Mercedes Helnwein: Difference between revisions
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This session, I did the External Links section with the Interviews subheading. |
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In 2008, she obtained representation from the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles. |
In 2008, she obtained representation from the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles. |
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Other publications to discuss her work were the ''Los Angeles Times, |
Other publications to discuss her work were the ''Los Angeles Times, BlackBook, Los Angeles Confidential, Los Angeles Magazine, Nylon, New York Magazine, New York Art Magazine, i-D, Juxtapoz, the Irish Times, The Irish Independent, Berliner Morgenpost'' (Berlin), ''Die Welt, Tank Magazine'' (U.K), ''Blag'' (U.K.) ''Lodown'' magazine (Berlin), ''Metal'' magazine (Spain), and ''Yodona'' (Spain). |
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== Film == |
== Film == |
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In 2008, Mercedes Helnwein included video as a medium in her work. Her brother, Ali Helnwein, composed the scores. They continue collaborating as filmmaker and composer. |
In 2008, Mercedes Helnwein included video as a medium in her work. Her brother, Ali Helnwein, composed the scores. They continue collaborating as filmmaker and composer. Titled after their respective exhibitions, the short films, “Whistling Past the Graveyard” and “East of Eden,” played for visitors at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery.<ref>http://www.mkgallery.com/artistpages/Mercedes_Helnwein/index.php?mm=video</ref> |
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In 2006, she signed with the literary agency, Ed Victor Ltd., based in London. Other representation includes the New York agency, Fletcher & Company as well as William Clark in New York.<ref>http://www.fletcherandco.com/fletcher_clients.html</ref> |
In 2006, she signed with the literary agency, Ed Victor Ltd., based in London. Other representation includes the New York agency, Fletcher & Company as well as William Clark in New York.<ref>http://www.fletcherandco.com/fletcher_clients.html</ref> |
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Her debut novel, ''The Potential Hazards of Hester Day'', was released in February 2008 by Simon & Schuster.<ref>http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Mercedes-Helnwein/44023180/books</ref> |
Her debut novel, ''The Potential Hazards of Hester Day'', was released in February 2008 by Simon & Schuster.<ref>http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Mercedes-Helnwein/44023180/books</ref> ''Publishers Weekly'' reviewed the work of literary fiction as a “funny, offbeat debut novel...[Helnwein’s] soul-searching adventure is reliably entertaining and her obligatory final-page epiphany feels just right.”<ref>http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6496571.html</ref> |
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''Publishers Weekly'' reviewed the work of literary fiction as a “funny, offbeat debut novel...[Helnwein’s] soul-searching adventure is reliably entertaining and her obligatory final-page epiphany feels just right.”<ref>http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6496571.html</ref> |
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* [http://www.artslant.com/global/artists/show/3737-mercedes-helnwein artist page at ArtSlant] |
* [http://www.artslant.com/global/artists/show/3737-mercedes-helnwein artist page at ArtSlant] |
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* [http://www.artnet.com/ag/fulltextsearch.asp?searchstring=mercedes+helnwein artist page at ArtNet] |
* [http://www.artnet.com/ag/fulltextsearch.asp?searchstring=mercedes+helnwein artist page at ArtNet] |
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* [http://wesc.com/activist/1271 WeActivist page at We Are the Superlative Conspiracy (WeSC)] |
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* [http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Mercedes-Helnwein/44023180/books author page at Simon & Schuster] |
* [http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Mercedes-Helnwein/44023180/books author page at Simon & Schuster] |
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* [http://www.fletcherandco.com/fletcher_clients.html author page at Fletcher & Co, literary representation] |
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* [http://www.amazon.com/Potential-Hazards-Hester-Day-Novel/dp/1416574662/ref=pd_sxp_f_pt ''The Potential Hazards of Hester Day'' on Amazon] |
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* [http://www.tlchicken.com/search.php?keywords=&issue=All§ion=All&byline=mercedes+helnwein&Submit=Submit short stories by Mercedes Helnwein at Tastes Like Chicken] |
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* [http://www.untitledbooks.com/fiction/short-stories/frank-by-mercedes-helnwein/ "Frank," a short story by Mercedes Helnwein] |
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=== Interviews === |
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* [http://www.juxtapoz.com/Features/exclusive-one-million-questions-for-one-mercedes-helnwein ''Juxtapoz'' magazine, "Exclusive: One Million Questions for One Mercedes Helnwein (Part One)," August 2009] |
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* [http://www.juxtapoz.com/Features/exclusive-interview-with-mercedes-helnwein-part-two ''Juxtapoz'' magazine, "Exclusive Interview with Mercedes Helnwein (Part Two)," August 2009] |
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* [http://www.mercedeshelnwein.com/press/wp-content/press/09/pdf/lula.pdf ''Lula'' magazine, "Dark Star," September 2009] |
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* [http://www.la-confidential-magazine.com/LAC_JA09_041_WHA.html ''LA Confidential'', "What Drives Mercedes," July/August 2009] |
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* [http://www.mercedeshelnwein.com/press/wp-content/press/09/pdf/blaglondon2009.pdf ''BLAG'' magazine (London), "Danny Masterson interviews Mercedes Helnwein," 2009] |
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* [http://www.mercedeshelnwein.com/press/wp-content/press/09/pdf/callespain2009.pdf ''Calle 20//'' (Spain), "La Sombra, La Luz Y La Incertidumbre Son Esenciales," September 2009] |
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* [http://thisbookisforyou.blogspot.com/2008/02/q-with-debut-novelist-mercedes-helnwein.html This Book Is For You, "Q&A with Debut Novelist Mercedes Helnwein," February 2008] |
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* [http://www.blackbookmag.com/article/mercedes-helnwein-in-conversation-with-gottfried-helnwein/1675 ''BlackBook'', "Mercedes Helnwein in Conversation with Gottfried Helnwein," November 2007] |
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* [http://www.mercedeshelnwein.com/press-2007/wp-content/press/07/pdf/lodown2007.pdf Lodown magazine (Berlin), "Vienna Calling," May/June 2007] |
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Revision as of 23:27, 5 January 2010
Mercedes Helnwein is a fine artist, writer, and video artist. She lives in Ireland and Los Angeles, CA.
