Showing posts with label Elsy Lahner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elsy Lahner. Show all posts

14/10/24

Robert Longo @ Albertina Museum, Vienna

Robert Longo
The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna
September 4, 2024 – January 26, 2025

Robert Longo
 
As an artist, I feel a moral imperative to preserve
the images of our shared dystopic present
with the hope that something will one day change. -- Robert Longo [1]
The ALBERTINA has a special connection to Robert Longo: “It was around 20 years ago that we were able to reopen the Albertina in 2003 with Robert Longo's exhibition ‘The Freud Drawings’. In my last year as General Director of the Albertina, we are looking back on these beginnings and dedicating a comprehensive retrospective to the outstanding American artist. The repositioning of the Graphic Art Collection began with Robert Longo. Instead of continuing to collect conventionally in cassette format and seeing the drawing primarily as a sketch or study that prepares the actual work of art, since this Longo exhibition in 2003 we have for the first time made the development of contemporary art towards the monumental, drawn ‘picture’ the guiding principle of a contemporary collection and museum mission: Franz Gertsch, Anselm Kiefer and many others, who had previously been ignored by the Albertina because of their large-format works, defined our new self-image from this point onwards”, says ALBERTINA General Director Klaus Albrecht Schröder.
The show features important key works from the various periods of his production, beginning with Men in the Cities, the series that made him famous overnight and embodied the zeitgeist of early 1980s New York like few other works. The exhibition also presents the Bodyhammers, in which the artist expresses his unease with gun culture in the United States, as well as works from the Freud cycle. The latter is based on photographs secretly taken in Freud’s office and apartment for documentation purposes, before he had to flee from the Nazis to London in 1938. Also featured are works from God Machines, in which Robert Longo addresses monotheistic world religions, and The Destroyer Cycle, in which he takes up events from global politics.

Robert Longo: Monuments in black and white

Robert Longo is known for his monumental hyperrealistic works: powerful, dynamic charcoal drawings whose virtuoso technique and the visual force of the motifs mesmerize the observer. For his models, Robert Longo uses photographs that record dramatic situations at the moment of their greatest tension. The artist is concerned here with the depiction of power—in nature, politics, history. He utilizes visual material that has been reproduced thousands of times, and which has long been a part of pop culture, of our collective visual memory. Longo isolates and reduces the motifs so as to raise their visual impact to a higher power. By enlarging the subject and intensifying the lighting into a dramatic chiaroscuro, we find ourselves before gigantic, previously unseen theatrical images. Longo draws on existing images, references reality secondhand, and creates impressive “copies” of the original black-and-white photographs, which pale beside their transformation into colossal charcoal drawings.

The dramatic lighting and shadow effects of the charcoal drawings emphasize the objects’ plasticity and the spatial depth. They make the motif appear as real as it is unreal. The deep black of the charcoal rubbed into the paper swallows up all of the light. Paradoxically, Robert Longo is ultimately capable, like no one else, of evoking brightness and radiant light, transparency, and differentiated materiality with the blackness of charcoal.

Robert Longo and the Pictures Generation

In the late 1970s Robert Longo belonged to the so-called Pictures Generation, a loose grouping of New York artists that critically engaged with mass media and pop culture in their works. His iconic large-scale series of drawings Men in the Cities (1979–83; pp. 31–39) in their extreme, dynamic poses aptly expressed the fragile mood— fraught with tension—of the 1980s. New York in those days was dominated as much by financial wealth, a real estate boom, and yuppie culture as it was by rising criminality, drug problems, and social inequality, polarizing the city. The neoconservative politics of the Reagan era and the threat posed by the Cold War contributed to a climate of insecurity. Longo’s severely formal drawings echo this sentiment. The figures are dressed in “urban uniforms and Film Noir attire” [2] against a white background, in an empty space, each one isolated, frozen in a moment of intense movement and physical contortion. The artist found a correspondence in the intensely stylized representation of black-and-white contrasts, originating in news media and black-and-white films. [3] Robert Longo prefers these abstract symbols to be installed as a group in order to create a rhythmic tension. He thereby also articulates their individually experienced inner turmoil in a collectively lived structure marked by tension and pressure.

