“You can’t have your kitsch and your good taste, too.”
Ron English (1959) American artist
Ron English's Fauxlosophy (2016)
Source: Running Dog
“You can’t have your kitsch and your good taste, too.”
Ron English (1959) American artist
Ron English's Fauxlosophy (2016)
Yves Klein (1928–1962) French artist
I wish to play with human feeling, with its 'morbidity' in a cold and ferocious manner. Only very recently I have become a sort of gravedigger of art (oddly enough, I am using the very terms of my enemies). Some of my latest works have been coffins and tombs. During the same time I succeeded in painting with fire, using particularly powerful and searing gas flames, some of them measuring three to four meters high. I use these to bathe the surface of the painting in such a way that it registered the spontaneous trace of fire.
Quote from Klein's 'Chelsea Hotel Manifesto', 1961; from the Yves Klein Archives - archived from the original on 15 January 2013; as cited on Wikipedia: Yves Klein
After the opening of his unsuccessful exhibition at Leo Castelli's Gallery, New York 1961, Klein stayed with Rotraut Uecker (fr) at the Chelsea Hotel for the duration of the exhibition. While there, he wrote the 'Chelsea Hotel Manifesto', a proclamation of the 'multiplicity of new possibilities'
1960 -1964
“The boundary between art and kitsch was negotiable, even porous.”
Alastair Reynolds book Blue Remembered Earth
Source: Blue Remembered Earth (2012), Chapter 7 (p. 162)
John Waters (1946) American filmmaker, actor, comedian and writer
Books, Shock Value: A Tasteful Book About Bad Taste (1981)
Pauline Kael book State of the Art
"A Bad Dream/A Masterpiece," review of The Moon in the Gutter (1983-09-19), p. 48.
State of the Art (1985)
“You know things have gone bad when military marches pass for pop music.”
James Patterson (1947) American author
Source: Witch & Wizard
“I'm pop-corn
I'm a hell storm
Yeah, I'm in the hands of faith
I’m so bad words
Now what you heard?”
Anastacia (1968) American singer-songwriter
Dark White Girl
Resurrection (2014)
“Pop art is the inedible raised to the unspeakable.”
Leonard Baskin (1922–2000) American sculptor
Leonard Baskin, Publishers Weekly (5 April 1965).