Helnwein ( presse )
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Flash Art - The World's Leading Art Magazine
Reena Jana
This is a show that confronts and haunts.
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Gottfried Helnwein : Child 6
Emma
Cologne
Alice Schwarzer
cover art: Gottfried Helnwein
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Gottfried Helnwein : Lucky Devil
The Japan Times
Loren Edelson
The Gottfried Helnwein seen on the poster advertising his show and the Gottfried Helnwein viewed in person seem to be a study in contradictions. With his head bandaged and eyes literally pierced by two forks, the poster Helnwein shatters glass with his seemingly torturous cries. In person, Helnwein's taut skin is unblemished; his personality, approachable and warm. But as he begins to talk, it becomes clear that he is indeed the creator of the madman. ... +

The Independent
London
Sheila Johnston
Edward Hopper and the American Experience at the Whitney Museum of American Art until 15 October
The show sets out the main evidence for its claim in a multimedia exhibit planted squarely in the middle of the exhibition space. A half- hour presentation compares Hopper's work with film stills and clips, photographs and canvasses by other painters. Audiences gasp at some of the juxtapositions - for example, Nighthawks with Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Gottfried Helnwein's popular spoof poster, and the diner scene in Herbert Ross's Hollywood version of Pennies from Heaven. The visual rhymes are unmistakable. ... +

Graphis
Number 290 March/April 1994 (Volume 50)
Cover story
Cover: "Kindskopf" ("Head of a Child"), photography by Gottfried Helnwein
He increasingly used photography, a medium that had accompanied his artistic work from the beginning. Initially employed for documentary purposes, it developed dynamics of its own. While in his paintings, Helnwein showed an unparalleled photographic sophistication to render his artistic concepts as realistically as possible, his photographic works used often minuscle changes in light and camera setting to merge the different realities of the visable and invisable. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : "faces", one man show
The Gazette, Montreal
ART
Ann Dunkan
To inaugurate the new exhibition space, which has to be one of the most dramatic in the city, Gosselin chose a powerful show of black-and-white photos by the Viennese-born German artist Gottfried Helnwein. Helnwein's work is everything that Annie Leibovitz's, shown last spring at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, is not. While both shoot celebrities - Helnwein's subjects include Keith Richards, Michael Jackson, Mick Jagger, William S.Burroughs, and an extremly wasted Andy Warhol - Helnwein's work is concentrated on the Psychological rather than on the gimmicky and the theatrical. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, one-man show, Centre International d'Art Contemporain de Montreal, Quebec

Gottfried Helnwein :
International Herald Tribune
Michael Lawton
Taschen is quick to spot a trend: Pierre et Gilles (of Mark Almond record covers fame) or the artist of the perpetual scream Gottfried Helnwein (Norman Mailer is a fan) are both the subjects of recent books. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : William S. Burroughs
CAMERA International
Gabriel Bauret
In fact Gottfried Helnwein made his name by spectacular performances, among them are self mutilations or simulacra of violence inflicted on himself. The violence is often concentrated on the eyes. The artist takes to bandaging the head which deprives the individual of all visual relations with the outside world. An obvious paradox on the part of an artist's whole life and work is closely linked with sight, to apply himself to representing, in various forms, impediments and problems of sight. Undoubtedly the scope of his projects is not limited to the sole artistic domain. His art also takes on an obvious historic dimension. Like a good number of artists of his generation, those born after the war, be they writers, painters, film makers or photographers, Gottfried Helnwein feels intense guilt at belonging to a part of Europe with such an unbearable past. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, "Faces", One Man Show in the Goethe-Institute Paris

Gottfried Helnwein :
Art News, New York
Kenneth Baker
Gottfried Helnwein follows the lead of his older Viennese contemporaries Arnulf Rainer and Hermann Nitsch in staging masquerades of suffering for the camera. He is the principal performer in his tableaux, some of which he translates from photograph into painting. Helnwein's first San Francisco show at the Modernism, came well past the moment when art seemed a fit vehicle for facile protestations of disgust at 20th-century history, especially those twisted with irony. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, one-man show at Modernism Gallery, San Francisco

Gottfried Helnwein : Burg Brohl Castle
San Francisco Chronicle
Barnaby Conrad III
Gottfried Helnwein, An artist reminds society of its past
Frankfurt, Germany. It was night on the Autobahn and I was going to see Gottfried Helnwein, an artist known as "The Razor-Blade Rembrandt." The artist's assistant, Heinz, was pushing the new Mercedes to 100 miles an hour. This unnerving high-speed delivery, on a highway built by Hitler, seemed an appropriate prelude to meeting an Austrian whose art is a biopsy of post-war Germany, with references to resurgent fascism, mass insanity, suicidal depression and childhood trauma. ... +
San Francisco Chronical, Helnwein at Schloss Burgbrohl

Münchner Merkur
translation
The painter of stark, often provocative pictures was interviewed by Andreas Maeckler.
Donald Duck was his first, Elvis Presley his second "revelation".
Gottfried Helnwein reveals how he became what he now is: a partisan of anti-culture.
The painter of stark, often provocative pictures was interviewed by Andreas Maeckler. The result is exciting to read from beginning to end.
Helnwein expresses himself in an outspoken and direct manner, without letting himself be drawn into profound theories. It is interesting to note that he confesses not to be able to say why he paints a picture.
"I have never met an artist who thinks about this while he is working. And whenever he does comment about this, he must be lying."