The dramatics and the composition of an image play a central role in Longo’s work. For the God Machines (2008–11; pp. 110–15), his portrayal of places of worship, he creates an atmosphere of reverence and sublimity through overwhelming size, through light and shadow, as well as through the perspective that expresses the power of religious institutions. A detailed elaboration of a bullet hole in close-up (pp. 15, 102/103), which allows the observer to recognize every crack and every splitter in the glass, literally draws us into the violence of the moment. By precisely rendering the mushroom cloud (p. 87) in central perspective, the artist transmits not only the enormous power, brutality, and destructive force of the catastrophic event of an atom bomb exploding, but also the feeling of fascination in the face of the terrifying beauty of this phenomenon.

Longo’s visual universe is fueled by personal impressions, influences, and topics connected with U.S. society, politics, and pop culture, as well as significant global events. Police brutality and racism, war and terrorism, the exercise of power, repression, and violence all find expression in his works. Yet even if the motifs appear personal, the artist is not concerned alone with the expression of an individual emotion.

Robert Longo: Raft at Sea

It is one of Robert Longo’s most impressive and at the same time most poignant works: Untitled (Raft at Sea) (2016–17; pp. 12/13, 184/185) depicts a rubber dinghy on the high seas, overloaded with its cargo of refugees and dangerously low in the water. The people in it, mostly men, sit on the edge of the rubber ring, disturbingly close to the water’s surface. They wear caps, hats, and thick jackets under their life vests, indicating the inhospitable temperatures. The composition situates the boat on the horizon line in the upper third of the image, on the central panel of the monumental charcoal drawing. The entire area underneath is the dark sea with its turbulent waves, to which the dinghy and its passengers are exposed. An overcast sky stretches above, becoming less clouded over to the right—at least promising a little hope. We observe the scene not from a secure perspective from above, from a larger ship, or from the air, but on the same level as the rubber raft. We might, therefore, be in a similar dinghy or even in the water amid the waves. The artist has thus placed us in the same predicament as the people shown in his drawing, who are risking their lives to flee.

For Raft at Sea, Robert Longo draws on an image we have often seen in the media in recent years. Yet in the whirlwind of images that swirl around us every day, we no longer perceive the situation in all of its harrowing intensity, because we have, to a certain degree, become accustomed to it. Through the artist’s altered composition and the enormous size of the work, Longo forces us to look once more and to engage with what is presented.

In his charcoal drawings, he appropriates the pathos, aesthetics, and narrative of film, the visual language of the cinema. Drawing on his experience as a film director and his work on music videos for bands such as New Order and R.E.M., Robert Longo often brings a cinematic gaze to the creation of his works. His motifs recall film stills that capture a moment of tension, an emotional climax. This dramatic component is experienced anew every time we see a work, as if it is happening right now, thereby acquiring a timeless quality. 

[1] Robert Longo in conversation with the author on June 27, 2024.

[2] The information and the following quotations are from a conversation between the artist and the author on February 22, 2024.

[3] In addition to film and television, Robert Longo was also influenced by the energy of the downtown punk and New Wave music scene. See the essay by Holger Liebs in this publication: Jerking into Now. Robert Longo’s Men in the Cities and the “Pictures Generation,” 23.

Curator: ELSY LAHNER 

Assitant: MELISSA LUMBROSO 

ALBERTINA MUSEUM
Albertinaplatz 1, 1010 Vienna

Updated Post - 09-07-2025

09/12/23

Gottfried Helnwein @ ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna - Reality and Fiction

Gottfried Helnwein 
Reality and Fiction 
ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna 
25 October 2023 – 11 February 2024 

To mark the seventy-fifth birthday of the artist Gottfried Helnwein, who was born in Vienna in 1948, the ALBERTINA presents a comprehensive exhibition of his output of the past three decades. Every single work of his is an accusation of cruelty and ruthlessness, of the horrors of fascism.

