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Gottfried Helnwein : Head of a Child
The Fresno Bee
Berkeley
Donald Munro
"The Child," at the Legion of Honor (www.thinker.org), is a less lyrical experience that confronts the way that the world so glibly uses children (in advertising, in war, in religion) to achieve less-than-innocent objectives. Some of Helnwein's paintings are terrifying. Instead of poster-child perfection, we're presented with children with various deformities: wayward eyelids, lumpy defects, hideous extra folds of flesh.
Then there's Helnwein's penchant for contrasting childlike innocence with the horrors of the Third Reich. In one piece, a woman with a naked infant son, in the classic pose of the Madonna, basks in the soft-focus gaze of five men dressed in Nazi uniforms.
Thought-provoking? Very. Disturbing? You bet. Children are our sacred cows. But they grow up. In that way, they are miniature adults. Sometimes art can push us in ways that shake the status quo. ... +

AC (ArtCircles)
is a Public Service Project for the Documentation of All Art
Peter Frank
curated by Robert Flynn Johnson, California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Lincoln Park, July 31-Nov. 28
Austrian-born and educated and now living Los Angeles, Helnwein employs a hyperrealist manner that will remind Americans of Gerhard Richter but, if anything, works to opposite effect. Rather than re-confirm post-modernist cynicism, Helnwein rekindles post-war anguish. This selection, going back more than three decades, emphasizes his preoccupation with the image of the child, from early Nitsch- and Schwarzkogler-influenced photo-actions (with the requisite bandages) to recent large portrait-like heads and depictions of Christ-child-like babes attracting odd, menacing crowds. A perverse streak runs through the images, but it’s not pederasty: tinged with surrealism, it’s an enduring shame and anger at the Nazi past – and the artist’s suspicion that Naziism hasn’t been eradicated. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Die Erweckung des Kindes (The Resurrection of the Child)
san francisco magazine
Jonathon Keats
how one man's ideas about art gave San Francisco a taste for risk - and about time.
Look at his inexplicably damaged children, often painted in a midnight monochrome, and you can't help but try to fill in the story, and take a degree of responsibility.
Helnwein's work is what the art world likes to call "difficult, "often as an excuse to look the other way. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Selektion - Neunter November Nacht
The Malibu Times
Laura Tate
In the film "Ninth November Night," painter Gottfried Helnwein describes his first encounter with Jewish people during his childhood in Austria after the war, a bleak and dark period, one, he says, with no singing, no laughter. He was nine years old when he saw the two people walking down the street, very close together, walking quickly, looking down the whole time.
Helnwein became intrigued and wanted to know who they were. He asked everyone, all the adults, "Who are they?" But no one wanted to answer. Finally, someone said the word, one that he remembers the person had great difficulty saying-"Jews." ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Ninth November Night
The Malibu Times
Arts
Documentary about Holocaust paintings opens at new Malibu Theater, benefiting the Museum of Tolerance
The film tells the story of famed Austrian painter Gottfried Helnwein, obsessed with a mission to use his art to preserve the memory of Holocaust persecutions. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Selection - Ninth of November Night
The Jewish Journal
Los Angeles
Mitchell Waxman
Depictions of tragedy and violence are often so powerful we may wish to avoid them entirely. Holocaust images and those of other persecutions tend to be rendered manageable by being circumscribed to memorials and museums, places that by their very design prepare us to receive them in hushed tones of historical concern. But confront these images in an unexpected context and one's reaction may be less predictable, especially if the content is not the vaguely safe images of Nazi horror, but the very symbols and propaganda that fed the rallying call of Hitler's death machine.
What is in fact the capacity of these symbols to move people? Artists can seem to teeter on the line of propriety in exploring this question. Helnwein, in particular, has been exploring this throughout his career. In one of his early exhibitions, in Germany in 1971, audience reaction encompassed the gamut of emotional reactions, from adulation and Führer worship at the sight of an oversized portrait of Hitler to violent rejection in the form of vandalism to sympathetic watercolor images of deformed and crippled children.

Helnwein was born in Austria in 1948 in a post-WWII culture unwilling to confront its wartime past. Humanist themes pervade Helnwein's work, but his approach is not one of pandering or niceties. From his earliest moments as an artist, Helnwein has sought to provoke and elicit "unexpected reactions that reveal the innermost held feelings and beliefs [of the viewer]," according to Alexander Borovsky, curator at the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg.

Some of the most powerful images that deal with Nazism and Holocaust themes are by Anselm Kiefer and Helnwein, although, Kiefer’s work differs considerably from Helnwein’s in his concern with the effect of German aggression on the national psyche and the complexities of German cultural heritage. Kiefer is known for evocative and soulful images of barren German landscapes. But Kiefer's and Helnwein’s work are both informed by the personal experience of growing up in a post-war German-speaking countries. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Epiphany I, Adoration of the Magi
California State University, Dominguez Hills
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Jeanne Curran and Susan R. Takata
Gottfried Helnwein's Epiphany I
* Helnwein's Epiphany I has been up on our site for years now. For a while I used it as wallpaper on my desktop. Perhaps that explains how the first hypertext poem came to be one about the Virgin. But as I struggled with updating the site, I checked all my old resources and came across materials that explain Helnwein's commitments and meanings far better than I could alone. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Modern Sleep I
www.livejournal.com
Kira B. Riannon
Еще несколько любимых мной фотографий. Эти три были сделаны человеком по имени Gottfried Helnwein (www.helnwein.com). Фотграф часто снимал детей, причем как раз так, как мне это нравится. А еще он сотрудничал с Мерлином Мэнсоном. Такие дела. Фото сверху входит в серию "Modern sleep". Восхитительная спящая девочка, хочу себе такую же. Эту фотографию гигантских размеров можно было наблюдать в составе инсталляции на Los Angeles ARTshow 2003, Santa Monica. На фотографии справа под текстом - инсталляция Ninth November Night 1988. Дети дети дети, множество фотографий, каждая размером 370 на 250 сантиметров. Красиво. ... +

Gottfried Helnwein : Child 4
Dokumentationszentrum
des Bundes Jüdischer Verfolgter des Naziregimes
Simon Wiesenthal

Wien

Lieber Freund.
Es freut mich, dass Ihre Ausstellung mit den berührenden und eindrucksvollen Kinderportraits im Wiesenthal-Center in L.A. gezeigt wurde und wünsche mir, dass Sie noch viele Menschen beeindrucken und zum Nachdenken anregen werden. ... +

online
Helnwein
The art of Gottfried Helnwein at Universities, colleges, highschools and other institutions for education - online.
Die Kunst von Gottfried Helnwein im Unterricht - online.
Hochschulen, Universitäten, Schulen und andere Bildungsinstitutionen zum Werk von Gottfried Helnwein. ... +


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