Art + Architecture + Design
On Ugliness by Umberto Eco
Just read a great review of Eco’s "On Ugliness" in the Telegraph. I confess a weakness for Eco’s essays and fiction, but Brian Dillon pulls no punches in his attempt to put Eco into historical place. Worth the read, made me want ot read him again:
"By the Romantic period, the grotesque and the sublime were established as aesthetic categories, and the decadents of the late 19th century loved nothing more than a deathly consumptive countenance. In the wake of 20th-century avant-gardes, unadulterated beauty looks saccharine, immature or kitsch. We seduce only with our faults, wrote Baudrillard. Or as Johnny Rotten put it: there’s nothing so boring as a pretty face."
read the rest after the jump HERE
| Print article | This entry was posted by Staff on December 11, 2007 at 11:44 am, and is filed under Books, Fashion, Literature, Philosophy. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed. |
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