Postmodernism encompasses a wide range of artistic movements and styles. In visual arts,
pop art,
conceptual art,
feminist art,
video art,
minimalism, and
neo-expressionism are among the approaches recognized as postmodern. The label extends to diverse musical genres and artists:
John Cage,
Madonna, and
punk rock all meet postmodern definitions. Literature, film, architecture, theater, fashion, dance, and many other creative disciplines saw postmodern expression. As an example,
Andy Warhol's pop art across multiple mediums challenged traditional distinctions between high and low culture, and blurred the lines between fine art and commercial design. His work, exemplified by the iconic ''
Campbell's Soup Cans'' series during the 1960s, brought the postmodernist sensibility to mainstream attention. Criticism of postmodernist movements in the arts include objections to departure from beauty, the reliance on language for the art to have meaning, a lack of coherence or comprehensibility, deviation from clear structure, and consistent use of dark and negative themes.
Architecture (1982) by
Michael Graves, considered the first built example of postmodern architecture in a tall building and "a seminal Postmodern work" near
Newtown Square, PA by alumnus of the Academy architect
Robert Venturi Scholarship regarding postmodernism and architecture is closely linked with the writings of critic-turned-architect
Charles Jencks, beginning with lectures in the early 1970s and his essay "The Rise of Post-Modern Architecture" from 1975. His
magnum opus, however, is the book
The Language of Post-Modern Architecture, first published in 1977, and since running to seven editions (in which he famously wrote: "Modern architecture died in St. Louis, Missouri, on 15 July 1972 at 3:32 p.m. (or thereabouts) when the infamous
Pruitt–Igoe scheme, or rather several of its slab blocks, were given the final coup de grâce by dynamite."). Jencks makes the point that postmodernism (like modernism) varies for each field of art, and that for architecture it is not just a reaction to modernism but what he terms
double coding: "Double Coding: the combination of Modern techniques with something else (usually traditional building) in order for architecture to communicate with the public and a concerned minority, usually other architects." In their book, "Revisiting Postmodernism",
Terry Farrell and Adam Furman argue that postmodernism brought a more joyous and sensual experience to the culture, particularly in architecture. For instance, in response to the modernist slogan of
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe that "less is more", the postmodernist Robert Venturi rejoined that "less is a bore".
Dance The term "postmodern dance" is most strongly associated with the
Judson Dance Theater, located in New York's
Greenwich Village during the 1960s and 1970s. Perhaps its most important principle is taken from the composer
John Cage's efforts to break down the distinction between art and life, developed in particular by the American dancer and choreographer
Merce Cunningham, Cage's partner.
Anna Halprin's San Francisco Dancers' Workshop, established in the 1950s to explore beyond the technical constraints of modern dance, pioneered ideas later developed at Judson; Halprin,
Simone Forti, and
Yvonne Rainer are considered "giants of the field". The Judson collective included trained dancers, visual artists, filmmakers, writers, and composers, exchanging approaches, and critiquing traditional dance, with a focus "more on the intellectual process of creating dance than the end result". The end of the 1970s saw a distancing from this analytical postmodern dance, and a return to the expression of meaning. In the 1980s and 1990s, dance began to incorporate other typically postmodern features such as the mixing of genres, challenging high–low cultural distinctions, and incorporating a political dimension.
Film Postmodern film aims to subvert the mainstream
conventions of
narrative structure and
characterization, and to test the audience's
suspension of disbelief. Typically, such films also break down the cultural divide between
high and
low art and often upend typical portrayals of
gender,
race,
class,
genre, and
time with the goal of creating something that does not abide by traditional narrative expression. Certain key characteristics are used to separate the postmodern from modernist cinema and traditional narrative film. One is an extensive use of
homage or
pastiche, imitating the style or character of other artistic works. A second is
meta-reference or self-reference, highlighting the relation of the image to other images in media and not to any kind of external reality.
Ridley Scott's
Blade Runner (1982) has been widely studied as a prime example of postmodernism. The setting is a future
dystopia where "replicants", enhanced
android workers nearly indistinguishable from humans, are hunted down when they escape from their jobs. The film blurs boundaries between genres and cultures, and fuses disparate styles and periods: futuristic visuals "mingle with drab 1940s clothes and offices, punk rock hairstyles, pop Egyptian styles and oriental culture." The film can also be seen as an example of major studios using the "mystique and cachet of the term 'postmodern' as a sales pitch", resulting in
Hollywood movies that "demonstrate all the postmodern characteristics".
