Decadent art famously values artifice over nature and sophistication over simplicity. It rejects the idea that art must be "useful" or spiritually elevating.
Friedrich Nietzsche , Oscar Wilde, Thomas Hardy, and Stéphane Mallarmé. Decadent Subjects: The Idea of Decadence in Art...
Charles Bernheimer’s explores decadence as a "stimulant that bends thought out of shape," transforming it from a vague label into a rigorous critical concept . Rather than seeing it as a concrete historical "agent," Bernheimer frames decadence as a complex interplay between cultural activity and a "pleasurably perverse relation to the world" during the European fin de siècle . Core Themes and Concepts Decadent art famously values artifice over nature and
Gustave Moreau, known for his jewel-like, dreamlike depictions of mythological figures. Figures like Salomé , the Sphinx, and the
Figures like Salomé , the Sphinx, and the Medusa became central motifs, representing both a fascination with and a fear of shifting gender relations at the turn of the century. Key Figures Explored
Bernheimer rereads several major thinkers and artists to rediscover the "dynamics of the decadent":