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Kitsch

Kitsch (/kɪ/ KITCH; loanword from German)[a][1] is a term applied to art and design that is perceived as naïve imitation, overly eccentric, gratuitous or of banal taste.[2][3]

A Friend in Need, a 1903 Dogs Playing Poker painting by Cassius Marcellus Coolidge, is a common example of modern kitsch.
Puppy by Jeff Koons (2010) is a self-aware display of kitsch, specifically as a combination of opulence and cuteness.

The modern avant garde traditionally opposed kitsch for its melodramatic tendencies, its superficial relationship with the human condition and its naturalistic standards of beauty. In the first half of the 20th century, kitsch was used in reference to mass-produced, pop-cultural products that lacked the conceptual depth of fine art. However, since the emergence of Pop Art in the 1950s, kitsch has taken on newfound highbrow appeal, often wielded in knowingly ironic, humorous or earnest manners.

To brand visual art as "kitsch" is often still pejorative, though not exclusively. Art deemed kitsch may be enjoyed in an entirely positive and sincere manner. For example, it carries the ability to be quaint or "quirky" without being offensive on the surface, as in the Dogs Playing Poker paintings.

Along with visual art, the quality of kitsch can be used to describe works of music, literature or any other creative medium. Kitsch relates to camp, as they both incorporate irony and extravagance.[4]

History edit

 
A mass-produced teapot and milk jug set, themed like an old cottage
 
Examples of kitsch in architecture

As a descriptive term, kitsch originated in the art markets of Munich, Germany in the 1860s and the 1870s, describing cheap, popular, and marketable pictures and sketches.[5] In Das Buch vom Kitsch (The Book of Kitsch), published in 1936, Hans Reimann defined it as a professional expression "born in a painter's studio".

The study of kitsch was done almost exclusively in German until the 1970s, with Walter Benjamin being an important scholar in the field.[6]

Kitsch is regarded as a modern phenomenon, coinciding with social changes in recent centuries such as the Industrial Revolution, urbanization, mass production, modern materials and media such as plastics, radio and television, the rise of the middle class and public education—all of which have factored into a perception of oversaturation of art produced for the popular taste.

Analysis edit

Kitsch in art theory and aesthetics edit

Modernist writer Hermann Broch argues that the essence of kitsch is imitation: kitsch mimics its immediate predecessor with no regard to ethics—it aims to copy the beautiful, not the good.[7] According to Walter Benjamin, kitsch, unlike art, is a utilitarian object lacking all critical distance between object and observer. According to critic Winfried Menninghaus, Benjamin's stance was that kitsch "offers instantaneous emotional gratification without intellectual effort, without the requirement of distance, without sublimation".[6] In a short essay from 1927, Benjamin observed that an artist who engages in kitschy reproductions of things and ideas from a bygone age deserved to be called a "furnished man"[8] (in the way that someone rents a "furnished apartment" where everything is already supplied).

Kitsch is less about the thing observed than about the observer.[9] According to Roger Scruton, "Kitsch is fake art, expressing fake emotions, whose purpose is to deceive the consumer into thinking he feels something deep and serious."[10]

Tomáš Kulka, in Kitsch and Art, starts from two basic facts that kitsch "has an undeniable mass-appeal" and "considered (by the art-educated elite) bad", and then proposes three essential conditions:

  1. Kitsch depicts a beautiful or highly emotionally charged subject;
  2. The depicted subject is instantly and effortlessly identifiable;
  3. Kitsch does not substantially enrich our associations related to the depicted subject.[11][12]

Kitsch in Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being edit

The concept of kitsch is a central motif in Milan Kundera's 1984 novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Towards the end of the novel, the book's narrator posits that the act of defecation (and specifically, the shame that surrounds it) poses a metaphysical challenge to the theory of divine creation: "Either/or: either shit is acceptable (in which case don't lock yourself in the bathroom!) or we are created in an unacceptable manner".[13] Thus, in order for us to continue to believe in the essential propriety and rightness of the universe (what the narrator calls "the categorical agreement with being"), we live in a world "in which shit is denied and everyone acts as though it did not exist". For Kundera's narrator, this is the definition of kitsch: an "aesthetic ideal" which "excludes everything from its purview which is essentially unacceptable in human existence".

