Helnwein ( presse )
NEWSARTISTWORKSTEXTSPRESSCONTACTSHOP


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). ... +

FAZ
Antje Vollmer

Vizepräsidentin des Deutschen Bundestages

Antje Vollmer: Zur Sloterdijk-Debatte
Die Reihe der großen Namen ist lang, die in den letzten Jahren in Verdacht und Verruf gerieten.
Botho Strauß, Anselm Kiefer, Martin Walser, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Gottfried Helnwein, Peter Handke
- ihnen allen wurde "gefährliches Denken", Abdriften in "Untiefen" oder "Fischen im Trüben" vorgeworfen, wenn man sie nicht gleich verdächtigte, "faschistoid" zu denken, zu malen oder zu schreiben. ... +
Antje Vollmer: Zur Sloterdijk-Debatte. Berlin, 27.09.1999

Ober-Österreichische Nachrichten
Irene Judmayer
Interview: Maler Gottfried Helnwein zu seiner "Apokalypse" in der Dominikanerkirche Krems.
Gigantische Kulisse für eine irritierende Schau großformatiger Bilder:Der 1948 in Wien geborene Maler Gottfried Helnwein zeigt in der sakralen Wucht der Dominikanerkirche Krems seine "Apokalypse". Einen Bild-zyklus anläßlich der "Großen Prophezeiungen", heuer Motto des nö. Donaufestivals. Die OÖN sprachen mit dem Künstler, der seit 1997 in Irland lebt und einer der International (u.a. in Japan, China, Finnland, USA, Russland) präsentesten aktuellen Maler Österreichs ist. Erstmals seit sechs Jahren stellt er wieder in seiner Heimat aus. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Apokalypse, Installation, one-man show, Krems.

Gottfried Helnwein :
profil
Wien
Horst Christoph
Interview. Gottfried Helnwein über seine späte Entdeckung der Renaissance und den Performance-Künstler Muhammad Ali.
Helnwein: "Mich hat der ganze Kulturbetrieb nicht interessiert. Ich war als Kind von Comics fasziniert, und den Rolling Stones und Jimi Hendrix, und ich habe mir immer gesagt, so müsste man auch malen können. Ich habe natürlich am Anfang Bilder gemacht, die ausgestellt werden sollten, aber ich habe immer das Gefühl gehabt, dass das noch nicht alles sein kann."
"Mich hat immer Unzufriedenheit mit dem, was ich gerade mache, weitergebracht. So habe ich Anfang der achtziger Jahre einen radikalen Schnitt vollzogen. Und ich bin mit meiner Familie nach Deutschland gegangen - auf Distanz zum Bekannten, Vertrauten. Ich habe dabei eine ungeheure Freiheit empfunden und schlagartig anders gemalt. Erst aus der räumlichen und zeitlichen Distanz ist mir auch das Österreichische in meiner Arbeit bewusst geworden, und habe ich es kritisch weiterentwickeln können." ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Installation and one-man show, Museum of Lower Austria


less
12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728
more

|
ALL 2008-2007 2006-2005 2004-2003 2002-2001 2000-1999 1998-1997 1996-1995 1994-1993 1992-1991 1990-1989 before 1989




ENGLISHDEUTSCHFRANCAISITALIANOESPANOLPOLSKIRUSSIANCHINESEJAPANESE
Helnwein : presse
more Helnwein Sites
www.helnwein.com
www.helnwein.de
www.helnwein.fr
italia.helnwein.com
hispano.helnwein.com
polska.helnwein.com
russia.helnwein.com
japan.helnwein.com
china.helnwein.com
www.helnwein.ch
www.gottfried-helnwein.ch
www.gottfried-helnwein.at
www.gottfriedhelnwein.ie
kristallnacht.helnwein.com
www.helnwein.org
www.helnwein.net
www.helnwein-museum.com
www.helnwein-music.com
www.helnwein-theater.com
www.helnwein-photography.com
www.helnwein.info
www.helnwein-archive.com
www.helnwein-archiv.de
www.helnweinreview.com
www.helnweincomic.homestead.com
OLD VERSION OF THIS SITE
NEWS [
Event Calendar
News Update
]
ARTIST [
Studio
Biography
Exhibitions
Collections
Bibliography
Films
Quotes
Quotes by Helnwein
News Update
]
WORKS [
Mixed Media on Canvas
Photography
Self-Portraits
Watercolors
Drawings
Installations and Performances
Landscapes
Theater and Film
]
TEXTS [
Selected Authors
English Texts
International Texts
Texts by Helnwein
Quotes
Quotes by Helnwein
]
PRESS [
>Selected Articles
English Press
International Press
Interviews
Internet
]
CONTACT [
Guestbook
E-mail
Links
]
SHOP [
www.helnwein-artstore.com
]