English
Adjective
- having the nature of kitsch
Quotations
- 2004: This is what his admirers go for: the gravelly grain of
his film stock, the crowded monochrome of his compositions (the new
film is mostly in black-and-white, with kitschy spasms of color),
and the way in which light bounces and breathes from the faces of
his players. — The New Yorker, 10 May 2004
Translations
having the nature of kitsch
- French: kitsch
- German: kitschig
- Hebrew:
Kitsch
/kɪtʃ/ is a term
of
German or
Yiddish
origin that has been used to categorize
art that is
considered an inferior, tasteless copy of an existing style. The
term is also used more loosely in referring to any art that is
pretentious to the point of being in
bad
taste, and also commercially produced items that are considered
trite or crass.
Because the word was brought into use as a
response to a large amount of art in the 19th century where the
aesthetic of art
work was associated with a sense of exaggerated
sentimentality or
melodrama, kitsch is
most closely associated with art that is sentimental; however, it
can be used to refer to any type of art that is deficient for
similar reasons—whether it tries to appear sentimental,
glamorous, theatrical, or creative, kitsch is said to be a gesture
imitative of the superficial appearances of art. It is often said
that kitsch relies on merely repeating convention and formula,
lacking the sense of creativity and originality displayed in
genuine art.
History
Though its precise
etymology is uncertain, it is
widely held that the word originated in the
Munich art
markets of the 1860s and ’70s,
used to describe cheap, hotly marketable pictures or sketches (the
English term mispronounced by Germans, or elided with the
German
dialect verb kitschen that originally meant “to scrape up mud from
the street” or "to smear"). Kitsch appealed to the crass tastes of
the newly moneyed Munich
bourgeoisie who allegedly
thought they could achieve the status they envied in the
traditional class of cultural elites by aping, however clumsily,
the most apparent features of their cultural habits.
The word eventually came to mean “a slapping
together” (of a work of art). Kitsch became defined as an
aesthetically impoverished object of shoddy production, meant more
to identify the
consumer with a newly acquired
class status than to invoke a genuine aesthetic response. Kitsch
was considered aesthetically impoverished and morally dubious, and
to have sacrificed aesthetic life to a pantomime of aesthetic life,
usually, but not always, in the interest of signalling one’s class
status.
Avant-garde and kitsch
The word was popularized in the 1930s by the
theorists
Theodor
Adorno,
Hermann
Broch, and
Clement
Greenberg, who each sought to define
avant-garde and
kitsch as opposites. To the art world of the time, the immense
popularity of kitsch was perceived as a threat to
culture. The arguments of all
three theorists relied on an implicit definition of kitsch as a
type of
false
consciousness, a
Marxist term
meaning a mindset present within the structures of
capitalism that is misguided
as to its own desires and wants. Marxists imagine there to be a
disjunction between the real state of affairs and the way that they
phenomenally appear.
Adorno perceived this in terms of what he called
the “
culture
industry,” where the art is controlled and formulated by the
needs of the market and given to a passive population which accepts
it—what is marketed is art that is non-challenging and
formally incoherent, but which serves its purpose of giving the
audience leisure and something to watch. It helps serve the
oppression of the population by capitalism by distracting them from
their alienation. Contrarily, art for Adorno is supposed to be
subjective, challenging, and oriented against the oppressiveness of
the power structure. He claimed that kitsch is
parody of
catharsis, and a parody of
aesthetic experience.
Broch called kitsch “the evil within the
value-system of art”—that is, if true art is “good,”
kitsch is “evil.” While art was creative, Broch held that kitsch
depended solely on plundering creative art by adopting formulas
that seek to imitate it, limiting itself to conventions and
demanding a totalitarianism of those recognizable conventions. To
him, kitsch was not the same as bad art; it formed a system of its
own. He argued that kitsch involved trying to achieve “beauty”
instead of “truth” and that any attempt to make something beautiful
would lead to kitsch.
Greenberg held similar views; believing that the
avant-garde
arose in order to defend
aesthetic standards from the
decline of taste involved in consumer society, and seeing kitsch
and art as opposites. He outlined this in his essay “Avant-Garde
and Kitsch.” One of his more controversial claims was that kitsch
was equivalent to
Academic
art: “All kitsch is academic, and conversely, all that is
academic is kitsch.” He argued this based on the fact that Academic
art, such as that in the 19th century, was heavily centered in
rules and formulations that were taught and tried to make art into
something learnable and easily expressible. He later came to
withdraw from his position of equating the two, as it became
heavily criticized. While it is true that some Academic art might
have been kitsch, not all of it is, and not all kitsch is
academic.
