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| Heinz Sichrowsky | ||
| News, Vienna |
"Helnwein ist eine Art Allegorie der Umstrittenheit." |
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| Sven Hoffmann | ||
| art-photographie.de |
"Endlich jemand der wirklich widerliche Kunst macht - nirgends einzuordnen - nicht angepaßt - ein Ärgernis für viele. Gratuliere!" |
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| Wolfgang Längsfeld | ||
| Professor der Hochschule für Film München, Magazin Kunst |
"Helnweins Bilder sind nicht delikat, sondern unverfroren, rebellisch, Fremdkörper, die sich unter der Haut einnisten." |
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| Alan Bamberger | ||
| art consultant, San Francisco |
"One thing you can't quibble over is the overwhelming impact of Helnwein's imagery - ethereal hallucinogenic meditations you enter effortlessly into. Hang one of these whatever-you-wanna-call-it's in a room and it totally permanently dominantly dicates the mood. Not much art can do that, which is what makes Gottfried Helnwein great." |
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| Susanne Vill | ||
| Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst, Mozarteum, Salzburg |
"Helnweins Bilder erwecken eine tiefere Angst vor sadomasochistischer Gewalt, vor Exzessen des Umgangs mit Menschen, die gequält werden, selbst quälen und dem Schrecken der Technik, der Medien oder dem Krankenhausterror ausgeliefert sind. Der Ekel, den seine superrealistischen Bilder vor allem Kranken, Abnormen, Deformierten in seiner hilflosen Auslieferung an gewaltsame Überformung auslösen, ist extremes Schockmittel im Sinne von Antonin Artauds Wirkungsästhetik. |
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| Reinhold Misselbeck | ||
| Curator for photography and new media, Ludwig Museum , Cologne |
"Gottfried Helnwein's view of reality has always been analytical, critical and even caustic. |
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| Klaus Honnef | ||
| Kurator für Fotografie, Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn |
"Helnweins künstlerische Praxis beruht auf der Erkenntnis der grundsätzlich unterschiedlichen Seinsformen von Fotografie und Malerei. |
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| Kenneth Baker | ||
| San Francisco Chronicle |
"After wincing for a while, viewers found themselves admiring Helnwein's conceptual compositions. The artist knows that images of disfigured Great War veterans provide some of the impetus for early surrealism. He slams those references against an allusion to religious martyrdom, the episode of Jesus' presentation in the Temple of Solomon, often employed in Christian art to symbolize the contrast between worldly and spiritual splendor, between sin and innocence. " |
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| Christoph Soltmannkowski | ||
| Schweizer Illustrierte |
"Seine hyperrealistischen Gemälde machten ihn zu einem der bedeutendsten Künstler der Gegenwart" |
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| Hubertus Froning | ||
| Curator, Folkwang Museum Essen |
"Wenn wir von Helnwein sagen, er habe von aussen nach innen gemalt, dann heisst das,daß seine minutiöse und bohrend-insistierende Arbeitsweise, die die geschaute Wirklichkeit brutal interpretiert, eine hinter den Dingen im Verborgenen liegende Welt aufzudecken versucht. |
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| Mic Moroney | ||
| writer, art-critic, artist |
"Helnwein's meticulous Irish landscapes are unashamedly aesthetic: gorgeous confections of pure, delicious spectacle. The typically epic but not inhuman scale imitates the subject matter. The tonal realism will make people go "Wow, are they paintings?" - thanks to the photorealist finish which seems free of the foibles of the human hand. Helnwein works with very small brushes - highlighting and subtly magnifying here, muting colours or creating shadows there; pushing some paintings towards momentary sleights of impressionism; and others towards seamless, burnished hyperreality. |
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| Cristin Leach | ||
| The Times |
"...These photo-paintings appear even more real than a photograph: they are hyper-real, super-saturated depictions of the world that surrounds us, as we would like to see it. Helnwein’s landscapes offer us the world as we see it in our mind’s eye, our memories. |
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| Sean Penn | ||
| actor, director |
"Helnwein is the most important living painter." |
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| mors0120 | ||
| UThink blogs, University of Minnesota |
"Helnwein is highly recommended even to those who do not have a predilection for morbid or grotesque art, for his intention is not merely to shock or titillate. Whereas many modern artists get lost in the artifice of excessive conceptualism, Gottfried Helnwein continues to produce challenging, thought-provoking work based on the weight of the subject matter, not the way in which it is presented. Having produced a wide range of imagery in a variety of mediums, Helnwein’s development is fascinating to trace from conceptual beginnings to his current synthesis of pop and fine art." |
