The painter of light has entered a dark period. Thomas Kinkade, the self-proclaimed (and trademarked) Painter of Light™, is beset with legal troubles. Several years ago, art gallery owners successfully sued his Kinkade’s Media Arts Group for millions after it was revealed that he and company officials invoked God and their “higher calling” to hide the financial risks of the investments.
The settlement put such a strain on his company that earlier this month, he filed for bankruptcy protection from his hundreds of other creditors. Adding to his woes, the artist was arrested on a DUI charge outside his home in Carmel, California.
What sets this news apart from similarly tragic human interest stories is that Kinkade is one of the most financially successful artists in the world. As his website proclaims, Kinkade is “America’s most collected living artist.” He has sold over ten million works and his art or licensed product (which includes wallpaper, tableware, stationary, and La-Z-Boy chairs and sofas) is estimated to be in one in ten homes in the United States. He has even “inspired” a novel (Cape Light), a TV-movie (“Home for Christmas”), and planned communities (“The Gates of Coeur d’Alene” in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and “The Village at Hiddenbrooke” outside of San Francisco, and others).
His admirers are legion, especially among evangelical Christians. As an evangelical, I was aware that he was popular but had no idea how much religious devotion he inspired until I expressed my disapproval of the artist’s oeuvre.
“Suppose you had never heard of Kincaid and you saw one of his paintings in a respectable art gallery,” responded my friend Steve. “Suppose you found out that Kincaid cut off his ear and died a long time ago without any money. Can you say with certainty that your opinion of his aesthetics would be the same?”
The interesting assumption behind my friend’s question is that the reason that Kinkade’s paintings are critically reviled is because the painter is rich, popular, and out of favor with the New York art world cognoscenti. (And has both ears.)
No doubt many people who would praise a rich, popular, establishment-approved hack like Andy Warhol despise Kinkade for being a rich, popular, evangelical-approved hack. But I think a solid case against Kinkade can be made on purely aesthetic criteria, especially when you compare his work to a superior artist.
Consider two works of on similar themes. Both are images of the Water Tower in Chicago. Both have similar elements—a carriage, trees, people with umbrellas. Indeed, the paintings are almost identical in theme and content, if not in style.
And yet the first is unquestionably technically superior. The use of texture and shadow puts the viewer within the picture. You can feel the chill of the cold Chicago wind and hear the sounds of the serene yet bustling city.
In contrast, the second painting distances the viewer from the scene. Artificial light oozes out from every window and the background lights resemble a brushfire, presenting a faux golden glow that is unrealistic and dull. And the carriage, though more sharply drawn than in the first painting, is two-dimensional and distracting; it could have been added in using Photoshop rather than daubs of paint. While the first work is worthy of gracing a museum wall, the second is only worthy of garnishing a greeting card.
As you could probably guess, the second painting is by Thomas Kinkade, circa 2004.
But what about the first painting, the more aesthetically superior rendition of the Water Tower? It too is by Thomas Kinkade. He painted it in 1998.
This is what makes Thomas Kinkade exasperating: He is both a creator of some of the most inspiring paintings of the past two decades and a producer of some of the worst schlock ever manufactured by a talented artist.
Both the harshest critics and the keenest admirers of Kinkade’s work, however, tend to be unfamiliar with his more meritable paintings. But it is his oft-overlooked cityscapes and early mountain scenes that truly reveal his keen eye, technical brilliance, and aesthetic sensitivity. Take, for example, his use of various shades of red in “San Francisco, 1909.”
Or his subtle use of white light, reminiscent of the Hudson River School, in his depiction of the Yukon town of “Dawson.”
Kinkade is at his best when he captures the human side of cities, such as in “New York, Central Park at Sixth Avenue.”
But just as a baker can ruin a superb dessert by adding too much sugar, Kinkade loses the sense of a place by attempting to romanticize a scene. His “San Francisco, Late Afternoon at Union Square” perfectly captures the mood of a city street after a rain.
Yet three years later, painting the almost exact same scene, he clogs every pore with color until it loses the magic that exudes from his previous work.
The first street scene was painted to capture a very specific place, San Francisco; the second scene was painted to capture a very different place, the consumer’s living room wall.
But Kinkade is best known for his cottage and nature scenes, so it is there that the bulk of critical attention must be placed. It was nine paintings into his career that he attempted his first cottage scene. “The Blue Cottage” differs from much of the later variations on the theme because of its simplicity in its use of light and color.