Other theorists over time have also linked kitsch
to
totalitarianism. The
Czech
writer
Milan
Kundera, in his book
The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1984), defined it as “the
absolute denial of shit.” He wrote that kitsch functions by
excluding from view everything that humans find difficult to come
to terms with, offering instead a sanitised view of the world in
which “all answers are given in advance and preclude any
questions.”
In its desire to paper over the complexities and
contradictions of real life, kitsch, Kundera suggested, is
intimately linked with totalitarianism. In a healthy
democracy, diverse interest
groups compete and negotiate with one another to produce a
generally acceptable
consensus; by contrast,
“everything that infringes on kitsch,” including
individualism, doubt, and
irony, “must be banished
for life” in order for kitsch to survive. Therefore, Kundera wrote,
“Whenever a single political movement corners power we find
ourselves in the realm of totalitarian kitsch.”
For Kundera, “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.”
Academic art
Nineteenth century
academic art
is still often seen as kitsch, though this view is coming under
attack from modern critics. Broch argued that the genesis of kitsch
was in
Romanticism,
which wasn’t kitsch itself but which opened the door for kitsch
taste, by emphasizing the need for expressive and evocative art
work. Academic art, which continued this tradition of Romanticism,
has a twofold reason for its association with kitsch.
It is not that it was found to be
accessible—in fact, it was under its reign that the
difference between
high art and low
art was first defined by intellectuals. Academic art strove towards
remaining in a tradition rooted in the aesthetic and intellectual
experience. Intellectual and aesthetic qualities of the work were
certainly there—good examples of academic art were even
admired by the avant-garde artists who would rebel against it.
There was some critique, however, that in being “too beautiful” and
democratic it made art look easy, non-involving and
superficial.
Many academic artists tried to use subjects from
low art and ennoble them as high art by subjecting them to interest
in the inherent qualities of form and beauty, trying to
democratize the art world. In
England,
certain academics even advocated that the artist should work for
the marketplace. In some sense the goals of democratization
succeeded, and the society was flooded with Academic art, the
public lining up to see art exhibitions as they do to see movies
today.
Literacy in art
became widespread, as did the practice of art making, and there was
a blurring between
high and
low
culture. This often led to poorly made or poorly conceived
artworks being accepted as high art. Often art which was found to
be kitsch showed technical talent, such as in creating accurate
representations, but lacked good taste.
Secondly, the subjects and images presented in
academic art, though original in their first expression, were
disseminated to the public in the form of prints and
postcards—which was
often actively encouraged by the artists—and these images
were endlessly copied in kitschified form until they became well
known
clichés.
The avant-garde reacted to these developments by
separating itself from the aspects of art such as pictorial
representation and harmony that were appreciated by the public, in
order to make a stand for the importance of the aesthetic. Many
modern critics try not to pigeonhole academic art into the kitsch
side of the art/kitsch
dichotomy, recognizing its
historical role in the genesis of both the avant-garde and
kitsch.
Postmodernism
With the emergence of
Postmodernism
in the 1980s, the borders between kitsch and high art became
blurred again. One development was the approval of what is called
“
camp taste.”
Camp refers to an ironic appreciation of that which might otherwise
be considered corny, such as singer/dancer
Carmen
Miranda with her tutti-frutti hats, or otherwise kitsch, such
as popular culture events which are particularly dated or
inappropriately serious, such as the low-budget science fiction
movies of the 1950s and 60s. “
Camp” is
derived from the
French
slang term camper, which
means “to pose in an exaggerated fashion.”
Susan Sontag
argued in her 1964
Notes
on “Camp” that camp was an attraction to the human qualities
which expressed themselves in “failed attempts at seriousness,” the
qualities of having a particular and unique style and of reflecting
the sensibilities of the era. It involved an aesthetic of artifice
rather than of nature. Indeed, hard-line supporters of camp culture
have long insisted that “camp is a lie that dares to tell the
truth.”