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| mors0120 | ||
| UThink blogs, University of Minnesota |
"Both Helnwein and Jeff Koons work in a wide variety of media—frequently on a large scale—and incorporate elements of pop culture and sexuality. But whereas Koons rejects hidden meaning and embraces the superficial “kitsch” element, Helnwein reappropriates these symbols as a means of enhancing his message. Symbols of innocence take on a decidedly sinister air—in Helnwein’s “Los Caprichos” painting installation, a maniacally grinning plastic Mickey Mouse looms over a series of canvases depicting maimed and vulnerable children. Yet Helnwein’s work comes across as more a statement about general victimization of the young and loss of innocence rather than purely a jab at pop culture. Both Koons and Helnwein have produced multiple self-portraits, but they are also drastically different in tone. Koons’ self-portraits glorify the artist in an excessively heroic manner that verges on the ironic, flawlessly groomed and surrounded by attractive women and/or the trappings of success. Helnwein’s self-portraits, on the other hand, depict the artist as a bandaged, disfigured, sub-human figure, often splattered with pigment and displaying all manner of expressions of pain and worry. Both artists indulge in a certain narcissism, but the effect is utterly different. This contrast highlights the basic difference between the two artists: Koons is content to revel in the decadent and superficial, while Helnwein is obsessed with physical and psychological anxieties." |
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| Christoph Schütte | ||
| Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung |
"Andy Warhol sieht furchtbar aus. Blaß, übernächtigt und jedenfalls nicht in Bestform. William S. Burroughs posiert pikanterweise mit einem Revolver, und Michael Jacksons Gesicht erscheint als das, was es ist: perfekte Fassade. Kaum eines der von Gottfried Helnwein aufgenommenen Schwarzweißfotos berühmter Persönlichkeiten - von Lou Reed über die beiden wunderbaren Aufnahmen des alten Charles Bukowski bis zur schon beinahe aufdringlich nett in die Kamera blickenden Leni Riefenstahl - möchte man im Ernst als schmeichelhaft bezeichnen. Gerade das aber ist es, was seine in den achtziger Jahren begonnene Porträtserie "Faces" auszeichnet: Helnweins Bilder erzählen vermutlich mehr von den Menschen, als ihnen lieb ist." |
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| Kurt Loder | ||
| MTV, USA |
"The new wave of rock-video grotesquerie isn't new at all, actually, the Austrian painter Gottfried Helnwein, whose self-portrait adorned the cover of an album by the German band Scorpions some years back, was doing images of medical horror twenty years ago." |
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| Medb Ruane | ||
| Art-critic, Ireland |
"Gottfried Helnwein's classic yet unnerving images transform sentimental representations of childhood into portraits of individual subjects frozen at the moment of suffering. His photo-paintings pirouette on the fine line between chocolate box pictures/excessive sentimentality and the cost to children of being treated as commodities, of suffering emotional or physical pain at a grown-up's hands. |
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| Diane Heilenman | ||
| Art-critic |
"But what does the hyper-realism of Austrian-born, Irish-based artist Gottfried Helnwein say to us and about us in the context (of the exhibition) "Body Anxious"? His work is what puts this show on the map of bodily pain and anxiety. He has painted a hyper-realistic, oversized portrait of a little girl in a pink-and-white undershirt, her head and eyes swathed in gauze so recently wrapped that it glistens with blood. It is from Helnwein's "Los Caprichos" series, named after the famous Goya series. Art historians say Goya's "Caprichos" mark the beginning of the modern world of art because they were the first to look at, rather than avoid or symbolize, pain, fantasy, cruelty, disloyalty and any other number of grievous human traits." |
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| Holly Crawford | ||
| Author, Artist, Curator |
"There was an exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art including Austrian artist Gottfried Helnwein's Mickey. An entire wall was covered by the photographic black and white oil painting. The scale of this Mouse was enough to attract attention, but more than just its scale made it gripping. Mickey Mouse loomed over the viewer; this was not a friendly Mouse, nor a copy of the static corporate logo. This Mouse showed his teeth. |
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