But it also contains something missing from almost all of his later cottage paintings: people.
Kinkade justifies the absence of people in his picturesque scenarios because he doesn’t want to exclude any viewers from being able to step into the fantasy. “When you paint people, you limit people,” Kinkade once explained, offering the example of a hypothetical Vietnamese-American family. “Why would they want to look at a picture of a dozen white people sitting around a Thanksgiving table?”
What the artist fails to understand is that Vietnamese-Americans (as well as African-, Mexican-, Chinese-, and other hyphenated Americans) probably do not share the Anglo-American cottage fantasy. And his cottage scenes are precisely that: fantasies. Adults hang paintings of Kinkade’s paintings of cottages in their living room for the same reason that little girls put posters of unicorns and rainbows on their bedroom walls. It is a pseudo-referential nostalgia, a longing for what does not exist in reality but exists in the fantasy realm of possibility.
No other painting epitomizes this nostalgia for a place that never existed better than “Cottage by the Sea.”
As Kinkade explains, “Though this cottage doesn’t exist anywhere but in my painting, I think for many of us it represents an ideal seaside getaway. Of course, I had to paint the scene at sunset. After all, what would a seaside cottage be without a beautiful sunset to watch?” (Well, it might be dawn on the east coast, or a beautiful spring noon, or a crisp fall late afternoon.)
There is nothing wrong, or course, with fantasy or with what C.S. Lewis called Sehnsucht, the inconsolable longing in the human heart for "we know not what." What makes Kinkade’s cottage painting so dispiriting is that rather than being created to challenge or even inspire, to evoke in some way the desire for Heaven, it’s intended only to comfort. It’s sentimental.
Sentimentality, as literary critic Alan Jacobs says in a recent interview with Mars Hill Journal, encourages us to “suspend judgment and reflection in order to indulge deliberately in emotion for its own sake.” Reflection reinforces and strengthens true emotions while exposing those feelings that are shallow and disingenuous. Sentimentalists, however, try to avoid this experience of reality and try to keep people from asking questions by giving them pleasing emotions they have not earned. The shameless manipulation of our emotions, says Jacobs, is the ultimate act of cynicism.
Kinkade’s cottage fantasies offer this sort of emotional manipulation. The cottages are self-contained emotional safehouses in which the viewer can shut himself off from true emotions earned through a real encounter with reality, from the rough and sometimes harsh realities of creation, and—most importantly—from other people. The Cottage by the Sea offers a place where the viewer can enter the perfect world of Kinkade’s creation—and escape the messy world of Kinkade’s Creator.
Joe Carter is web editor of First Things
Comments:
Although Kinkade seems to think his paintings are somehow comforting, I find them creepy.
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2009/06/23/kinkade%E2%80%99s-cottage-fantasy/
I appreciate the analysis, especially your discussion of Kinkade's more serious work. It gave me an appreciation for Kinkade as an artist, something I hadn't had before.
I also, though, would like to direct your attention to an article written a couple of years ago about Kinkade by Greg Wolfe, editor of Image Journal. His piece is a longer reflection on the subject of your last few paragraphs -- the differences between art and kitsch and why sentimentality in art is not a good thing for the faith-filled artist.
http://imagejournal.org/page/journal/editorial-statements/the-painter-of-lite
Don't quit your day job.
His famous seaside cottages (but where are the Keebler elves?) seem designed to illustrate Mencken: “Nobody ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public.” Can 5 million evangelicals be wrong? Why, yes! Kinkade knew it and counted on it! I picture him losing sleep at night over some cliche he might have left out, when he really wanted to do it all. This is not honest work, and the marketing, with its various tiers of false exclusivity, is disreputable, to say the least.
Do not contrast Kinkade with Andy Warhol or other avant garde lions, but rather with American painters of a more traditional manner: Andrew Wyeth, to name a famous one, or Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper, Willard Metcalf, etc. Or better yet contrast him to the many worthy living painters working with the goal of excellence–honoring their God-given talent, not turning their art into Bubba bait.
In a nutshell: kitsch has hurt art at times, but the reflexive fear of being thought kitschy has all but destroyed it. “Kitsch” is the all-purpose sneer that has frightened generations of artists into being rebarbative and displeasing at all costs, into doing anything—ANYTHING—never to be mistaken for a Kinkade, a Norman Rockwell, take your pick.
