Helga Michie. I Am Beginning to Want What I Am von Helga Michie | Werke / Works 1968–1985 | ISBN 9783903172005

Helga Michie. I Am Beginning to Want What I Am

Werke / Works 1968–1985

von Helga Michie und Helga Michie, herausgegeben von Christine Ivanovic
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinHelga Michie
Herausgegeben vonChristine Ivanovic
Beiträge vonJeremy Adler
Beiträge vonRüdiger Görner
Beiträge vonAntonia Hoerschelmann
Beiträge vonChristine Ivanovic
Beiträge vonMischa Lucyshyn
Beiträge vonChristine Nagel
Autor / AutorinHelga Michie
Buchcover Helga Michie. I Am Beginning to Want What I Am | Helga Michie | EAN 9783903172005 | ISBN 3-903172-00-6 | ISBN 978-3-903172-00-5

Helga Michie. I Am Beginning to Want What I Am

Werke / Works 1968–1985

von Helga Michie und Helga Michie, herausgegeben von Christine Ivanovic
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinHelga Michie
Herausgegeben vonChristine Ivanovic
Beiträge vonJeremy Adler
Beiträge vonRüdiger Görner
Beiträge vonAntonia Hoerschelmann
Beiträge vonChristine Ivanovic
Beiträge vonMischa Lucyshyn
Beiträge vonChristine Nagel
Autor / AutorinHelga Michie
This bilingual monograph marks the first time Helga Michie's previously largely unknown artistic oeuvre, giving voice to her own experiences of Nazi oppression and exile, is documented extensively. The book includes texts by friends as well as academic contributions discussing both Michie’s far-reaching relationships with Austrian émigrés in London and the early separation of the twin sisters, whose diverging paths open up complementary perspectives on a common fate. Past horrors of persecution and displacement return almost like dreams in Michie's quasi-automatic drawings: relocated into the uncanny world of fairy tales and mediated by poetic humor, keen observations of everyday activities, and experiments with various printing techniques. Simultaneously, the artist probes the possibilities of freely combining geometric shapes and colorful abstractions.
“Where does the consolation from these pictures come from? It is a mystery, but it’s there.” —Ilse Aichinger on the works of her twin sister