In common with the squirming erotica of Hans Bellmer, the artwork of Hans Rudolf Giger is a psychosexual pick-and-mix of lust and loathing. Best known as the Oscar-winning designer for Ridley Scott's 1979 'spam-in-a-can' sci-fi shocker, Alien, H. R. Giger is the artist your mother warned you about. His bloodless, monochromatic world is characterised by orifices, labial, anal, mechanical; by phalluses lethal with teeth; with pox-ridden babies and pentagrams; with machines hewn from cartilage and bone. Giger's view of flesh is not the glistening pink of the pornographer, but rather the waxy shine of the embalmist - worse, these are necrophiliac dreams - or nightmares more accurately. As an 'artist', Giger is disparaged and dismissed - a one-trick pony and probable misogynist - and yet, the popularity of his work is undiminished, his design for the Alien unsurpassed in terms of true 'other-worldliness'.
"Giger’s art has often been called
“biomechanoid and Giger himself called one of his books Biomechanics. It would
be difficult to find a word that better describes the Zeitgeist of the twentieth
century, characterized by staggering technological progress that enslaved
modern humanity in an internecine symbiosis with the world of machines. In the
course of the twentieth century, modern technological inventions became
extensions and replacements of our muscles, our nervous system, our brain, our
eyes and ears, and even our reproductive organs, to such an extent that the
boundaries between biology and mechanical contraptions have all but
disappeared. The archetypal stories of Faust, the sorcerer’s apprentice, Golem,
and Frankenstein became the leading mythologies of our times. Materialistic
science, in its effort to gain knowledge about the world of matter and to
control it, has engendered a monster that threatens the very survival of life
on our planet. The human role has changed from that of a demiurg to that of a
victim.
When we look for another characteristic
feature of twentieth century, what immediately comes to mind is unbridled
violence and destruction on an unprecedented scale. It was a century, in which
internecine wars, bloody revolutions, totalitarian regimes, genocide, brutality
of secret police, and international terrorism ruled supreme. The loss of life
in World War I was estimated at ten million soldiers and twenty million
civilians. Additional millions died from war-spread epidemics and famine. In
World War II, approximately twice as many lives were lost. This century saw the
bestiality of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, the diabolical hecatombs of
Stalin's purges and his Gulag Archipelago, the development of chemical and
biological warfare, the weapons of mass destruction, and the apocalyptic
horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
We can add to it the civil terror in China
and other Communist countries, the victims of South American dictatorships, the
atrocities and genocide committed by the Chinese in Tibet, and the cruelties of
the South African Apartheid. The war in Korea and Vietnam, the wars in the
Middle East, and the slaughters in Yugoslavia and Rwanda are additional
examples of the senseless bloodshed we have witnessed during the last hundred
years. In a mitigated form, death pervaded the media of the twentieth century
as a favorite subject for entertainment. It has been estimated that in the USA
an average child witnesses on television 8,000 murders by the time he or she
finishes elementary school. The number of violent acts seen on television by
age eighteen rises to 200,000.
The nature and scale of violence committed
in the course of the twentieth century and the destructive abuses of modern
science – chemical, nuclear, and biological warfare and use of concentration
camp inmates as human guinea pigs - gave this period of history distinctly
demonic features. Some of the atrocities were motivated by distorted
understanding of God and by perverted religious impulses resulting in mass
murder and suicide. This century saw the mass suicides of the members of Jim
Jones’ People’s Temple, Marshall Herff Applewhite’s and Bonnie Lu Nettles’
Heaven’s Gate, the Swiss Sun Temple cult, and other deviant religious groups.
Violent terrorist organizations, such as Charles Manson’s gang, the Symbionese
Liberation Army, and the Islamic extremists acted out deviant mystical
impulses, This was further augmented by a renaissance of witchcraft and satanic
cults and escalating interest in books and movies focusing on demon worship and
exorcism.
Yet another important characteristic of the
twentieth century is the extraordinary change of attitude toward sexuality, of sexual
values, and of sexual behavior. The second half of this century witnessed an
unprecedented lifting of sexual repression and polymorphous manifestation of
erotic impulses worldwide. On the one hand, it was removal of cultural
constraints leading to sexual freedom, early sexual experimentation of the
young generation, premarital sex, promiscuity, popularity of common law and
open marriage, gay liberation, and overtly sexual theater plays, television
programs, and movies.
On the other hand, the shadow sides of
sexuality surfaced to an unprecedented degree and became part of modern culture
– teenage pregnancy, adult and child pornography, red light districts offering
all imaginable forms of prostitution, sadomasochistic parlors, sexual “slave
markets,” bizarre burlesque shows, and clubs catering to clients with a wide
range of erotic aberrations and perversions. And the darkest shadow of them all
– the rapidly escalating specter of worldwide AIDS epidemic - forged an
inseparable link between sexuality and death, Eros and Thanatos.
The stress and excessive demands of modern
life, alienation, and loss of deeper meaning of life and of spiritual values
engendered in many people a consuming need to escape and seek pleasure and
oblivion. The use of hard drugs – heroin, cocaine, crack, and amphetamines –
reached astronomic proportions and escalated into a global epidemic. The
empires of the drug lords and the vicious battle for the lucrative black market
with narcotics on all its levels contributed significantly to the already
escalating crime rate and brought violence into the underground and streets of
many modern cities.
All the essential elements of twentieth
century’s Zeitgeist are present in an inextricable amalgam in Giger’s
biomechanoid art..."
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO :D
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ReplyDeleteI take back my previous post. Even though this is true, for the most part, I don't know if it represents Giger for the most part, something that the author straps right into conclusion. But it is a good eplenation, something to think about..
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