HR Giger
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Enter a world of haunting power and dark psychedelia with this
tribute to the biomechanic visions of HR Giger. This volumespans
Giger’s paintings, sculptures, film work, iconic album covers, and
unique artist’s museum, with an essay by Andreas J. Hirsch and an
extensive biography based on Giger’s own writings. The
biomechanical art of HR Giger “At its essence, Giger’s art digs
down into our psyches and touches our very deepest primal instincts
and fears. His art stands in a category of its own. The proof of
this lies in the intensity of his work and imagination, which I can
only compare to Hieronymus Bosch and Francis Bacon in their powers
to provoke and disturb.” – Ridley Scott Swiss artist HR Giger
(1940–2014) is most famous for his creation of the space monster in
Ridley Scott’s 1979 horror sci-fi film Alien, which earned him an
Oscar. In retrospect, this was just one of the most popular
expressions of Giger’s biomechanical arsenal of creatures, which
consistently merged hybrids of human and machine into images of
haunting power and dark psychedelia. The visions drew on demons of
the past, as well as evoking mythologies for the future. Above all,
they gave expression to the collective fears and fantasies of his
age: fear of the atom, of pollution and wasted resources, and of a
future in which our bodies depend on machines for survival. This
book was begun shortly before the artist’s untimely death and shows
the complete story of Giger’s life and art, his sculptures, film
work, and iconic album covers as well as the heritage he left us in
his own artist’s museum and self-designed bar in the Swiss Alps. In
an in-depth essay, Giger scholar Andreas J. Hirsch plunges into the
themes of Giger’s oeuvre and world while an extensive artist
biography draws on contemporary quotes and Giger’s own writings.
The artist HR Giger (1940–2014) was a Swiss painter,
sculptor, and designer, who combined surrealist influences and dark
fantasies to create his very own biomechanical universe. He first
received acclaim in the 1960s with his airbrushed fantasies of
post-apocalyptic creatures and landscapes, and rose to fame through
high profile movie work, most notably the creation of the monster
in Alien, which won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.