Literature In 1971, the American literary theorist
Ihab Hassan made "postmodernism" popular in literary studies with his influential book,
The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature. According to scholar David Herwitz, American writers such as
John Barth (who had controversially declared that the novel was "exhausted" as a genre),
Donald Barthelme, and
Thomas Pynchon responded in various ways to the stylistic innovations of
Finnegans Wake and the late work of
Samuel Beckett. Postmodern literature often calls attention to issues regarding its own complicated connection to reality. The postmodern novel plays with language, twisted plots, multiple narrators, and unresolved endings, unsettling the conventional idea of the novel as faithfully reflecting the world. In
Postmodernist Fiction (1987),
Brian McHale details the shift from modernism to postmodernism, arguing that postmodernist works developed out of modernism, moving from concern with questions about the nature and limits of knowledge about one's "world" ("
epistemological dominant") to concern with questions of modes of being and existence in relation to "different kinds of worlds" ("
ontological dominant"). McHale's "What Was Postmodernism?" (2007) follows
Raymond Federman's lead in now using the past tense when discussing postmodernism. Others argue that postmodernism in literature utilizes compositional and semantic practices such as inclusivity, intentional indiscrimination, nonselection, and "logical impossibility."
Music Postmodern influence extends across all areas of music; its accessibility to a general audience requires an understanding of references, irony, and pastiche that varies widely between artists and their works. In
popular music,
Madonna,
David Bowie, and
Talking Heads have been singled out by critics and scholars as postmodern icons. The belief that
art music – serious, classical music – holds higher cultural and technical value than
folk and popular traditions, lost influence under postmodern analysis, as musical hybrids and crossovers attracted scholarly attention. Across musical traditions, postmodernism can be identified through several core characteristics: genre mixing; irony, humor, and self-parody; "surface" exploration with less concern for formal structure than in modernist approaches; and a return to tonality. In the 1960s, composers such as
Henryk Górecki and
Philip Glass reacted to the perceived elitism and dissonant sound of atonal academic modernism by producing music with simple textures and relatively consonant harmonies, whilst others, most notably
John Cage challenged the modernist account of structure by including the contingent in the structure of his compositions themselves. In 2023, music critic Andy Cush described Talking Heads as "New York art-punks" whose "blend of nervy postmodernism and undeniable groove made them one of the defining rock bands of the late 1970s and '80s." Media theorist
Dick Hebdige, examining the "
Road to Nowhere" music video in 1989, said the group "draw eclectically on a wide range of visual and aural sources to create a distinctive pastiche or hybrid 'house style' which they have used since their formation in the mid-1970s deliberately to stretch received (industrial) definitions of what rock/pop/video/Art/performance/audience are", calling them "a properly postmodernist band." According to lead vocalist/guitarist/songwriter
David Byrne, commenting in 2011, "Anything could be mixed and matched – or
mashed up, as is said today – and anything was fair game for inspiration." Avant-garde academics labelled American singer Madonna a "personification of the postmodern" and created a sub-discipline of
cultural studies known as
Madonna studies. Her self-aware constructs of gender and identity, and classic film references in music videos for "
Material Girl" (1984) and "
Express Yourself" (1989), made her a favorite of cultural theorists, who saw her as "enacting postmodernist models of subjectivity." Madonna was seen to embody fragmentation, pastiche, retrospection, anti-foundationalism, and de-differentiation; her "subversion of the subversion of the subversion of the
male gaze" in the "Material Girl" video was analyzed. Sculptor
Claes Oldenberg, at the forefront of the
pop art movement, declared in 1961: "I am for an art that is political-erotical-mystical … I am for an art that embroils itself with everyday crap and still comes out on top." That year, he opened
The Store in a
dime store area of
New York's Lower East Side, where he blurred the line between art and commerce by producing and selling brightly painted plaster replicas of hamburgers and cans of soda, dresses, underwear, and other everyday objects: "Museum in b[ourgeois] concept equals store in mine". == In philosophy ==