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Gottfried Helnwein : Epiphany I, Adoration of the Magi
The Kilkenny Arts Festival 2001
Ireland
Mic Moroney

exhibition catalogue

Helnwein installation and one man show at the Kilkenny Arts Festival 2001
Most of the city pictures emerge from a deceptively simple strand of Gottfried's work, the frank photography of children's faces. He photographed over ninety children in Kilkenny. Now these kids are immortalised, larger than life in their extreme youth, and dotted around the gable-ends and walls of their native town; there eyes closed in beautiful, breathless meditation. Mounted in a manner which is normally the preserve of billboard advertising, these are quietly awesome images of the city's youngest inhabitants. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, AT THE KILKENNY ART FESTIVAL, 2001

Gottfried Helnwein :
The AMICO Library
Public Collection in Insight
View Full Catalog Record Below
This image is one of over 118,000 from The Art Museum Image Consortium Library (The AMICO Library™), a growing online collection of high-quality, digital art images from 39 museums around the world.

Creator Name: Gottfried Helnwein
Creator Nationality: European; Central European; Austrian
Title: Self-Portrait
Creation Date: 1993
Object Type: Drawings and Watercolors
Materials and Techniques: Colored pencil
Contributor: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Owner Location: San Francisco, California, USA
Credit Line: Museum Purchase, Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts Endowment Fund ... +

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 : Angel sleeping 7
project
Rick Poynor
Programme of research
In art we can experience Holocaust at the Imperial War museum, Apocalypse in RCA, and we can just view Euguene Smith's photographs and Helnwein's amazing art within stupefaction, or we can even find ourselves attached with Tarantino's 'ironic, affectless and funny' violent images...
On one hand, the perception and cognition of reality within these images of death, dying and suffering are bound to change one's attitude, ethical and moral views, and opinions in a way where the familiarity to death is dissipated and has become submissive. It has become easier to face the idea of death. So one might argue the fact that desensitized impression is actually sensitizing. On the other hand, the artist, who chooses to exhibit and present the political and provocative images of pain as a means of catharsis in order to heal, might be bringing a new way of dealing with the issues of death, suffering and dying (as in Helnwein's case).
So the project aims to scrutinize the fine line between these two views while investigating the contemporary images of death within a sociological, philosophical and historical approach. ... +

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 :
Albertina, Wien
Ingried Brugger, Angela Stief
painting - Austrian artists now
exhibition-catalogue
Albertina, Wien - 10. 10. 2000 - 18. 10. 2000
Galerie Suppan, Wien - 23.10. - 25.11. 2000
... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Charles Bukowski
canongate books
rebel inc.
Edited by Howard Sounes
Cover: Gottfried Helnwein
The Book Bukowski in Pictures is the first pictorial biography of cult writer, Charles Bukowski. The writer's extraordinary private and public life is illustrated with hundreds of photographs, most published for the first time. Extracts from Bukowski's poetry and prose are sprinkled throughout, together with drawings, cartoons, manuscripts, rare broadsides and personal letters. It features powerful new portraits of Bukowski by leading photographers such as Gottfried Helnwein and Tony Lane, former art director of Rolling Stone, as well as work by R.Crumb. All photographs have detailed captions by biographer Howard Sounes who has also written a powerful introductory text with new revelations gleaned from Bukowski's recently declassified FBI file. The end result is a fascinating life in pictures that will be essential for all Bukowski fans. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Heather Whitmore Jain

Curatorial Associate, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Helnwein's "Mickey I" at the SFMOMA
(excerpt) Other works in the exhibition present the dark side of cartoon characters. The prevailing narrative structure of many cartoons is a cycle of one's character's unrelenting attacks on another. Yet the violence of these scenarios is subverted and humor achieved by the lack of any permanent injury to the victim and the gleeful nonchalance of the adversary even during the most aggressive assault. Static representations of wounded or menacing cartoon characters can expose the violence and eliminate the humorous punch line. In Gottfried Helnwein's painting Mickey (plate 24), Mickey Mouse's physical features, which usually contribute to his appeal become a thin veneer of looming attack. Blown up to a monster scale and rendered in an austere gray palette, Mickey's smile is deceptive. ... +
"The Darker Side of Playland" Childhood Imagery from the Logan Collection

Gottfried Helnwein : Mouse
Artweek
Celebrating 30 years
Alicia Miller

Review

San Fracisco Museum of Modern Art
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's "Mouse" at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Gottfried Helnwein : Ghost in the Shell
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Robert A. Sobieszek

