The Ruffled Crow

Animation, Art, and Other Shiny Things

JohnnyExpress – Alfred Imageworks

HR Giger

Hans Rudolf Giger died yesterday from complications arising from a fall. He was 74 years old.

Emerson, Lake, and Palmer - Brain Salad Surgery album art.

Emerson, Lake, and Palmer – Brain Salad Surgery album art.

The first time I saw the art of HR Giger, I didn’t know it. It was the cover of Emerson, Lake, and Palmer’s Brain Salad Surgery album. Even though it was about their best album, I liked the cover better.

The next time was on the cover and in the pages of Heavy Metal Magazine. The June 1980 issue, to be precise. HM had been running ads for Giger’s Necronomicon for a while, but that issue had a full spread of his art.

I don’t think I need to say much about his work in Alien (and other movies) and his subsequent success except to mention the Oscar he won for the movie and his induction into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 2013.

Thankfully there is a HR Giger Museum in Gruyères, Switzerland and, even better, the website has an online virtual tour. Worth the ‘walk’.

June 80 issue with the HR Giger gallery. Made me a lifelong HM fan.

June 80 issue with the HR Giger gallery. Made me a lifelong HM fan.

His ‘Biomechanoids’ were both unsettling and sensuous, mixing death and eroticism. Giger’s art reached into our little Freudian souls and dragged out hidden fantasies, bloody and wriggling.

His most distinctive stylistic innovation was that of a representation of human bodies and machines in a cold, interconnected relationship, he described as “biomechanical”. His main influences were painters Ernst Fuchs and Salvador Dalí. He met Salvador Dalí, to whom he was introduced by painter Robert Venosa. He was also a personal friend of Timothy Learyvia

The art world lost a genuine surrealistic master in H R Giger.

Here are some of my favorites of his.

Necronom IV - The inspiration for the Alien

Necronom IV – The inspiration for the Alien

Alien Pilot

Alien Pilot

Dune IV - artwork from an unproduced Dune movie (Frank Herbert)

Dune IV – artwork from an unproduced Dune movie (Frank Herbert)

The Spell IV from Giger's Necronomicon

The Spell IV from Giger’s Necronomicon

Landscape XIX

Landscape XIX

Alien artwork, 1977

Alien artwork, 1977

Omelette – Madeline Sharafian

Out of Hand – Simon Fink

Bibo – Anton Chistiakov & Mikhail Dmitriev

Bear’n Wasteland – Kyongho Hong

Free Wheel

Dji Death Fails – Simpals

Omega – Eva Franz and Andy Goralczyk

The mechanical life form Ohm inhabits a bleak and devastated planet. The thousands of mechanical creatures of this world share a single cycle of energy. In this cycle, Ohm is a rogue element. His nature is to devour and absorb others. When one day a gargantuan foreign object appears in the skies. Drawn in by mysterious creatures of light, the Ohm tracks them across the planet, changing the known order of matter, time and space. via

Big Game

Bobo is a lonely monster, set to spend yet another birthday alone, until a cunning hunter throws him a killer surprise party.

Matthew Furnell, Jarrod Hasenjager, Miro Kolenic, Romy Latter, Aarin Lehmkuhl, and Sarah Scrimgeour from The Animation School, Cape Town, South Africa.