Inferno of the Innocents focuses – as does most of Helnwein’s work – on grotesque themes, often involving injured or disfigured children. Viewers familiar only with the artist’s Andrew Wyeth-like portraits of young girls will be shocked; those quiet and beautiful scenes are the outsiders in Helnwein’s catalog. Three paintings in the show – graphic depictions of a bloody-headed young girl – are particularly loaded at this moment; they can’t help but evoke Christina Taylor Green, the nine year old girl killed in the recent mass shooting in Tucson.
Shock has been an essential component of Helnwein’s work since the beginning. In art school in 1966 Helnwein began enacting performances in which he cut himself bloody with razors and etching tools. Later, while at Vienna’s University of Visual Art (the same school that rejected a young Adolph Hitler) he worked on performance pieces involving bandaged children in public places. Photographs of these performances inspired some of his early paintings, watercolors of disfigured toddlers. People reacted – strongly. Though the images were meant to be disturbing, Helnwein was surprised at the intensity of the reactions. “I didn’t expect [that],” he says. “I thought, ‘who’d care about this little watercolor?’”
The almost cartoonishly dark themes Helnwein explores are rooted in the artist’s bleak childhood in postwar Vienna. Helnwein felt completely isolated. “The world I lived in, I didn’t want to be there. I thought, ‘these people are strangers,’ even my parents…. I didn’t feel I belonged there.”
Helnwein describes his discovery of Walt Disney comic books as his salvation – his first glimpse of a world in which he actually wanted to live. He cites Carl Barks’ Donald Duck comics as a lifelong inspiration – a debt he has repaid by bringing Disney characters into his work many times over the years. A large and ominous Mickey Mouse looms out of Annunciation (Mouse 12), and Donald Duck features in several of the paintings on display in the show.
Helnwein describes his discovery of Walt Disney comic books as his salvation – his first glimpse of a world in which he actually wanted to live. He cites Carl Barks’ Donald Duck comics as a lifelong inspiration – a debt he has repaid by bringing Disney characters into his work many times over the years. A large and ominous Mickey Mouse looms out of Annunciation (Mouse 12), and Donald Duck features in several of the paintings on display in the show.
Immediacy is key in Helnwein’s work. His paintings are carefully conceived to ‘grab’ the viewer, and to provoke a reaction. His experience with those early watercolors was not forgotten, and it is no coincidence that his favorite subject matter – vulnerable children, the injured/handicapped, pop and movie stars, and Nazis (especially Nazis) – come pre-loaded with an emotional response. For Helnwein, life in Hitler’s aftermath (he was born in 1948) called for outrage, not subtlety.
I didn’t see it with my own eyes, but don’t forget, in that country 6 million Jews were killed, 500,000 gypsies were killed, gay people went to concentration camps… you cannot cause so much pain and death and not feel that. Even if you come later, you feel that, or I felt it, at least… [But] you couldn’t communicate to anybody… [I asked myself] ‘Why would people do that to other people?’ That was the reason I eventually became an artist.”
The Holocaust has been a touchstone for many artists from Teutonic countries, including Gerhard Richter, to whom Helnwein is inevitably compared. The comparison has to be difficult for Helnwein; Richter is on nearly every critic’s short list of the world’s greatest living artists. Helnwein is on Sean Penn’s.