Story : Heather Seidler
Photographer : Joshua Spencer
Art: Mercedes Helnwein
In the often openly litigious modern art world, it takes a lot for a particular artist to stand out as one of the shinning stars of an art scene, yet that is what artist Mercedes Helnwein has managed to do in a relatively short time. The 29 year-old, Austrian-born Helnwein, currently lives and works among the island of old concrete warehouses and slugged brick buildings, known as the âartist districtâ in downtown Los Angeles.
Helnweinâs work, can be described as a photorealistic hybrid between painting and drawing, with its blend of the figurative and ambivalent, radiating a sacrosanct beauty that is magnetic. She has exhibited nationally and internationally with her collections âEast of Edenâ, âStrange Daysâ and âWhistling Past the Graveyardâ âall the work from which was acquired by the legendary Damien Hirst and presented by A Gallery in London. Her latest series of oil pastel drawings, âTemptation to be Good,â debuted November 2010, at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery.
From Left: VIVIAN AND DINOSAUR, 2010; Black pencil on paper; 12 x 8 inches/ SWINGTIME IN SPRINGTIME, 2006 Black pencil on paper 29 x 23 inches/LOVE IS A DOG FROM HELL, 2009 Black pencil on paper 30 x 22 inches/KATIE CRUEL, 2010 Black pencil on paper 10.5 x 14.25 inches
In the series âTemptation to Be Goodâ Helnweinâs fictional portraits seem to subtly remark on disenfranchised Americana sensibilities and identities, an ambivalent comment on the invisible struggle within its pawnshops, strip-malls and living rooms. The carefully crafted noir-esque portraits echo the observant and reflect the eye of Helnwein; often expressing through a somewhat detached and old-fashioned viewpoint, a mischievous representation of contemporary American urbanity. To some, America is the land of the free, to others, it is a broken-promise land; that world capital of aggressive, self-interested business and fabricated liberties, full of deflated dreams, like all the stuffing leaked out of an old pillow. âEven the banal life-styles stored safely in between the top and the bottom of this country interest meâmaybe because I refuse to believe that there isnât something unbearably weird hidden within the fat layers of what is normal,â Helnwein explains.
In her various works, Helnweinâs meticulous attention to detail and texture accent her mastery of technique, resulting in richly executed imagery. She continues to build mystery and narrative in her portraits by fusing classicism with modernity, elevating the female form from a mere woman to a kind of clairvoyant creature with an undeniably cryptic personal story. Her images can depict merely the head of a young woman or just their limbs tangled over a chair, precociously removed from everything that cryptically exists just outside the frame. Helnwein does not so much address her viewers as confides in them, her style is a kind of eavesdropping, full of whisperings and tacit confessions.
When asked if she has a theme in mind from the beginning or if she creates simply what surfaces in her mind, âThe theme of an exhibition is never really something that is extremely clear to me in terms of words. Itâs clear to me in other ways, but not necessarily in neat packages of words,â she answers. âWhen I start working on a new show, I donât start out with an entire plan on what everything is about and what Iâm trying to say and what my âmessageâ is. I tend to work in a far more chaotic fashion. Things happen along the way, and that determines more about what happens next. Ideas kind of fall out of each other and onto each other and pretty much do whatever they want. Just because Iâm the one creating it, doesnât necessarily mean I have all the answers to what is going on in my work. Maybe the reason I enjoy doing it, is because I can be a spectator as well.â
Despite her steady ascent in the art world, Mercedesâ atypical story stretches back to when she was a child, growing up in a castle in Tipperary, Ireland. At the age of seven she had already penned and illustrated a series of comic books. About her earliest inspirations to draw, she recalls, âI have no idea what was the initial inspiration to need to draw. Is there one for children? It just seemed like the best way I could spend my time. I never went anywhere without papers and some kind of pen or pencil.â
From Left:Â SUMMER, 2010;Â Oil pastel on paper; 57 x 44 inches/Â PAM, 2010; Oil pastel on paper;70 x 44.5 inches/ALICE, 2010; Oil pastel on paper ;60.5 x 44 inches /ANGIE, 2010 ;Oil pastel on paper; 50 x 44 inches
From a young age and even now, Mercedes continues to be influenced by the Bible Belt, Middle America, along with the cacophony of Huckleberry Finn, the Delta blues, Robert Crumb, Tom Waits, Bukowski and Steinbeck; and is generally fascinated with the unusual.