Much of
Pop art attempted
to incorporate images from popular culture and kitsch; artists were
able to maintain legitimacy by saying they were “quoting” imagery
to make conceptual points, usually with the appropriation being
ironic. In
Italy, a movement
arose called the
Nuovi Nuovi
(“new new”), which took a different route: instead of quoting
kitsch in an ironic stance, it founded itself in a
primitivism which embraced
the ugliness and garishness, emulating it as a sort of
anti-aesthetic.
Conceptual
art and deconstruction posed as interesting challenges,
because, like kitsch, they downplayed the formal structure of the
artwork in favor of elements which enter it by relating to other
spheres of life.
Despite this, many in the art world continue to
have an adherence to some sense of the dichotomy between art and
kitsch, excluding all sentimental and
realistic art from being
considered seriously. This has come under attack by critics who
argue for a reappreciation of Academic art and traditional
figurative painting, without the concern for it appearing
innovative or new. As in the surreal and figurative paintings of
Lawrence
Hollien. A different tactic is taken by the
Norwegian artist
Odd
Nerdrum, who composed a
manifesto entitled “
On Kitsch,”
where he makes a point of declaring himself a Kitsch painter rather
than an artist, even though very few critics would actually think
of his artwork as kitsch.
In any case, whatever difficulty there is in
defining its boundaries with art, the word “kitsch” is still in
common usage to label anything felt in bad taste.
The concept of the “kitsch-man”
The term “kitsch-man” (or Kitschmensch, coined by
Broch) refers to an individual who compulsively metamorphoses all
of his aesthetic experiences into kitsch, regardless of whether the
work of art concerned is good or bad. Whenever the kitsch-man
contemplates art, it always involves the adoption of a particular
viewpoint, a perspective swamped with the vicarious and the
sentimental. When the kitsch-man encounters a genuine artwork and
its kitsch replica (e.g. a twelve-inch copy of
Michaelangelo’s
pieta in plaster) the
response elicited will be no different. Pathos is projected onto
genuine works of art, transforming art from the past into objects
of sentimentality. Even nature is not immune to kitsch under the
apprehension of the kitsch-man, in particular those components of
nature that have endured kitsch portrayals to the extent that they
have become hackneyed. A sunset, for example, could too closely
resemble its representation in cheap paintings or “romantic” films;
here the kitsch-man makes natural occurrences seem “false.”
Examples
One of the first painters that served as a
demonstrative example of kitsch is the
Hungarian Charles
Roka. Despised by the art world, he was nevertheless loved by
the people. He became famous for his numerous variations of the
Gipsy
Girl, where he painted exotic looking
Gypsies in
a
pin-up style,
and for sentimental portraits of children with their pet
dogs.
A modern example of a painter considered by most
art critics and academics to be producing kitsch, but who has a
loyal following that generally does not claim artistic
sophistication, is the commercially successful
American
Thomas
Kinkade, who brands himself the “Painter of Light™” and claims
to be the United States’ “most collected living artist.” Kinkade
paints scenes of stone cottages, lighthouses, cobble stone streets,
rustic villages, and other vistas, with emphasis on the glittery
ornamentation in the play of light and natural foliage. His work is
meant to be sentimental, patriotic, quaint, spiritual, and
inspirational. In the United Kingdom the artist
Maggi
Hambling is considered by many to be an unconscious exponent of
kitsch, with the coffin-like Oscar Wilde memorial and the
controversial Scallop sculpture (however, Hambling’s portraits of
the dying
Henrietta
Moraes escape such critical accusation). Perhaps the closest
British equivalent of Kinkade is the kitsch painter
Jack
Vettriano.
Velvet
paintings, which are widely sold in rural U.S. usually have
kitsch themes. They often depict images of
Elvis
Presley,
Dale
Earnhardt,
John Wayne,
Jesus,
Native Americans, and
Cowboys. One
example of a kitsch velvet painting features an 18-wheel truck
driving through the night with a ghostly image of Jesus in the sky
watching protectively from above.
Some kitsch items, typically small statuettes,
deviate from the original concept, such as a
Santa Claus
in biker garb riding a chopper. Commonly, they can also be found
bearing unrelated symbols, such as the motorcycle Santa wearing
Green Bay Packers colors and logo.
The musicians whose work may be considered kitsch
are
Stockholm
Syndrome,
Creed,
Kid Rock,
Nickelback,
Modern
Error, and
Telekinesis
for Cats. The
Eurovision
Song Contest is considered by some to be an example of kitsch.