The novel goes on to relate this definition of kitsch to politics, and specifically—given the novel's setting in Prague around the time of the 1968 invasion by the Soviet Union—to communism and totalitarianism. He gives the example of the Communist May Day ceremony, and of the sight of children running on the grass and the feeling this is supposed to provoke. This emphasis on feeling is fundamental to how kitsch operates:

Kitsch causes two tears to flow in quick succession. The first tear says: How nice to see children running on the grass! The second tear says: How nice to be moved, together with all mankind, by children running on the grass! It is the second tear that makes kitsch kitsch.[14]

According to the narrator, kitsch is "the aesthetic ideal of all politicians and all political parties and movements"; however, where a society is dominated by a single political movement, the result is "totalitarian kitsch":

When I say "totalitarian," what I mean is that everything that infringes on kitsch must be banished for life: every display of individualism (because a deviation from the collective is a spit in the eye of the smiling brotherhood); every doubt (because anyone who starts doubting details will end by doubting life itself); all irony (because in the realm of kitsch everything must be taken quite seriously).[14]

Kundera's concept of "totalitarian kitsch" has since been invoked in the study of the art and culture of regimes such as Stalin's Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy and Iraq under Saddam Hussein.[15] Kundera's narrator ends up condemning kitsch for its "true function" as an ideological tool under such regimes, calling it "a folding screen set up to curtain off death".[16]

Melancholic kitsch vs. nostalgic kitsch edit

 
A souvenir snow globe with an underwater motif

In her 1999 book The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience, cultural historian Celeste Olalquiaga develops a theory of kitsch that situates its emergence as a specifically nineteenth-century phenomenon, relating it to the feelings of loss elicited by a world transformed by science and industry.[17] Focusing on examples such as paperweights, aquariums, mermaids and the Crystal Palace, Olalquiaga uses Benjamin's concept of the "dialectical image" to argue for the utopian potential of "melancholic kitsch", which she differentiates from the more commonly discussed "nostalgic kitsch".[18]

These two types of kitsch correspond to two different forms of memory. Nostalgic kitsch functions through "reminiscence", which "sacrifices the intensity of experience for a conscious or fabricated sense of continuity":

Incapable of tolerating the intensity of the moment, reminiscence selects and consolidates an event's acceptable parts into a memory perceived as complete. […] This reconstructed experience is frozen as an emblem of itself, becoming a cultural fossil.[19]

In contrast, melancholic kitsch functions through "remembrance", a form of memory that Olalquiaga links to the "souvenir", which attempts "to repossess the experience of intensity and immediacy through an object".[20] While reminiscence translates a remembered event to the realm of the symbolic ("deprived of immediacy in favour of representational meaning"), remembrance is "the memory of the unconscious", which "sacrific[es] the continuity of time for the intensity of the experience".[21] Far from denying death, melancholic kitsch can only function through a recognition of its multiple "deaths" as a fragmentary remembrance that is subsequently commodified and reproduced. It "glorifies the perishable aspect of events, seeking in their partial and decaying memory the confirmation of its own temporal dislocation".[22]

Thus, for Olalquiaga, melancholic kitsch is able to function as a Benjaminian dialectical image: "an object whose decayed state exposes and reflects its utopian possibilities, a remnant constantly reliving its own death, a ruin".[20]

Uses edit

Art edit

The Kitsch movement is an international movement of classical painters, founded[clarification needed] in 1998 upon a philosophy proposed by Odd Nerdrum,[23] which he clarified in his 2001 book On Kitsch,[24] in cooperation with Jan-Ove Tuv and others incorporating the techniques of the Old Masters with narrative, romanticism, and emotionally charged imagery.