Despite being as beautiful and intriguing as her paintings herself, Mercedes is earnestly down to earth, humorously self depreciating and quite well-spoken. Without revealing too much about her own inner labyrinth, Mercedes expounds upon her reasons for making art and how the reception of her art affects her as an artist. âItâs true that I do art sometimes for very selfish reasons. I do it to scratch my own personal itch, because it feels good in much the same way as a guy having a beer at the end of a long day and watching sports. I mean, thatâs how I began,â she explains. âI loved drawing and didnât really know what to do with my hands if I wasnât drawing. It was personally gratifying. There were no aspirations or plans. I always thought I would be just a writer. But things change of course. And as I got more and more into fine art and got the chance to exhibit itâto have other people placed in front of my work, and feel the reactions and how the drawings hit people, it changed things. I realized that the whole point of art is to have it leave the artist and arrive with an audience.â
Helnweinâs process starts with finding a model and setting up a photo shoot, which helps her then figure out angles and lighting, as well as composition. After that, she takes the photographs and uses them to tweak the realism she employs into a more conceptual realm, preferring to focus on her version of reality rather than the mediocrity of a sometimes mundane world. âIt feels almost like writing, because you are creating a fictional person. Thereâs usually nothing of the actual model left in the finished work. Thereâll be a totally new story that sits in the face.â
Having followed her work for several years and being privy to its various incarnations, I inquired about the evolution of her work. âMy work has definitely gone through some stages. With time you just want to try more, try bigger, try different media, try stranger things,â she tells me. âYou want to get better, and you never want to be totally satisfied that you have reached a plateau where you can camp out for the rest of your life.â
It is furthermore refreshing to see an artist who is crossing disciplines and not sticking to just one medium as the only outlet of expressionâthe dexterous Helnwein is also a novelist, film-maker and self-taught banjo player. Helnweinâs films carve through spaceâbackwards, in slow manipulated motion, a choppy melody of movement; for which the music is adroitly provided by her composer brother Ali Helnwein. Her first acclaimed novel, The Potential Hazards of Hester Day was published in 2008 by Simon & Schuster. Her many artistic pursuits affirm that there had never been any box she thought inside of. âItâs better to have many different ways to say things. Every medium is suited for different things,â she states. âWhen I write a story, what I do is far more explicit than what I do in visual works. I mean, itâs right there in actual words. You canât get around using words in writing. There is much more going on in my head. Visual work is so much more âgutâ oriented. You never need to put anything into words. Itâs on another dimension entirely.â
Whatever dimension Mercedes is operating in, accolades asideâitâs certain that she is a real contender in the art arena. âThere is a general attitude that art is a luxuryâsomething to indulge in but not really the norm or a necessity,â she discloses. âThere is the idea also that art is something only a certain crowd can understand or should understand. I donât like that attitude, by the way. Nobody needs a degree in order to be moved by a work of art. If you walk into a gallery and you are unimpressed by a piece of string hanging from the wall, then in your eyes itâs crap, and thatâs the truth for you.â
The quality of her artwork is simply within its communication and whether or not it makes you thinkâstimulates your imagination. I could easily fill pages describing her work and in turn, ask her to describe it. However the greatest art isnât about giving answers, but asking questions. Helnweinâs cinematically mysterious protagonists definitely invoke examination and suggest a thousand questions.
UNTITLED II, 2010
Color pencil and oil pastel on paper
8 x 13.5 inches
MIDWEST, 2010
Black pencil on paper
16.5 x 21.5 inches
PAM’S FEELING, 2010
Black pencil on paper
30 x 22 inches
EASY COMPANY, 2010
Black pencil on paper
22 x 30 inches
Mercedes Helnweinâs collectible art just appeared in Berlin, when she brought âTemptation to be Goodâ to the Pool Gallery April 29th. In addition, she is also working on more films, having just completed one for Orla Kiely for their Fall/Winter collection 2011. You can also view her past and current work at www.mercedeshelnwein.com