I often wonder what the evangelicals and their "buy American" biases would think if they saw the factories in China that crank out the faux paintings,giglees, etc. where the mass produced pieces have daubs of color added after production 'by the hand of the artist'.
Kincaid employs marketing gurus, who are legendary. He couldn't have become what he is on his own. Several "product developers" of my acquaintance in the collectibles industry, who have worked with T.K. all agree that he is not the brightest tube of paint in the tackle box!
Wonderful article! I am going to read the archived article now. Thanks for the forum.
I am to writing what Thomas Kindade is to painting (only without the fame and money).
freelunch Will this be an annual column? I liked it last year.
I posted a modified version on the blog about a year ago (back when fewer people were reading it). But I thought with Kinkade in the news it might be worth dusting off and fleshing out a bit more.
Chris I also, though, would like to direct your attention to an article written a couple of years ago about Kinkade by Greg Wolfe, editor of Image Journal.
Thanks. I’m not sure how I missed that (I’m a regular reader of Image Journal) but I wish I had read it before I wrote this piece.
ahem Don't quit your day job.
So I should probably cancel my application to be the NYT’s art critic, eh? ; )
T.B. Root It looks to me like Kinkade’s stylistic explorations are simply commercial explorations.
Good point and one I should have addressed in the article. I don’t think it is slam on Kinkade (or any other artist) to say that they are attempting to be “commercial.” There is certainly nothing wrong with trying to appeal to an audience or produce art that has a broad appeal.
S.L. heresy ”Kitsch” is the all-purpose sneer that has frightened generations of artists into being rebarbative and displeasing at all costs, into doing anything—ANYTHING—never to be mistaken for a Kinkade, a Norman Rockwell, take your pick.
While I agree with your point, I think such artists merely producing “avant garde kitsch.” The work of Warhol or Hirsch is as kitschy as Kindade’s—it’s just produced for a different audience. (And Rockwell is a regrettably underrated artist, though I think we’ll see a re-appreciation of his work in another 20-40 years.)
Cheers from Canada.
Tony
But S.L.hersey makes the big true point.
My opinion of Kinkade has significantly declined since I saw a few of his more tasteful paintings as shown in this article -- the man actually had some measure of true talent, but he abandoned it for the garishness and sentimentality that is his trademark "look."
Notice how finely the enclosed in a total self-sufficing warmth and pulsating human sentiment of the cottage is contrasted with the outside background of the sea – a sea not lashing with wild ferocity as a first romantic would portray it – but splashing up with disordered care and longing and overflowing down the right side of the canvas in a brimming embrace. And the sky and the trees reach forward mellow and kind – sentimental yes, as a mother’s love is nothing but sentimental, but is not that type of feeling - from what we can tell from all of human culture and history - a permanent – sentimental – substratum in our psychology? And hence a definite subject of genuine art.
The foreground with its lamppost directing us up away from the shaggy disorder, but still friendly and warm, area of the “outside” of “nature”, towards the ultimate haven, the complete hearth-world of our total personal safety and self-fulfillment, the cottage, where all our home feelings are constructed, massaged, finalized; where we may return again and again forever to rest and bask in an ideal coziness; all this a perfect evocation of those exclusive, selfish and very real feelings for home and protection imbibed in that dream of childhood both experienced and valorized.
Kinkade’s other pieces are workings towards this expression of his particular imagination. They are botches or sketches as he groped to put down what he needed to. He may be a small talent exploited into fame and riches by the market, but the “Cottage” is original and true, a minor truth, but one nonetheless.
On the other hand, we must remember the vast majority of people can see that contemporary art is debased, tasteless and irrelevant — in some instances even pornographic. So, it's not surprising to find that many people enjoy Kincaid's art. On a desert island, a glass of plain water might seem to be a fine bordeaux.
From Canada. Tony.
And in response to steven jacks, to quote Charles Schultz: "bleechh"!
and all those cottages Mr Kincaid paints? look.... an awful lot like this cottage.
down to the lighting
it may or may not be a direct copy, but his claims to "unique style" went out the window with that.
thank you for an excellent article.
I had not seem those earlier paintings my Kinkade.
Here in Australia, Thomas Kinkade is virtually unknown. In the 1980's we had a similar popular artist named Ken Done. His work was ubiquitous appearing on t-shirts to tea towels. Of course gallery-land would not touch him with barge pole but he was very popular with the public and tourists (particular the Japanese). Now his style is totally out of date.
