemand so beklemmend dargestellt wie der österreichische Künstler Gottfried Helnwein. Auf seinen Bildern nimmt die Gewalt derart Besitz von der Normalität, dass sie zum alles vergiftenden Elixier des Grauens wird. Viele seiner Gemälde, Plakate, Fotografien und Federzeichnungen zeigen Versehrung und Verstümmlung von Menschen, klinische Folterszenen, brutalisierten Kindern mit apathischen Blick, mit verbundenen Köpfen und Händen, oder mit ausradierten Gesichtern. Dennoch schockiert nicht die Inhalte allein: So umfassend scheint vielmehr Helnweins Perspektive auf das Leben vom Gefühl der Qual durchtränkt, dass selbst motivisch harmlosen Porträts, von John F. Kennedy oder Mick Jagger etwa, noch die Gewalt aus jeder fotorealistischen Pore dringt. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Tom Rakewell
Welt am Sonntag
Engler
Das Haus an der Dammtorstrasse zeigt einen Klassiker der Moderne: Jürgen Flimm inszeniert "The Rake's Progress", Ingo Metzmacher dirigiert, und Gottfried Helnwein schuf das außergewöhnliche Bühnenbild. Der Maler, Fotograf, Bildhauer und Bühnenbildner Gottfried Helnwein gestaltet Bühne, Kostüme und Masken - nach Jörg Immendorff ist er der zweite Maler, der sich an die Strawinsky Oper wagt. Im Gegensatz zu dem Düsseldorfer Neuen Wilden geht Helnwein allerdings mit dem fotografischen Auge eines Kameramannes und mit großem Feingefühl als Kostüm- und Maskenerfinder zu Werke. "Was Gottfried Helnwein da gemacht hat, ist gewaltig," sagt der amerikanische Bassbariton David Pittsinger, ein erfahrener Strawinsky-Interpret, der in der Inszenierung den Teufel Nick Shadow singen wird. "Die Kostüme hat er als Maler entworfen, die Farben entsprechen den Klangfarben der Musik und denen der Figuren im Libretto," schwärmt der Sänger, dessen Lehrer Richard Cross noch selbst mit Strawinsky gearbeitet hatte. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
The Irish Times
Aiden Dunne
Helnwein is famously confrontational, and his bold conflations of Nazi and Christian iconography, in Epiphany and other prominently displayed pictures, predictably generated some friction. Yet, in a way, one shouldn't rush to condemn condemnations of, or expressions or resignation about, Helnwein's work, no matter how superficial or uninformed they turn out to be. Because, let's face it, a large part of its effectiveness had to do with its calculated, barbed ambiguity.
The point of the images is that they put it up to you as a viewer. Given that, one potential line of criticism is that they are designed solely to be provocative, like Marcus Harvey's portrait of Myra Hindley. But the abiding strength of Helnwein's work is that provocation is a means rather than an end; it is - however uncomfortable - morally grounded, if not necessarily in a way that will please all observers...
His beautiful photographs of Kilkenny children are, collectively, a recognisable derivative of his work Selection, which implicitly placed the viewer in the position of someone marking children for extermination. Strong stuff.
If that seems irrelevant in an Irish context, one could always point to Northern Ireland and to the scandals that have shaken the complacent authority of church and state in recent years.
What is more innocent, more open, more charming than the face of a child? Except that we are more than ever uncomfortably aware that the act of looking is not at all innocent, and Helnwein's children, with their closed, downcast eyes, decline to meet our collective gaze. Why? Perhaps because they insist on remaining within the orbits of their imaginations.
There is also, however, a slight unease arising from the uniformity of the images and the awareness that the subjects are being directed. Helnwein has a knack for throwing responsibility for what we are looking at back onto us, the viewers. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, AT THE KILKENNY ART FESTIVAL, 2001