See also edit

  • Camp – Ostentatious style
  • Thomas Kinkade - Another American painter whose works are described as kitsch.
  • Chocolate box art – Term describing idealistic paintings
  • Cliché – Idea which has become overused to the point of losing its original meaning or being irritating
  • Lowbrow (art movement) – Underground visual art movement
  • Museum of Bad Art – Art museum in Massachusetts
  • Poshlost – Russian word for a particular negative human character trait or man-made thing or idea
  • Prolefeed – Fictional language in the novel "Nineteen Eighty-Four"
Notable examples

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ Despite being a direct borrowing from modern German, kitsch is most often left uncapitalized and without italics (cf. Gestalt, Sonderweg). Pronunciation may also be colloquially realized as /kɪʃ/ KISH.

Citations

  1. ^ "Definition of KITSCH". www.merriam-webster.com.
  2. ^ "Dialectic of Enlightenment - Philosophical Fragments" (PDF). Wayback Machine Internet Archive. 2002. (PDF) from the original on 14 June 2017. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  3. ^ Dutton, Denis (2003), "Kitsch", Oxford Art Online, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t046768, retrieved 22 October 2021
  4. ^ Scruton, Roger (21 February 2014). "A fine line between art and kitsch". Forbes. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  5. ^ Calinescu, Matei. Five Faces of Modernity. Kitsch, p. 234.
  6. ^ a b Menninghaus, Winfried (2009). "On the Vital Significance of 'Kitsch': Walter Benjamin's Politics of 'Bad Taste'". In Andrew Benjamin and Charles Rice (ed.). Walter Benjamin and the Architecture of Modernity. re.press. pp. 39–58. ISBN 9780980544091.
  7. ^ Broch, Hermann (2002). "Evil in the Value System of Art". Geist and Zeitgeist: The Spirit in an Unspiritual Age. Six Essays by Hermann Broch. Counterpoint. pp. 13–40. ISBN 9781582431680.
  8. ^ "Walter Benjamin: Dream Kitsch (trans. Edward Viesel) - -". www.edwardviesel.eu. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  9. ^ Eaglestone, Robert (25 May 2017). The Broken Voice: Reading Post-Holocaust Literature. Oxford University Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0191084201.
  10. ^ "A Point of View: The strangely enduring power of kitsch". BBC News. 12 December 2014.
  11. ^ Tomas, Kulka (1996). Kitsch and art. Pennsylvania State Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0271015941. OCLC 837730812.
  12. ^ Higgins, Kathleen Marie; Kulka, Tomas (1998). "Kitsch and Art". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. JSTOR. 56 (4): 410. doi:10.2307/432137. ISSN 0021-8529. JSTOR 432137.
  13. ^ Kundera, Milan (1984). The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Harper Perennial. p. 248
  14. ^ a b Kundera, Milan (1984). The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Harper Perennial. p. 251
  15. ^ Makiya, Kanan (2011). Review: What Is Totalitarian Art? Cultural Kitsch From Stalin to Saddam. Foreign Affairs. 90 (3): 142–148
  16. ^ Kundera, Milan (1984). The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Harper Perennial. p. 253
  17. ^ Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury.
  18. ^ Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury. pp. 26, 75
  19. ^ Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury. p. 292
  20. ^ a b Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury. p. 291
  21. ^ Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury. p. 294, 292
  22. ^ Olalquiaga, Celeste (1999). The Artificial Kingdom: A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience. Bloomsbury. p. 298
  23. ^ E.J. Pettinger [1] 7 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine "The Kitsch Campaign" [Boise Weekly], 29 December 2004.