Some of the most interesting work i have seen of his is for a movie. early on in their careers Kinkade and James (Dinotopia) Gurney did the background art for Ralph Bakshi animated movie Fire and ice (1982).
Watching that movie its hard to take your eyes off the gorgeous colour combinations and the expressionistic brushwork.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085542/
By the way i first found out about him via Susan Orlean's article which is a good read.
http://www.susanorlean.com/articles/art_for_everybody.html
cheers
Eddy
Actually Kinkade's recent Disney-inspired artworks are perhaps symbolic of where the "light" talents are best expressed. They're fantastical, and the painted-light scenes render a very cinematic, yet animated quality.
But I do wish I had the tenacity of the man to stick to a single direction. He won many over by ignoring criticism of his art. I haven't seen all of his art but your blog has shown me that there was much more to this man and his art than I had originally been aware of.
One thing that I picked up from much of the commentary is that using high sounding phrases doesn't help with description of the artists intentions. Yes he used a formula. That's why he could churn out so many pictures that were acceptable to the general public. But I look at someone like singer Tony Bennett who has been immensely popular for many decades. How could one say that the lyrics of most of the songs he sings are not Kitsch, schlock. Yet no one criticizes them for the style. He hits some people with exactly the right feeling, emotion, and memory.
Please don't determine his honesty or integrity because of his sentimentality, etc. by the subject that he chooses. Many of the artists that the world applauds now days where totally lacking in integrity as far as I can see. Can one say that someone like Andy Warhol was a man of integrity? Or was he caught up in the sordid world of thins and sex. And is his world any better than T.K.'s.?
However, all of this sounds a bit hyperbolic to me. Everyone is sort of demonizing the guy for using his talent to appeal to a wide market of people. I think that's a pretty natural thing to do. It appears that he does not aspire to be the next Van Gogh - and that's OK, isn't it? Why is he sub-human and talentless as an artist because he targets his work toward a specific subset or demographic of people? If you don't like his paintings, don't buy them. Big deal.
Obviously if there's lack of integrity in the way he does business, that's a bigger deal. If he's manipulated art galleries, for example, into investing in his work knowing that he was putting them at risk, then he deserves the lawsuit.
I personaly have neverr liked this work. They all seem almost the same to me and i get tired just looking at cottages in so many. I do wish him the best it is sad that here he is bankrupt and picked up for DUI.
I have always suspected his claims of being such a devout Christian to be more marketing than substance, much like his paintings. I don't know too many real Christians who go around fleecing their business partners, groping women's breasts or admitting to a penchant for public urination (charges he has admitted to.) That stuff is as creepy as his so-called art.
All that aside, suppose that sentimentality is always wrong. Nevertheless, just because "Kinkade’s cottage fantasies offer this sort of emotional manipulation" sounds no more problematic for his paintings than alcohol itself is morally problematic just because it "offers" itself as a means of escape to a drunk; just because "the viewer can shut himself off from true emotions earned through a real encounter with reality," it hardly means he must when he looks at such paintings; and just because "The Cottage by the Sea offers a place where the viewer can enter the perfect world of Kinkade’s creation—and escape the messy world of Kinkade’s Creator," doesn't mean he must. It's likewise just as possible that The Cottage by the Sea offers the very opposite of what Mr Carter suggests. It could well be a place where the viewer enters into the messy world of Kinkade's Creator. This is what I have always taken it to be at any rate, and this suggests that something might be wrong with the analysis in this article.
Could it be that there is another explanation for Kitsch art? I think it might have to do with making the point of a picture too easily available by directing the viewer to an emotion, a thought, a conclusion much too directly, without offering the viewer the opportunity to contribute/collude in the effort. Gombrich pointed out that we tend to prefer images seen through mottled glass where we have to 'work' to complete them, so permitting the viewer to contribute to the total sense of the painting. We don't like poetic/aesthetic meaning delivered on a platter. Maybe we like to flatter ourselves by seeing a reflection of our own intellect in the painting. Now wouldn't that be a curious thing?
Anyway may his family be comforted at this time. I did not know the guy, I understand he had personality flaws. But we are saved by grace, not our self righteousness nor (thankfully) by our aesthetic sensibilities.
Warmest regards, Philip.
I agree with the article. I am happy to see examples of T.K.'s earlier works. I see T.K.'s "light" paintings much as a photograph taken with a long exposure that would also produce that warm glow from every light source ~ producing a warmer, more welcoming, photo...even of city-scapes.
Thank you for the article and critique. - Don