Gottfried Helnwein : Apokalypse
www.arte-tv.com
Chuck Close, Gottfried Helnwein, Jason Brooks
Une peinture photoréaliste demande un mois de travail, voire une année. Parfois, la toile n’est que la copie d’une photo. Jason Brooks, un Britannique de 31 ans, s’est récemment vu décerner pour l’une de ses Ĺ“uvres l’un des prix artistiques les plus convoités de Grande-Bretagne. Par ailleurs, Londres accueille en ce moment une rétrospective consacrée à l’Américain Chuck Close. Il est considéré comme l’un des fondateurs du photoréalisme, au même titre que Gottfried Helnwein qui expose actuellement dans une église gothique à Krems en Autriche. Serait-ce le come-back du photoréalisme ? Comment se fait-il que cette technique, qui a connu son âge d’or dans les années 70, fascine aujourd’hui les jeunes artistes ? Pourquoi ces tableaux interpellent-ils davantage le spectateur que les clichés d’origine ? METROPOLIS a rencontré Gottfried Helnwein et Jason Brooks à Londres et s’est entretenu avec eux de leurs motivations, des techniques employées et de l’avenir de ce mouvement. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Marlene Dietrich
Frankfurter Rundschau
Roland Mischke
Gottfried Helnwein über Marlene Dietrich
"Sogar Marlenes Stimme klang einsam"
Am Ende ihres Lebens schloss sich Marlene Dietrich von der Welt aus. Zu den sieben Freunden, die sie in ihrer Pariser Wohnung besuchen durften, gehörten der Maler Gottfried Helnwein und seine Frau Renate. Sie erzählen von ihrer Freundschaft zu der Diva, die am 27. Dezember 100 Jahre alt geworden wäre. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Marlene Dietrich

Gottfried Helnwein : The Rake's Progress
Stuttgarter Zeitung
Götz Thieme
Flimm gewann für Bühne und Kostüme Gottfried Helnwein, der angeblich notorisch Drastik und Provokation sucht, zunächst aber ein ingeniöser Bildmacher ist. ein Maler, Grafiker und Fotograf. Das verbindet ihn mit William Hogarth, dem englischen Kupferstecher, dessen Bilderzyklen Strawinsky zur Oper inspirierten. Doch 250 Jahre später setzt Helnwein nicht bei Hogarth und seiner realistisch genauen Darstellung der Londoner Casinos, Lusthöllen und Irrenhäuser an. Helnwein arrangiert eine magische Zeitlosigkeit durch präzise Rekostruktion konkreter Stile und zugleich fantasiegeborener Kreationen. Selten erlebte man die plastische Wirkungskraft von Kostümen so intensiv wie in Helnweins schiefem, nach rechts sich neigendem Kubusraum, in den zur Linken drei Türen eingelassen sind und dessen hellweisse Flächen immer wieder Bildprojektionen dienen, Kostüme und Bilder sind von ausgesuchtem Antipsychologismus, von entwaffnend stereotyper Symbolik, so wie Audens und Kallmans Text, wie Strawinskys Musik. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Bühnenbild und Kostüm für "Rake's Progress" von Strawinsky

