![]() |
||
Film still 5 ~ digital print on plexiglas ~ 24 x 44 inches |
Mercedes HelweinWhistling past the graveyardMarch 12th - April 10th, 2009
‘Whistling past the graveyard’ is an American idiom, and means pretty much just that: whistling while walking past a graveyard. Faking a cheerful front. Trying to smother some fear. For some reason this idiom made sense in relation to my new body of work. It just seemed to fit. Judging by their expressions I would say there’s probably something the girls in these drawings would rather not talk about – something they’d prefer to sit on. And they’re keeping it in, but it’s kind of leaking out of their faces.’ Mercedes Helnwein’s, February, 2009 |
|
Film still 1 ~ digital print on plexiglas ~ 24 x 44 inches |
The Molesworth Gallery is delighted to present Mercedes Helnwein’s second solo exhibition at the gallery. Her drawings have variously been described as “photo-realistic delicacies”, “lucid fairy-tales”, “strikingly bizarre”, “haunting”, “southern Gothic”, “evocative” and “unexpected”. Her self-portraits have been compared to Cindy Sherman and her sense of quiet drama to Alfred Hitchcock and Edgar Allen Poe. |
|
Film still 2 ~ digital print on plexiglas ~ 24 x 44 inches |
As the title suggests, something unsettling is being choked by the beautiful women that make up the cast of Whistling past the graveyard. Demurely dressed with glossy hair and expensive shoes, they are engaged in inexplicable activities involving toy trucks, bars of soap, miniature camels, plastic dinosaurs and strange utensils that look like they might belong into an industrial kitchen from the 1930s. Despite the innocence of the props, the women’s loaded expressions undermine any straight interpretation of the scenes. |
|
Film still 3 ~ digital print on plexiglas ~ 24 x 44 inches |
Born in Vienna, Austria, and now living in Los Angeles and Ireland, Mercedes Helnwein has had previous solo at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles and the Pool Gallery in Berlin. Her work has been reviewed in The Irish Times, The Los Angeles Times, Anthem Magazine, i-D, Tank, and Flaunt. Her first novel The Potential Hazards of Hester Day was published by Simon & Schuster in 2008. For more information on the artist and the exhibition, please contact the gallery. |
|
Film still 3 ~ digital print on plexiglas ~ 24 x 44 inches |
MERCEDES HELNWEINBorn, Vienna, 1979 Selected exhibitions |
|
Pam ~ oil on canvas ~ 14 x 11 inches |
April 2004, America Motel, installation exhibition, various venues Awards Selected reviews & publications
|
|
Alexei ~ oil on canvas ~ 11 x 14 inches |
|
|
Georgie ~ oil on canvas ~ 14 x 11 inches |
|
|
Video projection ~ installation shot ~ running time, 3 minutes |
|
|
Video projection ~ installation shot ~ running time, 3 minutes |
|
|
The Accomplice II (2008)~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 24 x 19 inches |
|
|
Crocodile and knees (2008) ~ pencil on paper ~ 16 x 19 inches |
|
|
Tiffany and dictionary (2008) ~ black & coloured pencil on paper ~ 19 x 30 inches |
|
|
Untitled self-portrait (2008) ~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 10 x 10 inches |
|
|
Sink (2008) ~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 20 x 10 inches |
|
|
Duck on bike ~ pencil on paper ~ 28 x 20 inches |
|
|
Soap and dish (2008) ~ pencil on paper ~ 19 x 23 inches |
|
|
Abrador II (2008) ~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 15 x 11 inches |
|
|
Shelby (2009) ~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 13 x 10 inches |
|
|
NoDoz I (2008) ~ coloured pencil on paper ~ 9 x 9 inches |
|
|
NoDoz II (2008) ~ pencil on paper ~ 10 x 8 inches |
|
|
Dear landlord (2008) ~ pencil on paper ~ 9 1/2 x 13 1/2 inches |
|
|
Video projection ~ installation shot ~ running time, 3 minutes |
|
|
Video projection ~ installation shot ~ running time, 3 minutes |
|
|
Video projection ~ installation shot ~ running time, 3 minutes |
|
« Return to Exhibitions Home Back to Top
|
the molesworth gallery, 16 Molesworth Street, Dublin 2, Ireland |