  24. ^ Dag Solhjell and Odd Nerdrum. On Kitsch, Kagge Publishing, August 2001, ISBN 8248901238.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Adorno, Theodor (2001). The Culture Industry. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-25380-2
  • Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten (2008). "Wabi and Kitsch: Two Japanese Paradigms" in Æ: Canadian Aesthetics Journal 15.
  • Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten (2019) The New Aesthetics of Deculturation: Neoliberalism, Fundamentalism and Kitsch (Bloomsbury). Foreword by Olivier Roy.
  • Braungart, Wolfgang (2002). "Kitsch. Faszination und Herausforderung des Banalen und Trivialen". Max Niemeyer Verlag. ISBN 3-484-32112-1/0083-4564.
  • Cheetham, Mark A (2001). "Kant, Art and Art History: moments of discipline". Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80018-8.
  • Dorfles, Gillo (1969, translated from the 1968 Italian version, Il Kitsch). Kitsch: The World of Bad Taste, Universe Books. LCCN 78-93950
  • Elias, Norbert. (1998[1935]). "The Kitsch Style and the Age of Kitsch," in J. Goudsblom and S. Mennell (eds) The Norbert Elias Reader. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Gelfert, Hans-Dieter (2000). "Was ist Kitsch?". Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht in Göttingen. ISBN 3-525-34024-9.
  • Giesz, Ludwig (1971). Phänomenologie des Kitsches. 2. vermehrte und verbesserte Auflage München: Wilhelm Fink Verlag. [Partially translated into English in Dorfles (1969)]. Reprint (1994): Ungekürzte Ausgabe. Frankfurt am Main: S. Fischer Verlag. ISBN 3-596-12034-9 / ISBN 978-3-596-12034-5.
  • Gorelik, Boris (2013). Incredible Tretchikoff: Life of an artist and adventurer. Art / Books, London. ISBN 978-1-908970-08-4
  • Greenberg, Clement (1978). Art and Culture. Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-6681-8
  • Holliday, Ruth and Potts, Tracey (2012) Kitsch! Cultural Politics and Taste, Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-6616-0
  • Karpfen, Fritz (1925). "Kitsch. Eine Studie über die Entartung der Kunst". Weltbund-Verlag, Hamburg.
  • Kristeller, Paul Oskar (1990). "The Modern System of the Arts" (In "Renaissance Thought and the Arts"). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02010-5
  • Kulka, Tomas (1996). Kitsch and Art. Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-271-01594-2
  • Moles, Abraham (nouvelle édition 1977). Psychologie du Kitsch: L'art du Bonheur, Denoël-Gonthier
  • Nerdrum, Odd (Editor) (2001). On Kitsch. Distributed Art Publishers. ISBN 82-489-0123-8
  • Olalquiaga, Celeste (2002). The Artificial Kingdom: On the Kitsch Experience. University of Minnesota ISBN 0-8166-4117-X
  • Reimann, Hans (1936). "Das Buch vom Kitsch". Piper Verlag, München.
  • Richter, Gerd, (1972). Kitsch-Lexicon, Bertelsmann. ISBN 3-570-03148-9
  • Ryynänen, Max (2018). "Contemporary Kitsch: The Death of Pseudo Art and the Birth of Everyday Cheesiness (A Postcolonial Inquiry)" in Terra Aestheticae 1, pp. 70–86.
  • Scruton, Roger (2009). Beauty: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press ISBN 0199229759
  • Scruton, Roger (1983). The Aesthetic Understanding: Essays in the Philosophy of Art and Culture ISBN 1890318027
  • Shiner, Larry (2001). "The Invention of Art". University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-75342-5.
  • Thuller, Gabrielle (2006 and 2007). "Kunst und Kitsch. Wie erkenne ich?", ISBN 3-7630-2463-8. "Kitsch. Balsam für Herz und Seele", ISBN 978-3-7630-2493-3. (Both on Belser-Verlag, Stuttgart.)
  • Ward, Peter (1994). Kitsch in Sync: A Consumer's Guide to Bad Taste, Plexus Publishing. ISBN 0-85965-152-5
  • "Kitsch. Texte und Theorien", (2007). Reclam. ISBN 978-3-15-018476-9. (Includes classic texts of kitsch criticism from authors like Theodor Adorno, Ferdinand Avenarius, Edward Koelwel, Walter Benjamin, Ernst Bloch, Hermann Broch, Richard Egenter, etc.).