Gottfried Helnwein : self-portrait as sub-human I
www.retortmag.com
by Robert Lort
"There can be no art without pain, there can be no pain without art". - Alexandro Jodorowsky
Austrian born artist Gottfried Helnwein's work is also of exemplary value, beginning with bandage action events (documented by the artist appearing in cafe's and lying in the street with his "wounded" head and face bandaged). His work depicts physical injuries which are metaphors for far deeper existential, psychological and human tragedies. Medical injuries, facial deformities and abused children proliferate throughout his work evoking primary internal anxieties. The inhumane acts of violence (child abuse, war atrocities, state oppression) and frightening images of familial estrangement that are presented in his work, constitute events which are preferred forgotten, like the nazi era, or preferred left unspoken such as familial traumas like child abuse. Helnwein also conducts a probing analysis of the individual and the self through an abundance of self portraits, each obscured by hideous facial bandages, his facial muscles, lips and eyes are stretched apart, torturingly, by varied medical instruments, now made famous by the Rammstein covers. All his images in some way evoke associations with mutilation, anguish or internal alienation. The works (frequently paintings appearing remarkably like photographs), boldly put forward social unacceptabilities never before portrayed so lucidly and so confrontingly. The many intensities produced in the work are profoundly disturbing, the impressions - uncomfortably eerie, electrocuting the eyes with a rush of haunting spatiality. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : American Prayer
ART newsroom.com
Joanna Hayman-Bolt
Any artist who sites Donald Duck and Jesus Christ as the most important influences in their art must be worth taking a look at.
In the row of pristine gallery fronts in London's Cork street, you cannot miss Gottfried Helnwein's show; it's the one with the gigantic Mickey Mouse staring out at you.
The Robert Sandelson Gallery has given us a stunning show of the infamous, Austrian born artist's recent work. Helnwein is on a mission to find the answers to questions that no-one in Austria would give him; such as why the post-war republic portrayed itself as a victim rather than as one of the first main perpetrators of Nazism. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, one-man show at Robert Sandelson Gallery, London, 2000

Gottfried Helnwein :
Jewish Chronicle, London
Julia Weiner
London show for Gottfried Helnwein, Artist's haunting Nazi-era Images
Austrian artist Gottfired Helnwein's powerful and haunting paintings provide a disturbing commentary on Nazism and the Holocaust, regularly provoking outraged reactions from right-wingers in his native land and in Germany. "I was amazed how much pictures could reach into the hearts and minds of people - and how much they would talk to me about it," he told the JC. "For me, art is like a dialogue. My art is not giving answers, it is asking questions." ... +

REUTERS City , International / Art
John Hendry
A year or so back, an exhibition called Sensations caused a few upsets, first in London and then in New York. Central to the reaction was a large-scale portrait of a child-killer assembled from, if I remember correctly, the palm prints of children. So far, so bland. The shock element in art has been much talked about in the last five years but art that actually shocks has been thin on the ground during the same period.
Step forward then, Gottfried Helnwein.
By and large, if art is going to shock, it better have something shocking to say,and it's clear that Helnwein has found that. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, One Man Show, Robert Sandelson Gallery, 2000

Gottfried Helnwein :
Haaretz
Israel
... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
TANK Magazine
London
Gottfried Helnwein
These paintings are about America, I guess from a very European point of view.
They're based on photographs, mainly newspaper photographs, of the Fifties and Sixties from archives in New York and L.A. Most people in these pictures are real people, caught in some long forgotten, petty events.
I rearranged the scenes, introduced new characters, and created new relationships and contexts. And then I painted them in black and blue.
That's how I remember America back then in the early Fifties in Vienna, where I was born. The big war had ended a few years ago, but the city still seemed undecided as to whether this was the end of the world or if life should go on.
It was a strange, sad and surreal world. The streets were empty, the houses dark - many of them in ruins from the bombings.
The few people I saw seemed ugly, clumsy, and depressed.
I never saw anybody laughing and I never heard anybody sing. It was a world without sound and colour. Everything moved in slow motion, like slime. We had no phones, no television, no cars, no music, no pictures, except the paintings of tortured people in the Roman Catholic church which made a deep impression on me, haunting me in the sleepless nights of my childhood limbo.
And then, without any warning, suddenly there was America.
When I saw the first picture of Elvis I was in a state of shock, because I couldn't believe that a human being could be so beautiful.
That was the beginning of the never-ending flood of American images that suddenly came over us and started to penetrate and transform everything. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein," The American Paintings",One-man show, Modernism Gallery,San Francisco, 2000

Evening Standard
London
Godfrey Barker
says GODFREY BARKER
But stand all this beside an Antony Gormley cage figure (White Cube) or the giant paintings of stillborn babies by Gottfried Helnwein, an artist revered in Germany and Austria (Robert Sandelson). ... +



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