Met Embraces Costume Institute 'Camp' for 2019 Blockbuster Show



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How does one follow the most-visited Costume Institute show in the history of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, one of the top three most-visited exhibits of all, one that grappled with the sacred issues of God, biblical allusion and religious ornamentation? How does one top "Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination"?

With, apparently, an about-face to the profane.

On Tuesday, the museum announced its major Costume Institute exhibition for 2019: "Camp: Notes on Fashion," a play on Susan Sontag's 1964 essay "Notes on 'Camp,'" the 58-point treatise that arguably brought the concept into the mainstream and helped make Sontag a literary celebrity. "The essence of Camp is its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration," she wrote in Partisan Review, at a time when the boundary between elite art and mass culture was disintegrating.

Cut to 2018. "We are going through an extreme camp moment, and it felt very much at the point of view of the cultural world, especially for marginalized cultures, Said Andrew Bolton, the Curator in charge of the Costume Institute, who said he had been exploring the idea for the last few years. "Whether it's pop camp, queer camp, high camp or political camp – Trump is a very camp figure – I think it's very timely."

Correction:

An earlier version of a picture captioning with this article, using information from the Met, misidentified the designer for the "Too Much Irony!" Together. It is Moschino, not Virgil Abloh for Off-White.

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