Gottfried Helnwein’s work stands out for its uncompromising realism, which denounces social ills and focuses on the innocent, defenseless child. Children embody psychological and social fears, as well as the pain inflicted upon them by abuse, power, and violence.

The artist’s hyperrealist images, which are always based on photographic models, are “bigger than life” while impressing us with their technical perfection. Although the works are perceived as real, their oversized dimensions and the use of monochromy contradict reality; Gottfried Helnwein moves away from the original impression of reality his pictures pretend to convey, seeking to create a symbolic image. In his pictorial cosmos, the artist combines motifs from diametrically opposed worlds: manga characters and war photography, Donald Duck and Adolf Hitler, the Virgin Mary and Nazi henchmen.

In the series “The Disasters of War,” which Gottfried Helnwein has worked on since 2007, he integrates manga-inspired figures of girls into disaster scenarios. Through this bizarre fusion of manga elements with real catastrophes, the artist highlights the absurdity of these incidents. Although the manga style is omnipresent in today’s popular culture, Helnwein initially found it alien and disturbing. For him, this style symbolizes an artificial childishness that does not seem human, but cold and synthetic.

Occasionally, girls in military uniforms or carrying weapons in their hands appear in Gottfried Helnwein’s pictures, sometimes with bandages or bloody wounds. The scenes recall child soldiers or teenage shooters running amok in the United States. The artist thus addresses the susceptibility of children to all forms of manipulation and how they are abused ideologically. The cartoon characters in his pictures seem like perfidiously imagined “whisperers” and at the same time emphasize the madness of these delusions that have become images. Mickey Mouse, monstrous and with bared teeth, reveals a latent dark side and unmasks the evil that hides behind its otherwise friendly façade. Approaching a child’s bed, the eerie yellow birdman with his long pointed beak likewise seems to have emerged from a nightmare.

Gottfried Helnwein ties in with the world of children, where imaginary things and fantasy constructs have the same right to exist as real things: the monster under the bed becomes a real danger, the teddy bear feels authentic emotions, and the closet door becomes the entrance to an alien realm. But here in the picture, nothing springs from a child’s blossoming imagination; on the contrary, Gottfried Helmwein blurs the line between reality and nightmare to illustrate that monsters do exist.

Gottfried Helnwein has translated his themes into a wide variety of techniques and media: from his early watercolors and drawings, his actions and their photographic documentation, to paintings, stage sets for theater productions, and installations in public spaces. Oftentimes the genres merge, or elements that were originally created in one context are used in another. Gottfried Helnwein thus sees himself primarily as a conceptual artist. In the 1980s, at the time of his move to Germany, the artist realized that format had come to play a role in his art. He concluded that his works would have to become larger if they were to compete for attention with the flood of images, advertisements, posters, and billboards. With this caesura in his oeuvre, his portraits of children became monumental, sometimes covering entire façades of buildings. Gottfried Helnwein lends children an extraordinary presence that conveys the importance and urgency of his themes. In their larger-than-life size and hyperrealist mode of representation, and with the artist reproducing every detail with incredible accuracy, the figures come up to an exaggeration of reality that disturbs and simply overwhelms us.

Gottfried Helnwein’s work seems to impress us just because of this very tension between realism and the transcendence of the artistic object. The symbolic figures and motifs of violence take over in our minds, for what we see may well be a face smeared with blood, but this face is neither bleeding nor contorted with pain.

Curator: Elsy Lahner

Gottfried Helnwein
Gottfried Helnwein
Editor: Elsy Lahner, Klaus Albrecht Schröder
Published by Hirmer Verlag, 2023
Available in German and in English
152 pages, 28,5 x 24,5 cm, Hardcover
ISBN: 9783777442082
Accompanying the exhibition a 152 pages comprehensive catalogue is published containing texts by Elsy Lahner and Klaus Speidel, as well as quotes by the artist himself.
ALBERTINA Museum
Albertinaplatz 1 - 1010 Vienna