Hans Ruedi Giger (IPA: ) (born at Chur, Grisons canton, February 5, 1940) is a Swiss painter best known for his design work on the film Alien.
Work
Giger's
Alien design, inspired by his painting "Necronom IV", earned him an
Oscar in 1980. His fourth published book of paintings, titled
Necronomicon (followed by
Necronomicon II in
1985), continued his rise to international prominence, as did the frequent appearance of his art in the magazine
Omni. Giger is also well known for artwork on a number of popular records, including
Emerson Lake and Palmer's
Brain Salad Surgery, Dead Kennedys'
Frankenchrist and
Debbie Harry's
Koo Koo.
Style
For most of his career, Giger has worked predominantly in
airbrush, creating strange monochromatic canvasses depicting
surreal, nightmarish landscapes. His most distinctive stylistic innovation is that of a representation of human bodies and machines in a cold,
interconnected relationship, described as "
biomechanical". His paintings often display
fetishistic sexual imagery and are considered disturbing by some. Some of his paintings also feature
Satanic imagery, though Giger himself is not known to be a
Satanist. He had many meetings with
Salvador Dalí, to whom he was introduced by
Luis Buñuel. The Spanish painter let Giger see his own work under a new point of view. The Swiss artist then realized the
surrealistic aspect of his art, and it was truly inspired by that in later development. He was also a personal friend of
Timothy Leary. Giger is perhaps the best known sufferer of
night terrors and his paintings are all to some extent inspired by his experiences with that particular
sleep disorder. He was originally educated as an
architect and made his first paintings as a way of
art therapy.
Obscenity lawsuit
Giger's artwork for the
Dead Kennedys' album
Frankenchrist,
Landscape XX (nicknamed
Penis Landscape), was at the center of an
obscenity lawsuit against
Jello Biafra.
Other works
Giger has also created furniture designs, particularly the
Harkonnen Capo Chair for an unproduced movie version of the novel
Dune that was originally slated to be directed by
Alejandro Jodorowski (many years later
David Lynch directed the film, using none of Giger's designs). Giger has also applied his biomechanical style to interior design, and several "Giger Bars" sprung up in
Tokyo,
New York, and his native Switzerland, although the foreign bars have since closed. His art has greatly influenced
tattooists and
fetishists worldwide.
Ibanez guitars has released an H.R. Giger signature series. The
Ibanez ICHRG2, an
Ibanez Iceman, features the work, "NY City VI", and the
Ibanez RGTHRG1, has the work "NY City XIX" printed on it.
Oakley borrowed heavily from Giger's bio-mechanical theme for their futuristic sunglass and watch designs.
Pop culture
Movies
Work for recording artists
Interior decoration
Computer games
Giger is often referenced in pop culture and especially in works of the science fiction and cyberpunk genres. Novelist William Gibson (who wrote the original script for Alien³) seems particularly fascinated, presenting in Virtual Light a minor character, Lowell, with New York XXIV tattooed across his back. As well, Yamazaki, a secondary character in Idoru specifically describes the buildings of nanotech Japan as Giger-esque. Comic Book Artist Jhonen Vasquez is a fan of Giger's art and design
External links
1940 births | Living people | Swiss painters | Transgressive artists
Hansruedi Giger | H. R. Giger | Hans Rudi Giger | Hans Ruedi Giger | Hans Rüdi Giger | H・R・ギーガー | Гигер, Ганс Рудольф | H. R. Giger | H.R. Giger