One could also consider such music to be examples of the closely
related concept of
camp.
Las
Vegas is considered by many the pinnacle of architectural
kitsch in the world, and may be used as good example of how luxury
and kitsch can be together. 1959 Cadillacs also seem to illustrate
this. The plastic
pink
flamingo lawn icon, popularized in the 1950s, has been reviled
as kitschy bad taste or revered as retro cool.
These are only strong, defining examples of what
art purists refer to as kitsch—many would say that it
saturates all popular culture, and some would equate popular
culture and kitsch as being one and the same; as
Clement
Greenberg remarked, kitsch is “all that is spurious in the life
of our times" (from "Avantgarde and Kitsch", in Greenberg
1989).
Quotations
- “Kitsch is mechanical and operates by formulas. Kitsch is
vicarious experience and faked sensations. Kitsch changes according
to style, but remains always the same. Kitsch is the epitome of all
that is spurious in the life of our times.”—Clement
Greenberg, “Avant-Garde
and Kitsch,” 1939.
- “The more romantic a work of art, or a landscape, the quicker
its repetitions are perceived as kitsch or ‘slush.’ ”
—Arthur
Koestler, 1949
- “[K]itsch is the absolute denial of shit, in both the literal
and figurative senses of the word; kitsch excludes everything from
its purview which is essentially unacceptable in human
existence.”—Milan
Kundera, 1984
- “Kitsch is the expression of passion at all levels, and not the
servant of truth. It keeps relative to religion and truth...Truth,
kitsch leaves for (modern) art. In kitsch skill is the important
criteria...Kitsch serves life and seeks the individual.” Odd Nerdrum,
“Kitsch—The Difficult Choice,” 1998.
- “I think that what’s truly vulgar is kitsch, that means the
lack of technical awareness.”—Daniele
Luttazzi, 1 February 2001 interview at L’Espresso.
- “The absence of kitsch makes life
unbearable”—Friedensreich
Hundertwasser
- “They say that romance is back in fashion, they say that kitsch
is back in fashion.”— (Brian Molko,
during live performance of the song “Kitsch Object”)
See also
Notes
References and further reading
- Adorno, Theodor (2001). The Culture Industry. Routledge. ISBN
0-415-25380-2
- Broch, Hermann (2003). Geist and Zeitgeist: The Spirit in an
Unspiritual Age. Counterpoint Press. ISBN 1-58243-168-X
- 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 .
- Greenberg, Clement (1978). Art and Culture. Beacon Press. ISBN
0-8070-6681-8
- Kulka, Tomas (1996). Kitsch and Art. Pennsylvania State Univ
Pr. ISBN 0-271-01594-2
- Kundera, Milan (1999). The Unbearable Lightness of Being: A
Novel. (Perennial. ISBN 0-06-093213-9
- Moles, Abraham (nouvelle édition 1977). Psychologie du Kitsch:
L’art du Bonheur, Denoël-Gonthier
- Odd Nerdrum (Editor) (2001). On Kitsch. Distributed Art
Publishers. ISBN 82-489-0123-8
- Olalquiaga, Celeste (2002). The Artificial Kingdom: On the
Kitsch Experience. Univ. of Minnesota ISBN 0-8166-4117-X
- Richter, Gerd, (1972). Kitsch-Lexicon, Bertelsmann
Lexicon-Verlag. ISBN 3-570-03148-9
- Ward, Peter (1994). Kitsch in Sync: A Consumer’s Guide to Bad
Taste, Plexus Publishing. ISBN 0-85965-152-5
kitschy in Bulgarian: Кич
kitschy in Catalan: Kitsch
kitschy in Czech: Kýč
kitschy in German: Kitsch
kitschy in Spanish: Kitsch
kitschy in French: Kitsch
kitschy in Ido: Kitsch
kitschy in Italian: Kitsch
kitschy in Hebrew: קיטש
kitschy in Hungarian: Giccs
kitschy in Dutch: Kitsch
kitschy in Japanese: キッチュ
kitschy in Norwegian: Kitsch
kitschy in Polish: Kicz
kitschy in Portuguese: Kitsch
kitschy in Russian: Китч
kitschy in Slovak: Gýč
kitschy in Serbian: Кич
kitschy in Finnish: Kitsch
kitschy in Swedish: Kitsch
kitschy in Turkish: Kitsch