Curator of Photography, Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Photography and the Human Soul, 1850-2000
Historian Peter Selz has compared Gottfried Helnwein's tortured, screaming, and bandaged self-portraits to Messerschmidt's sculptural self-portraits,
but the artist has said, " The reason why I took up the subject of self-portraits and why I have put myself on stage was to function as a kind of representative.
There is nothing autobiographical, no therapy, and it says nothing about me personally.
.... I am always available as a model." ... +

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 :
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

Unikankare kuvataide
Finland
Virpi Wuori
HELNWEIN HAASTAA VUOROPUHELUUN
Teksti: Virpi Wuori Kuva: Gottfried Helnwein
Unikankare haastatteli itävaltalaista taidemaalari ja valokuvaaja Gottfried Helnweinia Wäinö Aaltosen museossa ennen hänen retrospektiivisen näyttelynsä avajaisia. Teema, johon Helnwein palaa aina uudelleen, on ihmisen julmuus ja toisaalta haavoittuvuus, fyysinen ja psyykkinen kipu, jonka yhtenä symbolina hän käyttää teoksissaan kylmiä metalli-instrumentteja pehmeän ja haavoittuvan ihon rinnalla. "Työni lähtökohtana on dialogi katsojan kanssa. Jos olisin yksin autiolla saarella, maalaamisessa ei olisi mitään mieltä. Haluan vaikuttaa kuvillani ihmisiin. Siksi aikakauslehdet ja etenkin suuret ulkojulisteet ovat olleet minusta tärkeä kanava saada kuvani niin monien ihmisten ulottuville kuin mahdollista." Niinpä Helnwein on johdonmukaisesti kiinnostunut esittelemään taidettaan myös tietoverkossa. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Finishing touches to "Angels Burning"
Museum of Lower Austria
Catalogue for the Installation in the Dominican Church, Krems, 13.6. - 31.8. 1999
Peter Zawrel

Director of the Museum of Lower Austria

Apokalypse, one man show and Installation by Gottfried Helnwein at the Dominican Church in Krems
Only in this way was Helnwein able to trigger the shock that he intended, a shock with a possible healing effect whose first target was the repression of the greatest trauma of our century. The repression of National Socialism, the Austrian people complicity in it and its consequences had been declared an official policy in Austria. In this way the generations born after 1945 had no chance to deal with the barbaric, neither with its outbreak a few years earlier nor with its lingering latent presence.
Everything had become harmless again. The revelation occurred only in 1986 when Kurt Waldheim became President of Austria and a "case" that was discussed world-wide. Based on this specifically Austrian situation Helnwein developed a visual language of apocalyptic vision that can be understood all over the world. The beautiful and the ugly, the fear of the terrible and the power of its fascination, the clearly recognisable and that which cannot be interpreted but lurks outside the painting as well as outside the nursery door, and more closely intertwined in these pictures than those of any other living artist.
The enigma of Helnwein's paintings always has to do with guilt and atonement, perpetrators and victims, accusation and remorse. He has never escaped the Christian world of ideas and images of his childhood, but instead has used it for his own artistic purposes. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
project @ the mint
Henry Place, off Henry Street, Dublin 1
Ireland
A Theatre of Cruelty Season
Project Arts Centre ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Fall of the Angels
Wolfgang Bauer
Poet
Museum of Lower Austria

Apokalypse, Helnwein, installation, one-man show

Helnwein - Inspiration
As long ago as 1963 a fellow-artist and I imagined the horrible future of a free-lance artist.
The topic of our discussion was not so much finances as the necessity of letting go and totally abandoning oneself.
At the time I had the idea of inventing something like a "fitness training of geniuses".
In retrospect I must say that I know very few artists who have persevered in this imaginary training programme. Gottfried Helnwein is one of them.
Helnwein likes to linger at boundaries.
Whoever wants to pass through is closely examined by him. Like Goya he is one of the magic customs officials of art. (Rousseau, on the other hand, always stayed on the other side of the border even though he really was a customs official by profession!)

Whoever wants to enter the plane of art has to be able to understand and communicate reality. Helnwein is not only an artist but also a perfect transformer.
The so called imagination should not come into play at the beginning of a world, but its nuclear power should be released only at the moment of transformation, of metamorphosis. ... +
Wolfgang Bauer, Helnwein catalogue for "Apokalypse" exhibition 1999, Krems, Austria

Gottfried Helnwein :
Arkansas Art Center, The Collection
In addition to over 130 Signac drawings, the Arts Center has amassed a world-renowned collection of fellow Europeans' works on paper. Among the celebrated draftsmen are the familiar names of Rembrandt, Rubens, Cézanne, Degas, Francois Boucher, Alberto Giacometti, Tiepolo and Picasso. Equally important is the ranging from an intimate 15th century Northern silverpoint to numerous examples from the Russian Avant-Garde to contemporary works by Berner Venet and Gottfried Helnwein. ... +



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