External links edit

  • "Kitsch" 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine. In John Walker's Glossary of art, architecture & design since 1945.
  • Avant-Garde and Kitsch – essay by Clement Greenberg

kitsch, this, article, about, term, other, uses, disambiguation, tacky, redirects, here, other, uses, adhesive, tacky, song, kitch, loanword, from, german, term, applied, design, that, perceived, naïve, imitation, overly, eccentric, gratuitous, banal, taste, f. This article is about the art term For other uses see Kitsch disambiguation Tacky redirects here For other uses see Adhesive and Tacky song Kitsch k ɪ tʃ KITCH loanword from German a 1 is a term applied to art and design that is perceived as naive imitation overly eccentric gratuitous or of banal taste 2 3 A Friend in Need a 1903 Dogs Playing Poker painting by Cassius Marcellus Coolidge is a common example of modern kitsch Puppy by Jeff Koons 2010 is a self aware display of kitsch specifically as a combination of opulence and cuteness The modern avant garde traditionally opposed kitsch for its melodramatic tendencies its superficial relationship with the human condition and its naturalistic standards of beauty In the first half of the 20th century kitsch was used in reference to mass produced pop cultural products that lacked the conceptual depth of fine art However since the emergence of Pop Art in the 1950s kitsch has taken on newfound highbrow appeal often wielded in knowingly ironic humorous or earnest manners To brand visual art as kitsch is often still pejorative though not exclusively Art deemed kitsch may be enjoyed in an entirely positive and sincere manner For example it carries the ability to be quaint or quirky without being offensive on the surface as in the Dogs Playing Poker paintings Along with visual art the quality of kitsch can be used to describe works of music literature or any other creative medium Kitsch relates to camp as they both incorporate irony and extravagance 4 Contents 1 History 2 Analysis 2 1 Kitsch in art theory and aesthetics 2 2 Kitsch in Milan Kundera s The Unbearable Lightness of Being 2 3 Melancholic kitsch vs nostalgic kitsch 3 Uses 3 1 Art 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2019 nbsp A mass produced teapot and milk jug set themed like an old cottage nbsp Examples of kitsch in architectureAs a descriptive term kitsch originated in the art markets of Munich Germany in the 1860s and the 1870s describing cheap popular and marketable pictures and sketches 5 In Das Buch vom Kitsch The Book of Kitsch published in 1936 Hans Reimann defined it as a professional expression born in a painter s studio The study of kitsch was done almost exclusively in German until the 1970s with Walter Benjamin being an important scholar in the field 6 Kitsch is regarded as a modern phenomenon coinciding with social changes in recent centuries such as the Industrial Revolution urbanization mass production modern materials and media such as plastics radio and television the rise of the middle class and public education all of which have factored into a perception of oversaturation of art produced for the popular taste Analysis editKitsch in art theory and aesthetics edit Modernist writer Hermann Broch argues that the essence of kitsch is imitation kitsch mimics its immediate predecessor with no regard to ethics it aims to copy the beautiful not the good 7 According to Walter Benjamin kitsch unlike art is a utilitarian object lacking all critical distance between object and observer According to critic Winfried Menninghaus Benjamin s stance was that kitsch offers instantaneous emotional gratification without intellectual effort without the requirement of distance without sublimation 6 In a short essay from 1927 Benjamin observed that an artist who engages in kitschy reproductions of things and ideas from a bygone age deserved to be called a furnished man 8 in the way that someone rents a furnished apartment where everything is already supplied Kitsch is less about the thing observed than about the observer 9 According to Roger Scruton Kitsch is fake art expressing fake emotions whose purpose is to deceive the consumer into thinking he feels something deep and serious 10 Tomas Kulka in Kitsch and Art starts from two basic facts that kitsch has