Title: POSTMODERNISM
1This is not a PowerPoint Presentation on
Postmodernism
Jeff Haig, The Treachery of Professors
2POSTMODERNISM
Rene Magritte, The Treachery of Images
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5The (Post)Modern Crisis
- Things fall apart the centre cannot hold
- Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
- The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
- The ceremony of innocence is drowned
- The best lack all convictions, while the worst
- Are full of passionate intensity.
-
- William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming (1920)
6Modernism and Postmodernism
- Both styles are FORMALIST as much concerned with
how a story is told, as the story itself. Both
feature fragmentation, self-referentiality,
irony, doubling and pastiche.
7Modernism and Postmodernism
- Postmodernism has many different definitions,
depending on which art is being discussed. Pomo
is different in architecture, for instance, than
it is in film.
8POSTMODERNISM
Postmodernism unlike Modernism, Postmodernism
starts from the assumption that grand utopias are
impossible. It accepts that reality is fragmented
and that personal identity is an unstable
quantity transmitted by a variety of cultural
factors. Postmodernism advocates an irreverent,
playful treatment of one's own identity, and a
liberal society. http//www.ffotogallery.org/th-e
du/glossary.htm
9POSTMODERNISM
Some features of postmodern styles ?Nostalgia
and retro styles, recycling earlier genres and
styles in new contexts (film/TV genres, images,
typography, colors, clothing and hair styles,
advertising images) ?"...the disappearance of a
sense of history, the way in which our entire
contemporary social system has little by little
begun to lose its capacity to retain its own
past, has begun to live in a perpetual present
and in a perpetual change that obliterates
traditions of the kind which all earlier social
formations have had in one way or another to
preserve... The information function of the media
would thus be to help us to forget, to serve as
the very agents and mechanisms of our historical
amnesia" (Jameson). ?Culture on Fast Forward
Time and history replaced by speed, futureness,
accelerated obsolescence.
10TRADITIONAL
POSTMODERN SINGLE NARRATIVE MULTIPLE
NARRATIVES (Single Coding) (Double
coding) ENCLOSED OPEN UNSELFCONSCIOUS SEL
FCONSCIOUS UNSELFREFERENTIAL SELFREFERENTIAL OB
JECTIVE SUBJECTIVE BELIEF IN VALUES
DISBELIEF IN VALUES (SINCERE) (IRONIC)
11REALIST At best Meaningful, engrossing, moving
At worst Deceptive, sentimental
POSTMODERN At best Playful, curious,
startling At worst Detached, nihilistic,
sexist, despairing, homophobic, racist
12Double Coding Film
- Knight's Tale Medieval setting, Queen's We Will
Rock You song - Moulin Rouge Victorian Paris setting, Smells
Like Teen Spirit song - Run Lola Run, Sliding Doors Playing with
different possible scenarios - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Being John
Malkovich - Reality is fragmented, memory unreliable, past
and present indistinguishable, - identity uncertain
- Shrek Princess fights like martial-artist,
cross-references to Disney
13Double Coding
Britney Both Innocent and Not That Innocent
Madonna Both Virgin and Not-Virgin
14Salvador Dali, The Persistence of Memory
Matt Groening, The Persistence of the Simpsons
15Yo Mama's Last Supper Renee Cox (1996)
16Postmodernism
Andy Warhol, Van Heusen (Ronald Reagan), 1985
Andy Warhol, Campbells Soup, 1968
17Postmodernism
Roy Lichtenstein, Untitled, 1968
Charles Ray, Untitled, 1991
18(No Transcript)
19 POSTMODERN NO REALITY, ONLY PERCEPTIONS,
COPIES (SIMULACRA) NO SUSPENSION OF
DISBELIEF PAST AND PRESENT SAME MASS-PRODU
CED INDIVIDUALISM (These jeans are you!)
TRADITIONAL (REALIST) REALITY SUSPENSION OF
DISBELIEF HISTORY INDIVIDUALISM
SIMULACRA JEAN BEAUDRILLARD
Paris, Las Vegas
20The Self-Referential Text
- But pardon, and gentles all,The flat unraised
spirits that have daredOn this unworthy scaffold
to bring forthSo great an object can this
cockpit holdThe vasty fields of France? or may
we cramWithin this wooden O the very
casquesThat did affright the air at
Agincourt?O, pardon! since a crooked figure
mayAttest in little place a millionAnd let us,
ciphers to this great accompt,On your imaginary
forces work. - -- Shakespeare, Henry V
21Self-Referentiality
- Lisa Dont worry, Bart. It seems like every
week something odd happens to the Simpsons. My
advice is to ride it out, make the occasional
smart-aleck quip, and by next week, well be back
to where we started from, ready for another wacky
adventure. - Homer Loves Flanders, The Simpsons
22Self-Referentiality
- Seinfeld A sitcom in which nothing happens,
about a man named Jerry Seinfeld, played by Jerry
Seinfeld, who writes a sitcom in which nothing
happens.
23The Postmodern Hero
- Postmodern heroes in realist narratives
24Double-Coding (Doubling)
- Double-coding is the practice of creating a work
of art that speaks to two different audiences in
different ways. - For example, Animaniacs, Shrek, Toy Story and
the classic Bugs Bunny cartoons are double-coded
- they have many references that a child wont
get but will amuse an adult.
25Double-Coding (Doubling)
- Other examples are things such as hip-hop, which
will use an old song as the basis for the new
one, and the Sprite ad showing an athlete who
both sells the product, and pops up top deny
selling the product.
Geico Tiny House ad
26Pastiche
- Can mean either a (satirical) imitation of
another work, or a hodge-podge of different
styles all thrown together in one work. - Family Guy is often a pastiche of other TV, film
and musical genres or specific work, to the
extent that any given episode may have no other
meaning.
27Pastiche
- Richard Hamilton, "Just What Is It That Makes
Today's Home So Different, So Appealing? 1956
28Kitsch
- theoristshave 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. His argument was 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. - (wikipedia.org)
29Kitsch
Margaret Keane, Wistful, 1978
30Margaret Keane
31Kitsch
32Kitsch
Anne Geddes (1956-)
33Kitsch
LOL Cats
34(No Transcript)
35Collectible Plates
36Collectible Figurines
37(No Transcript)
38Kitsch Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons, Michael and Bubbles, 1988 Sold for
5.6m in 1991.
Jeff Koons, Ushering in Banality, 1988
39Kitsch Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons, Elvis, 2003
Jeff Koons, Balloon Dog (Yellow), 1994-2000
40Kitsch Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons, Pink Panther, 1988 Sold for 1.8m
Jeff Koons, Puppy, 2000
41Kitsch Thomas Kinkade
Thomas Kinkade, Lamplight Lane, 1999
42Mark Ryden
Sophia's Mercurial Waters
43Mark Ryden
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
44Mark Ryden
The Meat Train
45Mark Ryden
Inside Susan (1997)
46Mark Ryden
Saint Barbie
47Disneyland exists in order to hide that it is
the "real" country, all of "real" America that is
Disneyland.... Disneyland is presented as
imaginary in order to make us believe that the
rest is real, whereas all of Los Angeles and the
America that surrounds it are no longer real, but
belong to the hyperreal order and to the order of
simulation. Jean Baudrillard-- Simulacra and
Simulation p. 12-13
Epcot Center