Family and Early Life
Mercedes Helnwein was born in Vienna, Austria. Her father is Austro-Irish artist Gottfried Helnwein and her mother is Renate Helnwein. She and her brothers, Cyril, Ali, and Wolfgang Amadeus, have often modeled for their father’s work as children. [1] Helnwein and her family lived in a castle in Tipperary, Ireland. In 2000, she began dividing her time between Ireland and the U.S. Her studio is located in downtown Los Angeles. [2]
Fine Art
Mercedes Helnwein is known for her large-scale drawings, most of which are done with black pencil. The others employ ink, colored pencils, and pastels. As described in New York Magazine, her work is “immaculately executed…like dramatically lit, attractively cast indie flicks.” [3] Helnwein’s art debuted in 2003, with her first group exhibition hosted in Los Angeles by art collector and actor Jason Lee. This exhibition was followed by regular self-instigated one-night-shows at spaces throughout L.A., often with photographer Alex Prager.[2] Thereafter, Helnwein began to exhibit in New York, Berlin, Dublin and London.
Helnwein contributed art to the Beck album, The Information (2006),[4] and appeared in his music video for “Gamma Ray,” filmed by photographer and filmmaker Autumn DeWilde.
In 2008, she obtained representation from the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles.
Other publications to discuss her work were the Los Angeles Times, BlackBook, Los Angeles Confidential, Los Angeles Magazine, Nylon, New York Magazine, New York Art Magazine, i-D, Juxtapoz, the Irish Times, The Irish Independent, Berliner Morgenpost (Berlin), Die Welt, Tank Magazine (U.K), Blag (U.K.) Lodown magazine (Berlin), Metal magazine (Spain), and Yodona (Spain).
Film
In 2008, Mercedes Helnwein included video as a medium in her work. Her brother, Ali Helnwein, composed the scores. They continue collaborating as filmmaker and composer. Titled after their respective exhibitions, the short films, “Whistling Past the Graveyard” and “East of Eden,” played for visitors at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery.[5]
Writing
In 2004, her travelogue, “Devil Got Religion,” covered the 15-day road trip with Alex Prager and Beth Riesgraf for their “America Motel” installation.[6]
In 2006, she signed with the literary agency, Ed Victor Ltd., based in London. Other representation includes the New York agency, Fletcher & Company as well as William Clark in New York.[7]
Her debut novel, The Potential Hazards of Hester Day, was released in February 2008 by Simon & Schuster.[8] Publishers Weekly reviewed the work of literary fiction as a “funny, offbeat debut novel...[Helnwein’s] soul-searching adventure is reliably entertaining and her obligatory final-page epiphany feels just right.”[9]
Quotes
Employing a precise but unprepossessing realism in her drawing, Helnwein renders strange lighting conditions, odd clothing (odd at least within the context), and even odder gestures. Her models are lissome but spooked, as if caught, alone, in the first minutes of a slasher movie -- although they evince far more self-awareness than the dispensable cheerleader types who usually get the buzzsaw. Indeed, the heightened sensitivity that flickers across these youthful but wary faces may be the most radical aspect of Helnwein’s series: she portrays what is probably the Western world’s most ogled demographic as people, not mere objects of the gaze. Invested with such affect, Helnwein’s subjects need only hold a toy or a kitchen implement a certain way and, in the raking light, it takes on dramatic portent.[10]
- Peter Frank, THE Magazine, Los Angeles
There is a sense of protagonists engrossed in their own disturbed, hallucinatory worlds. The protagonists are usually young women, and they are alternatively strong, self-contained, in control, and possible victims. While there is a theatrical air to it all, a sense of make-believe, Helnwein maintains a genuine edginess as well, so that we can’t be quite sure that everything will be okay. It is stylish noir, delivered with considerable bravura.[11]
Helnwein's drawings -- feminine and smooth as porcelain -- portray her subjects as they cover their ears and shy away from unknowns; they sit with toy trucks, alligators, antlers, and handguns, all props that suggest that even though they wear high-heels and fancy dresses, there's still something not quite right.[12]