an undeniable mass appeal and considered by the art educated elite bad and then proposes three essential conditions Kitsch depicts a beautiful or highly emotionally charged subject The depicted subject is instantly and effortlessly identifiable Kitsch does not substantially enrich our associations related to the depicted subject 11 12 Kitsch in Milan Kundera s The Unbearable Lightness of Being edit The concept of kitsch is a central motif in Milan Kundera s 1984 novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being Towards the end of the novel the book s narrator posits that the act of defecation and specifically the shame that surrounds it poses a metaphysical challenge to the theory of divine creation Either or either shit is acceptable in which case don t lock yourself in the bathroom or we are created in an unacceptable manner 13 Thus in order for us to continue to believe in the essential propriety and rightness of the universe what the narrator calls the categorical agreement with being we live in a world in which shit is denied and everyone acts as though it did not exist For Kundera s narrator this is the definition of kitsch an aesthetic ideal which excludes everything from its purview which is essentially unacceptable in human existence The novel goes on to relate this definition of kitsch to politics and specifically given the novel s setting in Prague around the time of the 1968 invasion by the Soviet Union to communism and totalitarianism He gives the example of the Communist May Day ceremony and of the sight of children running on the grass and the feeling this is supposed to provoke This emphasis on feeling is fundamental to how kitsch operates Kitsch causes two tears to flow in quick succession The first tear says How nice to see children running on the grass The second tear says How nice to be moved together with all mankind by children running on the grass It is the second tear that makes kitsch kitsch 14 According to the narrator kitsch is the aesthetic ideal of all politicians and all political parties and movements however where a society is dominated by a single political movement the result is totalitarian kitsch When I say totalitarian what I mean is that everything that infringes on kitsch must be banished for life every display of individualism because a deviation from the collective is a spit in the eye of the smiling brotherhood every doubt because anyone who starts doubting details will end by doubting life itself all irony because in the realm of kitsch everything must be taken quite seriously 14 Kundera s concept of totalitarian kitsch has since been invoked in the study of the art and culture of regimes such as Stalin s Soviet Union Nazi Germany Fascist Italy and Iraq under Saddam Hussein 15 Kundera s narrator ends up condemning kitsch for its true function as an ideological tool under such regimes calling it a folding screen set up to curtain off death 16 Melancholic kitsch vs nostalgic kitsch edit nbsp A souvenir snow globe with an underwater motifIn her 1999 book The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience cultural historian Celeste Olalquiaga develops a theory of kitsch that situates its emergence as a specifically nineteenth century phenomenon relating it to the feelings of loss elicited by a world transformed by science and industry 17 Focusing on examples such as paperweights aquariums mermaids and the Crystal Palace Olalquiaga uses Benjamin s concept of the dialectical image to argue for the utopian potential of melancholic kitsch which she differentiates from the more commonly discussed nostalgic kitsch 18 These two types of kitsch correspond to two different forms of memory Nostalgic kitsch functions through reminiscence which sacrifices the intensity of experience for a conscious or fabricated sense of continuity Incapable of tolerating the intensity of the moment reminiscence selects and consolidates an event s acceptable parts into a memory perceived as complete This reconstructed experience is frozen as an emblem of itself becoming a cultural fossil 19 In contrast melancholic kitsch functions through remembrance a form of memory that Olalquiaga links to the souvenir which attempts to repossess the experience of intensity and immediacy through an object 20 While reminiscence