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Chicago Tribune
Marlene Dietrich's last years were very lonely, according to Gottfried Helnwein, a German painter and photographer. She trusted very few people. But she still had her sharp, sarcastic sense of humor... ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, about Marlene Dietrich

Gottfried Helnwein : der schöne Schrecken
Basler Magazin
Christian Scholz
Kunst im 20. Jahrhundert
Nach 1945 trumpft die Kunst umfänglich erst wieder mit der 68er Bewegung schockierend auf. Etwa in der Pop-Art. Etwa mit den Bildtafeln eines Roy Lichtensteins. Seine Arbeiten, wie auch die anderer Pop-Artisten, tendieren indes zu einer Ästhetisierung des Schreckens. Zitatförmig nimmt Lichtenstein etwa Comic-Motive vom Krieg auf. Doch die Darstellung oszilliert zwischen Wohlgefallen an der Szenerie und Kritik an der Szenerie. Ähnlich ambivalent erscheinen die zahlreichen Drucke von Andy Warhol zum Thema "Kennedy-Mord".
Der wirkliche Schrei, Signum einer Vorkriegsepoche, taucht nicht mehr auf. Ausnahme von der Regel sind die Werke von Gottfried Helnwein. Sie zielen nochmals auf die Scham- und Peinlichkeitsschwelle. Oder sie machen aus dem täglichen Schrecken im Fernsehen ein formatfüllendes Standbild, ("Das Wunder I", 1980, "Das Lied I", 1981). ... +
Otto Dix, Pablo Picasso, Gottfried Helnwein, Roy Lichtenstein, Salvador Dali

Gottfried Helnwein : Marlene Dietrich
USA Today
Anne Trebbe
Gottfried Helnwein, an artist who worked on a book with Dietrich and was in close contact for the past six years, says he never saw her. She was in the bedroom and we were in the other rooms. She would write little notes and put them under the door. She wanted the world to remember her with this beautiful, artificial face created by Sternberg." ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Marlene Dietrich

Gottfried Helnwein :
The Hollywood Reporter
Kirk Honeycutt
The last years of Marlene Dietrich's life "were very lonely and secluded in Paris," said German painter and photographer Gottfried Helnwein, who collaborated with the legendary actress on a book published last year. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Marlene Dietrich

The New York Times
Arts
William Safire

Magazine Desk

IN THE WASHINGTON bureau of The New York Times hangs a framed poster titled ''Boulevard of Broken Dreams.'' It is a painting by Gottfried Helnwein - inspired by the nostalgia and realism in Edward Hopper's painting ''Nighthawks'' - of four legendary people in a dreary diner at night.
Working behind the counter is Elvis Presley; sitting on one stool by himself, coat collar turned up, with a white mug of coffee at hand, is an unshaven James Dean; Marilyn Monroe, blond head tossed back in provocative laughter, is seated close to Humphrey Bogart, wearing a bow tie as Rick in ''Casablanca,'' staring glumly at a glass in front of him. All dead too soon, but their images shimmer in the shared, broken dreams of our national memory. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Lady Macbeth
The New York Times
Craig R. Whitney

Craig R. Whitney is the chief of the London bureau of the Times.

The most controversial part of the festival this year is likely to be a West German ballet, Johann Kresnik's and Gottfried Helnwein's ''Macbeth,'' performed by the Bremer Theater from Bremen Aug. 15 to 17. This production is described in the festival literature as ''blood-boltered and violent, full of sadomasochistic images,'' and inspired not only by the Shakespeare tragedy but also by the more recent mysterious death of a West German politician in Schleswig-Holstein. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : American Prayer
ZeitMagazin
Hamburg
Gottfried Helnwein
Gottfried helnwein about Carl Barks, the man who created Donald Duck.
At nights my room was plunged into a deep, red light - my toys, the furniture, my bed, my hands - everything had the same color and seemed to be made of the same soft material. As though the natural laws were suddenly suspended, all matter seemed to glow from the inside out. The explanation for this red magic was the large illuminated star of the Red Army on the roof of the factory across the street, which poured it’s fire nightly into my room. ... +
The Museum of the 100 paintings, Important writers and artists present their favorite artwork.
Published by Fritz J. Raddatz

Gottfried Helnwein : Selektion - Ninth November Night
Kölner Stadtanzeiger, Cologne
hue
Gottfried Helnwein’s photography project “Ninth November Night," a spectacular work of art that recalls the destruction of the synagogues during the so-called “Reichskristallnacht,” was itself the target of an attack.
On Monday night an unknown person destroyed all seventeen child portraits with knife slashes. The portraits had been set up between the Museum Ludwig and the Dome of Cologne.
Helnwein had financed the project himself. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, PORTRAITS DESTROYED BY KNIVES

Gottfried Helnwein : Neunter-November-Nacht
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
Roland Mischke
Helnwein-Installation between Cologne Cathedral and Ludwig Museum
The lane of pictures between Ludwig Museum and the Dome of Cologne is one hundred meters long. Each panel is 4 meters high. There are thousands of people daily passing by the rear platform of the cathedral and by far the majority of them, only accustomed to the language of billboard-advertising, are baffled, indignant and shocked at the pale children’s faces, printed on large sheets of vinyl. The city council and museums of Cologne receive dozens of calls daily, finding themselves forced into a position of explanation and justification.
The Installation had barely been set up, when the first damage occurred: At night the large-sized child portraits, which had been made to appear distorted and old by the use of makeup, were slashed with knives; one picture was stolen. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, "Ninth November Night", Installation between Ludwig Museum and the Dome of Cologne.



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