Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn, January 01, 1996
by Günter Zehnder
Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn
Gottfried Helnwein's artistic and intellectual approach is to aim quite subtly at producing a crucial feeling of insecurity and a concomitant change of consciousness in the viewer, by using seemingly familiar or usual images that have a certain amount of tradition and an apparently well known composition.Gottfried Helnwein, Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn, 1996Helnwein show at the Museum of Modern Art Otaru, Japan, catalogue, 1996
by Evgenija Nicolaevna Petrova
Chief Curator of the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg
The works of Gottfried Helnwein are technically classified as hyper-realism (surpassing super-realism) and at first glance are practically indistinguishable from photographs. Though realistic in terms of technique, most of Helnwein's works are characterized by metaphorical implications.Among his works, for example, is a painting of a man blindfolded with a bandage around his head. Featured in magazines and newspapers worldwide, looking at this painting may have caused people to feel its unheard cry. Throughout most of Helnwein's work is the basic principle of realism laced with metaphor. Viewed in this light, this basic principle can be considered, in a sense, metaphorical under the guise of realism. On the contrary, photographs by Helnwein look like paintings with implications. Included in all of Gottfried Helnwein's work, this basic principle demonstrates a reflection of the aesthetics of popular culture and irony, and represent Helnwein's major outlook on the world. Gottfried Helnwein is endowed with perfect pitch and distinguished sense of contemporary issues. As a painter whose art deals with issues confronting human society, Helnwein creates a new standard of measuring modernism. Gottfried Helnwein, One-man Show at the Museum of Modern Art Otaru, Japan, 1996Helnwein exhibition catalogue, Andreas Mäckler, 1996
by Andreas Mäckler
"The reason why I took to doing self-portraits", Gottfried Helnwein said in a 1990 interview, "and why I have been presenting my own persona from the very start, lay in a kind of substitution for the self. There is nothing of an autobiographical or therapeutic nature on show. It tells you nothing about me personally. I don't mean me at all: I just use myself because I am always available as a model. All I mean to present is a human being, pure and simple." The bandaged head became a cliché that was repeatedly misunderstood. Even Mick Jagger once asked, albeit with a laugh: "Will you paint me with bandages?"Gottfried Helnwein, One Man Show, Museum of Modern Art, Otaru, 1996Prestel, Munich - New York, catalogue, 1995
by David s. Ruben
Curator of 20th Century Art, Phoenix Art Museum Curator of 20th Century Art, Phoenix Art Museum IT'S ONLY ROCK AND ROLL Rock and Roll Currents in Contemporary Art. The portraits of Hendrix, Joplin, and Lennon are particulary stirring because their ghostlike treatment translates as a poetic and humble tribute to major creative forces whose lives were tragically cut short. As exemplified by the paintings of Helnwein, the purpose of a contemporary rock and roll portrait may extend well beyond biographical signification to stimulating reflection upon larger issues of social or political consequence. Gottfried Helnwein, It's Only Rock and Roll, 1995The Gazette, Monreal, 1994
by 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, QuebecCAMERA International, December 01, 1992
by 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 ParisArt News, New York, November 01, 1992
by 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, 1992"Malerei muss sein wie Rockmusik", 21. September 1992
von Andreas Mäckler
Gottfried Helnwein im Gespräch mit Andreas Mäckler. Die Interviews mit Gottfried Helnwein fanden statt am 13./14. Juli und wurden am 21./22. September 1990 fortgesetztGottfried Helnwein, Interview by Andreas Mäckler, 1992Gottfried Helnwein, Carl Barks, Oregon, July 11, 1992
by Gottfried Helnwein
Barks:... I preferred to work with the duck - I could push Donald around, let him get into an accident, I could let him fall off a cliff, or whatever I wanted.It was lots of fun with Donald. With Mickey that would have been dangerous, because he always had to be loved and had to be victorious in all situations. With Donald I had a comedian who I could treat badly and who I could make fun of. Gottfried Helnwein, Interview with Carl Barks, Oregon, 1992Gottfried Helnwein, Carl Barks, Oregon, 11. Juli 1992
von Gottfried Helnwein
Barks: . . . Ich habe lieber mit der Ente gearbeitet, Donald konnte ich herumstossen, ich konnte ihn verungluecken lassen, ich konnte ihn von einem Felsen fallen lassen, oder was immer ich wollte. Mit Donald war es wirklich lustig.Gottfried Helnwein, Interview mit Carl Barks, Oregon, 1992
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