translates a remembered event to the realm of the symbolic deprived of immediacy in favour of representational meaning remembrance is the memory of the unconscious which sacrific es the continuity of time for the intensity of the experience 21 Far from denying death melancholic kitsch can only function through a recognition of its multiple deaths as a fragmentary remembrance that is subsequently commodified and reproduced It glorifies the perishable aspect of events seeking in their partial and decaying memory the confirmation of its own temporal dislocation 22 Thus for Olalquiaga melancholic kitsch is able to function as a Benjaminian dialectical image an object whose decayed state exposes and reflects its utopian possibilities a remnant constantly reliving its own death a ruin 20 Uses editArt edit The Kitsch movement is an international movement of classical painters founded clarification needed in 1998 upon a philosophy proposed by Odd Nerdrum 23 which he clarified in his 2001 book On Kitsch 24 in cooperation with Jan Ove Tuv and others incorporating the techniques of the Old Masters with narrative romanticism and emotionally charged imagery See also editCamp Ostentatious style Thomas Kinkade Another American painter whose works are described as kitsch Chocolate box art Term describing idealistic paintings Cliche Idea which has become overused to the point of losing its original meaning or being irritating Lowbrow art movement Underground visual art movement Museum of Bad Art Art museum in Massachusetts Poshlost Russian word for a particular negative human character trait or man made thing or idea Prolefeed Fictional language in the novel Nineteen Eighty Four Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsNotable examplesVelvet Elvis Painting of Elvis Presley on velvet Chinese Girl 1952 painting by Vladimir Tretchikoff Christmas cards A major type of greeting cardsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets His Master s VoiceReferences editInformational notes Despite being a direct borrowing from modern German kitsch is most often left uncapitalized and without italics cf Gestalt Sonderweg Pronunciation may also be colloquially realized as k ɪ ʃ KISH Citations Definition of KITSCH www merriam webster com Dialectic of Enlightenment Philosophical Fragments PDF Wayback Machine Internet Archive 2002 Archived PDF from the original on 14 June 2017 Retrieved 22 October 2021 Dutton Denis 2003 Kitsch Oxford Art Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article t046768 retrieved 22 October 2021 Scruton Roger 21 February 2014 A fine line between art and kitsch Forbes Retrieved 16 January 2017 Calinescu Matei Five Faces of Modernity Kitsch p 234 a b Menninghaus Winfried 2009 On the Vital Significance of Kitsch Walter Benjamin s Politics of Bad Taste In Andrew Benjamin and Charles Rice ed Walter Benjamin and the Architecture of Modernity re press pp 39 58 ISBN 9780980544091 Broch Hermann 2002 Evil in the Value System of Art Geist and Zeitgeist The Spirit in an Unspiritual Age Six Essays by Hermann Broch Counterpoint pp 13 40 ISBN 9781582431680 Walter Benjamin Dream Kitsch trans Edward Viesel www edwardviesel eu Retrieved 20 December 2022 Eaglestone Robert 25 May 2017 The Broken Voice Reading Post Holocaust Literature Oxford University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0191084201 A Point of View The strangely enduring power of kitsch BBC News 12 December 2014 Tomas Kulka 1996 Kitsch and art Pennsylvania State Univ Press ISBN 978 0271015941 OCLC 837730812 Higgins Kathleen Marie Kulka Tomas 1998 Kitsch and Art The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism JSTOR 56 4 410 doi 10 2307 432137 ISSN 0021 8529 JSTOR 432137 Kundera Milan 1984 The Unbearable Lightness of Being Harper Perennial p 248 a b Kundera Milan 1984 The Unbearable Lightness of Being Harper Perennial p 251 Makiya Kanan 2011 Review What Is Totalitarian Art Cultural Kitsch From Stalin to Saddam Foreign Affairs 90 3 142 148 Kundera Milan 1984 The Unbearable Lightness of Being Harper Perennial p 253 Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury pp 26 75 Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury p 292 a b Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury p 291 Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury p 294 292 Olalquiaga Celeste 1999 The Artificial Kingdom A Treasury of the Kitsch Experience Bloomsbury p 298 E J Pettinger 1 Archived 7 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Kitsch Campaign Boise Weekly 29 December 2004 Dag Solhjell and Odd Nerdrum On Kitsch Kagge Publishing August 2001 ISBN 8248901238 Bibliography Horkheimer Max Adorno Theodor W 2002 Schmid Noerr Gunzelin ed Dialectic of enlightenment philosophical fragments PDF Translated by Jephcott Edmund Stanford California ISBN 978 0 8047 8809 0 OCLC 919087055 Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Further reading Adorno Theodor 2001 The Culture Industry Routledge ISBN 0 415 25380 2 Botz Bornstein Thorsten 2008 Wabi and Kitsch Two Japanese Paradigms in AE Canadian Aesthetics Journal 15 Botz Bornstein Thorsten 2019 The New Aesthetics of Deculturation Neoliberalism Fundamentalism and Kitsch Bloomsbury Foreword by Olivier Roy Braungart Wolfgang 2002 Kitsch Faszination und Herausforderung des Banalen und Trivialen Max Niemeyer Verlag ISBN 3 484 32112 1 0083 4564 Cheetham Mark A 2001 Kant Art and Art History moments of discipline Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 80018 8 Dorfles Gillo 1969 translated from the 1968 Italian version Il Kitsch Kitsch The World of Bad Taste Universe Books LCCN 78 93950 Elias Norbert 1998 1935 The Kitsch Style and the Age of Kitsch in J Goudsblom and S Mennell eds The Norbert Elias Reader Oxford Blackwell Gelfert Hans Dieter 2000 Was ist Kitsch Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht in Gottingen ISBN 3 525 34024 9 Giesz Ludwig 1971 Phanomenologie des Kitsches 2 vermehrte und verbesserte Auflage Munchen Wilhelm Fink Verlag Partially translated into English in Dorfles 1969 Reprint 1994 Ungekurzte Ausgabe Frankfurt am Main S Fischer Verlag ISBN 3 596 12034 9 ISBN 978 3 596 12034 5 Gorelik Boris 2013 Incredible Tretchikoff Life of an artist and adventurer Art Books London ISBN 978 1 908970 08 4 Greenberg Clement 1978 Art and Culture Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 6681 8 Holliday Ruth and Potts Tracey 2012 Kitsch Cultural Politics and Taste Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 6616 0 Karpfen Fritz 1925 Kitsch Eine Studie uber die Entartung der Kunst Weltbund Verlag Hamburg Kristeller Paul Oskar 1990 The Modern System of the Arts In Renaissance Thought and the Arts Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02010 5 Kulka Tomas 1996 Kitsch and Art Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 01594 2 Moles Abraham nouvelle edition 1977 Psychologie du Kitsch L art du Bonheur Denoel Gonthier Nerdrum Odd Editor 2001 On Kitsch Distributed Art Publishers ISBN 82 489 0123 8 Olalquiaga Celeste 2002 The Artificial Kingdom On the Kitsch Experience University of Minnesota ISBN 0 8166 4117 X Reimann Hans 1936 Das Buch vom Kitsch Piper Verlag Munchen Richter Gerd 1972 Kitsch Lexicon Bertelsmann ISBN 3 570 03148 9 Ryynanen Max 2018 Contemporary Kitsch The Death of Pseudo Art and the Birth of Everyday Cheesiness A Postcolonial Inquiry in Terra Aestheticae 1 pp 70 86 Scruton Roger 2009 Beauty A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 0199229759 Scruton Roger 1983 The Aesthetic Understanding Essays in the Philosophy of Art and Culture ISBN 1890318027 Shiner Larry 2001 The Invention of Art University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 75342 5 Thuller Gabrielle 2006 and 2007 Kunst und Kitsch Wie erkenne ich ISBN 3 7630 2463 8 Kitsch Balsam fur Herz und Seele ISBN 978 3 7630 2493 3 Both on Belser Verlag Stuttgart Ward Peter 1994 Kitsch in Sync A Consumer s Guide to Bad Taste Plexus Publishing ISBN 0 85965 152 5 Kitsch Texte und Theorien 2007 Reclam ISBN 978 3 15 018476 9 Includes classic texts of kitsch criticism from authors like Theodor Adorno Ferdinand Avenarius Edward Koelwel Walter Benjamin Ernst Bloch Hermann Broch Richard Egenter etc External links edit Kitsch Archived 3 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine In John Walker s Glossary of art architecture amp design since 1945 Avant Garde and Kitsch essay by Clement Greenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kitsch amp oldid 1174942305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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