Home > Work > Notes on Camp
1 " Camp sees everything in quotation marks. It's not a lamp, but a 'lamp'; not a woman, but a 'woman'. "
― Susan Sontag , Notes on Camp
2 " Time liberates the work of art from moral relevance, delivering it over to the Camp sensibility . . . Another effect: time contracts the sphere of banality. (Banality is, strictly speaking, always a category of the contemporary.) What was banal can, with the passage of time, become fantastic. "
3 " Art Nouveau objects, typically, convert one thing into something else: the lighting fixtures in the form of flowering plants, the living room which is really a grotto. A remarkable example: the Paris Métro entrances designed by Hector Guimard in the late 1890s in the shape of cast-iron orchid stalks. "
4 " What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine; what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine… "
5 " Camp which knows itself to be Camp ('camping') is usually less satisfying. "
6 " Gaudi's lurid and beautiful buildings in Barcelona are Camp not only because of their style but because they reveal — most notably in the Cathedral of the Sagrada Familia — the ambition on the part of one man to do what it takes a generation, a whole culture to accomplish. "
7 " The connoisseur of Camp has found more ingenious pleasures. Not in Latin poetry and rare wines and velvet jackets, but in the coarsest, commonest pleasures, in the arts of the masses. "
8 " To name a sensibility, to draw its contours and to recount its history, requires a deep sympathy modified by revulsion. "
9 " Camp sees everything in quotation marks. It's not a lamp, but a "lamp"; not a woman, but a "woman." To perceive Camp in objects and persons is to understand Being-as-Playing-a-Role. It is the farthest extension, in sensibility, of the metaphor of life as theater. "
10 " In naïve, or pure, Camp, the essential element is seriousness, a seriousness that fails. Of course, not all seriousness that fails can be redeemed as Camp. Only that which has the proper mixture of the exaggerated, the fantastic, the passionate, and the naïve. "
11 " When something is just bad (rather than Camp), it's often because it is too mediocre in its ambition. "
12 " Not all homosexuals have Camp taste. But homosexuals, by and large, constitute the vanguard –and the most articulate audience– of Camp. "