Her visual works feature women juggling defiance and restraint… She came of age in a Viennese castle, her face bandaged, mouth filled with medical instruments (all in the name of art). With her forthcoming novel, and new solo shows on the horizon, the next generation is out to prove just how strange—and genius—she can get....[1]
...an exciting mixture of purity, mysticism and raging beauty that follows the concept of no rules.[13]
- Lodown magazine
Mercedes epitomizes the true pursuance of art, and my hat's off to her for maintaining that thing that too many creative folks either never had, or let go of because they've somehow lost their way. I'm talking about sincerity, and purity. Mercedes has the kind of discipline you might find in a great concert pianist; she never stops working. And with artists like Mercedes, I can always rest assured that there is still in fact a real drive somewhere out there to maintain a tradition of intelligent and sincere artistic progression.[14]
- Jason Lee, Anthem magazine
References
- ^ a b Haramis, Nick (Dec/Jan 2008). “The New Literary Enfant Terrible.” Blackbook. Retrieved 2010-01-04 at http://www.blackbookmag.com/article/the-new-literary-enfant-terrible/1546#When:17:01:00Z
- ^ a b Tung, Tommy (Aug 2009). “One Million Questions for One Mercedes Helnwein,” Part One and Two. Juxtapoz. Retrieved 2010-01-04 at http://www.juxtapoz.com/Features/exclusive-one-million-questions-for-one-mercedes-helnwein and http://www.juxtapoz.com/Features/exclusive-interview-with-mercedes-helnwein-part-two
- ^ Wolff, Rachel (July 2007). “Making Cindy Sherman Proud.” New York Magazine. Retrieved 2010-01-04 at http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2007/07/making_cindy_sherman_proud.html
- ^ http://www.artistdirect.com/artist/mercedes-helnwein/3818009
- ^ http://www.mkgallery.com/artistpages/Mercedes_Helnwein/index.php?mm=video
- ^ Gelt, Jessica (Apr 2004). “Rooms With a View of America’s Heartland.” Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-01-04 at http://articles.latimes.com/2004/apr/08/news/wk-ungallery8
- ^ http://www.fletcherandco.com/fletcher_clients.html
- ^ http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Mercedes-Helnwein/44023180/books
- ^ http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6496571.html
- ^ Frank, Peter (Oct 2008). “Mercedes Helnwein: Whistling Past the Graveyard.” THE Magazine, Los Angeles. Retrieved 2010-01-05 at http://themagla.com/cgi-bin/artmagla/review.cgi?ID=267
- ^ Dunne, Aidan (Apr 2009). “A mixture of the assertive and the uncertain.” Irish Times. Retrieved 2010-01-05 at http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/features/2009/0401/1224243788136.html
- ^ Williams, Kate (May 2008). “Girls Interrupted: Writer and artist Mercedes Helnwein is adept at portraying women on the edge -- though she herself remains far from it.” Nylon.
- ^ Rambow, Christoph Johann (May/June 2007). “Vienna Calling.” Lodown Magazine.
- ^ Lee, Jason (Aug 2006). “Kindred Spirit: Mercedes Helnwein epitomizes the true pursuance of art.” Anthem.
External links
- Mercedes Helnwein: official Web site
- Mercedes Helnwein on MySpace
- Mercedes Helnwein on YouTube
- Strayed Dogs on YouTube
- artist page at the Merry Karnosky Gallery
- artist page at the Pool Gallery, Berlin
- artist page at the Molesworth Gallery, Dublin
- artist page at Bo Lee Gallery
- artist page at ArtSlant
- artist page at ArtNet
- WeActivist page at We Are the Superlative Conspiracy (WeSC)
- author page at Simon & Schuster
- author page at Fletcher & Co, literary representation
- The Potential Hazards of Hester Day on Amazon
- short stories by Mercedes Helnwein at Tastes Like Chicken
- "Frank," a short story by Mercedes Helnwein
Interviews
- Juxtapoz magazine, "Exclusive: One Million Questions for One Mercedes Helnwein (Part One)," August 2009
- Juxtapoz magazine, "Exclusive Interview with Mercedes Helnwein (Part Two)," August 2009
- Lula magazine, "Dark Star," September 2009
- LA Confidential, "What Drives Mercedes," July/August 2009
- BLAG magazine (London), "Danny Masterson interviews Mercedes Helnwein," 2009
- Calle 20// (Spain), "La Sombra, La Luz Y La Incertidumbre Son Esenciales," September 2009
- This Book Is For You, "Q&A with Debut Novelist Mercedes Helnwein," February 2008
- BlackBook, "Mercedes Helnwein in Conversation with Gottfried Helnwein," November 2007
- Lodown magazine (Berlin), "Vienna Calling," May/June 2007