Quick Facts
Also Known As: Hans Ruedi Giger
Died At Age: 74
Family:
Spouse/Ex-: Carmen Maria Scheifele Giger, Li Tobler, Mia Bonzanigo
father: Hans Richard Giger
mother: Melly Giger-Meier
siblings: Iris Giger
Artists Sculptors
Died on: May 12, 2014
place of death: Zürich
Cause of Death: Accident
Childhood & Early Life
Hans Rudolf “Ruedi” Giger, eventually known as H.R., was born Feb. 5, 1940, in Chur, Graubünden, Switzerland, as the second child to Melly Giger-Meier and Hans Richard Giger.
He and his sister, Iris, who was seven years his senior, were treated kindly by their parents. The family lived in a modest, somewhat dingy apartment above the pharmacy where his father, a chemist, worked.
His first exposure to the art world, pictures of Cocteau’s film, ‘Beauty and the Beast’, came in 1944 through magazines from American soldiers who, while recuperating from skiing injuries, rested in his home.
In 1946, he began school, first attending the ‘Catholic Marienheim’, but soon transferring to ‘Auntie Grittli’s Reform(ational) Kindergarten’.
He first encountered death when his father received a skull as a promotional gift, which Giger immediately claimed as his plaything.
After graduating from high school in 1958, he obtained a certificate in drawing, followed by a couple of years of practical training from an architect and developer as well as completion of military college as a mortar gunman.
From 1962 to 1965, he attended the ‘School of Applied Arts’, Zurich, graduating from the ‘Department of Interior and Industrial Design’.
Career
Giger worked full-time as an office furniture designer for Andreas Christen from 1966 until 1968, producing some ink drawings, oil paintings and his first polyester sculptures in his spare time.
In 1968, he quit his job to devote all of his time to creating art, including a commission to create movie props, which included designing his first extraterrestrial being.
Switzerland’s first poster printing company printed, with world-wide distribution, his first collection of posters in 1969, the same year of the first exhibitions of his work outside of Zurich.
Rock band ‘Emerson, Lake and Palmer’ commissioned him to create the cover of the 1973 album ‘Brain Salad Surgery’.
In the 1970s, he began using an airbrush, becoming known as the world’s leading airbrush artist, and developed his signature style of meticulously rendered, otherworldly visions of the macabre, depicted in murky grays and blacks.
Filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky commissioned Giger in 1976 to collaborate as part of an all-star production team on the legendary unmade film, ‘Dune,’ for which he designed the sci-fi world of ‘The Harkonnen’.
After viewing Giger’s images published in 1977’s ‘Necronomicon’, director Ridley Scott hired him for the production of the science fiction film, ‘Alien’. The elaborate costume of the ‘Xenomorph’ creature in the movie included Rolls-Royce parts, rib bones and reptile vertebrae.
His first design of a total environment, the ‘Giger Bar’ in Tokyo opened in 1988, but, disappointed in its execution, he personally supervised the interior design and opening of a second bar in Chur four years later.
The official Giger Internet site, www.HRGiger.com, went online on March 19, 1996, with more than 200,000 visitors from over 100 countries in the first year.
The four-story ‘H.R. Giger Museum’ opened in June 1998, in the Chateau St. Germain, in the medieval walled city of Gruyères, Switzerland, housing the world’s largest collection of his artwork.
April 12, 2003, witnessed the official opening of the ‘H.R. Giger Museum Bar’, a 400-year-old space transformed by Giger’s characteristically grotesque but somehow beautiful designs.
Beginning in 2004, major museums around the world honored him with a series of retrospectives of his works.
He worked up to his death, leaving an unknown quantity of unfinished and unreleased projects.
Major Works
The most well-known collection of his work, 1977’s book, ‘Necronomicon,’ included the lithograph of a biomechanoid, ‘Necronom IV,’ which grabbed the attention of Ridley Scott and became the basis for the Xenomorph creature in ‘Alien.’
The designs created for the title creature, all stages of its lifecycle, spacecraft and extraterrestrial environments in the 1979 film ‘Alien’ not only catapulted Giger into fame but transformed the science fiction movie genre.
Awards & Achievements
Giger’s along with the special effects team on ‘Alien’ were honored with an ‘Academy Award for Best Achievement in Visual Effects’, on April 14, 1980.
On Dec 17, 2004, Giger received the prestigious award, ‘La Médaille de la Ville de Paris’, at Paris City Hall.
He was inducted into the ‘Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame’ in 2013.
Personal Life & Legacy
In 1975, his nine-year romance with actress and muse Li Tobler ended with her sudden suicide.
Married in 1979, Giger and first wife Mia Bonzanigo divorced only a year and a half later.
His second wife, Carmen Maria Scheifele Giger, and he wed in 2006.
On May 12, 2014, after a brief hospitalization, Giger succumbed to injuries sustained from a fall down stairs in his Zurich home.
Facts About H. R. Giger
Giger was known to have a fascination with combining organic and biomechanical elements in his artwork, creating a unique and unsettling aesthetic that has left a lasting impact on the world of science fiction and horror.
Despite his dark and often disturbing subject matter, Giger was known to have a playful and humorous side, incorporating whimsical elements into some of his works to balance out the darkness.
Giger’s work extended beyond visual art, as he also designed furniture, record album covers, and even a mic stand for the lead singer of the band Korn, showcasing his versatility and creativity.
Giger’s artistic vision was so influential that it inspired the iconic design of the alien creature in the “Alien” film franchise, solidifying his legacy as a visionary artist whose impact reached far beyond the realm of fine art.
Giger’s work continues to be celebrated and exhibited around the world, demonstrating the enduring fascination and appreciation for his unique and boundary-pushing artistic vision.
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