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| Ann Dunkan | ||
| The Gazette, Montreal |
"The Centre International d'Art Contemporain de Montreal chose a powerful show of black-and-white photos by the Viennese-born 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." |
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| Gisela Fiedler-Bender | ||
| Direktorin des Landesmuseums in Mainz |
"Es ist der Mensch, ausschließlich der Mensch, das menschliche Antlitz, der vom Leben gezeichnete Mensch. Es geht Helnwein nicht um die schöne Oberfläche des Gesehenen, nicht um ästhetischen Genuß an der Natur und um eine Bestätigung herkömmlicher ästhetischer Normen. |
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| Mark Swed | ||
| Los Angeles Times |
"Gottfried Helnwein's wondrous staging of "Der Rosenkavalier" is eccentric and anachronistic — yet utterly faithful to its spirit. |
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| Madeleine Shaner | ||
| The Hollywood Reporter |
"What dominates, however, in a manner I've seldom seen is Helnwein's use of color -- the monochromatic blue of Act 1 even extends to skin color. Herr von Faninal's house is bathed in a rich golden sheen, from the orange glow of Ochs' silly wig to the platinum of the lovely Sophie's almost-there dress. The final act, in a cheap restaurant, is mainly a glaring red, again from Ochs' wig to his skin and the costumes of the huge band of players. The walls of the restaurant are, incidentally, lined with Helnwein's own works, mainly huge photo-realistic portraits of contemporary women. The 200 costumes Helnwein designed for the piece deserve a whole review for themselves this is inventiveness gone wild, a genius concept, and a huge addition to the production. There might be purists in disagreement here, but this would seem to be a "Rosenkavalier" for the ages." |
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| Anthony Tommasini | ||
| The New York Times |
"The Los Angeles Opera's much-anticipated new production of Strauss's "Rosenkavalier" opened on Sunday night and you can bet that the high-concept and boldly stylized sets and costumes by the designer and visual artist Gottfried Helnwein are going to provoke the strongest reactions. |
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| Alexander Borovsky | ||
| Curator for Contemporary Art at the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg |
"Helnwein's work is a complex dialectics of corporeality and ideality, accessibility and distance, fragility and invulnerability. In plastic form it is high optical sensitivity (portraits are drawn, yet their photographic basis remains perfectly clear), the forced magic of the fixed stare (the stare of the camera lens and tracking device - no wonder Susan Sontag identified tender homicide in the freeze-frame), heightened physical sensitivity, and coldly estranged form, behind which lie the universal phenomena of love and hate, presence and non-existence. ("There is a certain state of confusion in sensuality, like drowning. It's the nausea you feel when you see a dead body", writes George Bataille)." |
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| Peter Ludwig | ||
| Kunstsammler, Gründer vieler Museen un d Stiftungen |
"Menschlichkeit im Riesenmass (- über das monumentale Kinderbild im Werk Gottfried Helnweins, anlässlich einer Schenkung mehrerer Helnwein-Arbeiten an das Staatliche Russische Museum in St. Petersburg)" |
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| Peter Ludwig | ||
| German Art Collector, Founder of many Museums and Foundations for the Arts |
"Many artists use photographs as references to create their paintings – and this is something that has already existed in the 19th century. Lehnbach painted the famous portraits of his contemporaries after photographs. Gerhard Richter and Gottfried Helnwein have given these photographic materials an additional accent – they have transformed them into paintings - not copied them." |
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| Terence Clarke | ||
| Art-critic |
"Gottfried Helnwein paints views of sadistic punishment with the care and precision of a latter-day Vermeer." |
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| Friedensreich Hundertwasser | ||
| Künstler |
"Helnwein ist vor allem ein Fotokünstler. Er verstärkt das fotografische Abbild in dramatischen Ausdrücken. Es stimmt, bei ihm nehmen Häßlichkeit und Gewalt eine zentrale Rolle ein, aber nicht um ihrer selbst willen, sondern mit Gründen. |
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