Helnwein ( presse )
NEWSARTISTWORKSTEXTSPRESSCONTACT


Gottfried Helnwein : Apokalypse
www.arte-tv.com
Chuck Close, Gottfried Helnwein, Jason Brooks
Une peinture photoréaliste demande un mois de travail, voire une année. Parfois, la toile n’est que la copie d’une photo. Jason Brooks, un Britannique de 31 ans, s’est récemment vu décerner pour l’une de ses Ĺ“uvres l’un des prix artistiques les plus convoités de Grande-Bretagne. Par ailleurs, Londres accueille en ce moment une rétrospective consacrée à l’Américain Chuck Close. Il est considéré comme l’un des fondateurs du photoréalisme, au même titre que Gottfried Helnwein qui expose actuellement dans une église gothique à Krems en Autriche. Serait-ce le come-back du photoréalisme ? Comment se fait-il que cette technique, qui a connu son âge d’or dans les années 70, fascine aujourd’hui les jeunes artistes ? Pourquoi ces tableaux interpellent-ils davantage le spectateur que les clichés d’origine ? METROPOLIS a rencontré Gottfried Helnwein et Jason Brooks à Londres et s’est entretenu avec eux de leurs motivations, des techniques employées et de l’avenir de ce mouvement. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Selection - Ninth November Night
The Beverly Hills Courier
Imee Gacad

Staff Writer

“This is a very serious and somewhat disturbing exhibition,” said Mayor Meralee Goldman, who is supportive of the exhibit and was first approached by the Austrian artist.
“There is an important component of education to go along with this exhibit,” Human Relations Director Mary O’Gorman said. “This is a Holocaust Memorial, and the intent at times is to overwhelm.”
The exhibit is described as “an art event to focus the conscience of the viewer and, through media exposure, the conscience of the widest possible public” by the artist’s draft proposal. “An art installation a city block long...will rise into public view to cry out against not only one of history’s most tragic and horrific episodes of prejudice, but also against the current resurgence of the endangerment of children through intolerance around the world.” ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Eimear Connelly (detail)
The Irish Times
frontpage
Workmen finish one of a series of prints measuring 9.3 metres by 6.2 metres by Austrian artist Gottfried Helnwein.The prints of Kilkenny children will hang on buildings in Kilkenny as parts of its arts festival beginning on August 10th. ... +
Gottfried Helnwein, Installation and one-man show at the Kilkenny arts festival

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

The Guardian
Kate Connolly

But as with his repressive Roman Catholic upbringing, it seems that Helnwein, born in 1948, will never escape the Nazi theme (in fact, he sees the two traditions as inextricably linked). Spurred into action by an interview in an Austrian tabloid in which the country's top court psychiatrist, Dr Heinrich Gross, admitted killing children at Vienna's Am Spiegelgrund Paediatric Unit during the war by poisoning their food, Helnwein painted Life not Worth Living - a watercolour of a little girl "asleep" on the table, her head in her plate. The painting sparked a nationwide debate that finally led to Gross appearing before a Vienna court in March. The judge ruled Gross was mentally unfit to be tried.
Outside the courtroom I met relatives of his alleged child victims, bearing photographs of them: their bellies distended from drug experimentation, their skulls clamped in head-measuring instruments. The brains of more than 400 of them ended up pickled in jars in the basement of the hospital where Gross experimented on them. Helnwein's first solo show in the UK consists largely of frail and tender formaldehyde-yellow or x-ray-blue images of pre-natal babies and children, reflecting the horror of the Nazi euthanasia programme, but brought close to the 21st century by the freshness of the Gross story. The huge portraits have been reworked from deformed teratological images from Austria's Anatomical Museum. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein :
Haaretz
Israel
... +

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.


less
123
more

|
ALL 2008-2003 2002-1997 1996-1991 before 1991




ENGLISHDEUTSCHFRANCAISITALIANOESPANOLPOLSKIRUSSIANCHINESEJAPANESE
Helnwein : presse
NEWS [
News Update
]
ARTIST [
Studio
Biography
Exhibitions
Collections
Bibliography
]
WORKS [
selected Works
]
TEXTS [
Selected Authors
English Texts
International Texts
]
PRESS [
>Selected Articles
English Press
International Press
Internet
]
CONTACT [
Guestbook
E-mail
Links
]