On The Popularity of Steampunk

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Does the New York Times arti­cle on Steampunk mean the genre/​fashion craze has made the high water mark and will begin to recede from here? What is the shelf-​​life of an aes­thetic move­ment, and for that mat­ter, what is the soci­o­log­i­cal force behind this par­tic­u­lar movement?

It’s a Stylistic Rebellion

Particularly as an aes­thetic move­ment, steam­punk is pop­u­lar pri­mar­ily with an under 30 set. This is a gen­er­a­tion that has rarely owned hand-​​crafted objects. Our con­sumer goods have been mass man­u­fac­tured, extruded plas­tic blocks. Aesthetic appeal was rarely a con­sid­er­a­tion, and even if it was, each prod­uct was exactly iden­ti­cal to the other. You could try and stand out through your par­tic­u­lar fash­ion sense and con­sumer good choices, but more often than not, you ended up look­ing like a thou­sand others.

Steampunk is a mid­dle fin­ger to the iPod, but it’s also a blown kiss. This move­ment says, “yes” to tech­nol­ogy and sci­ence, but also “does it have to look so anti­sep­tic?” The design aes­thetic of Apple appeals to many, as evi­denced by their stock prices, but it’s some­what repul­sive to oth­ers. And for a gen­er­a­tion who has rarely owned hand-​​crafted objects, the attrac­tion of tak­ing some­thing and mod­i­fy­ing it, craft­ing it, until it is yours and unique–is very strong. The Victorian period was not the last time things were made by hand, but it’s an aes­thetic dis­tantly enough removed from the mod­ern that it feels dif­fer­ent, more so than the 40s, 50s, 60s, etc. Steampunk is brown and brass, in con­trast to the whites and blacks of mod­ern design. It’s metal and wood, not plas­tic. It’s lace, not lycra.

It is also a call­back to a period when objects looked exactly as if they were capa­ble of what they could do. A square block of plas­tic does not con­vey its abil­ity to com­mu­ni­cate over vast dis­tances. There’s noth­ing inher­ently com­mu­nica­tive about it’s shape. A steam­punk ray gun, on the other hand, can­not be con­fused for much of any­thing else. Technology then was cruder, but you could tell what some­thing did by look­ing at it. You could see the inner work­ings, and those inner work­ings were much eas­ier to under­stand. I think most peo­ple feel they could learn to put watch pieces together. Not very many believe they could learn to man­u­fac­ture cir­cuit boards.

Has it peaked?

Unless you’re invested semi-​​professionally in the pop­u­lar­ity of the genre as I am, then this ques­tion doesn’t prob­a­bly mat­ter to you. Having spent most of my spring prepar­ing a series of images and sto­ry­lines that draw heav­ily from this aes­thetic, I am a lit­tle con­cerned that the pop­u­lar­ity of steam­punk is about to peak, if it hasn’t already. If the activ­ity on the steam­fash­ion group on Livejournal is any indi­ca­tion, pop­u­lar­ity has already begun to wane. I recently rejoined this group, and I have found that posts to it are increas­ingly infre­quent. Now it may just be that every­one is too busy mak­ing things, but I sus­pect some have already moved on to other fix­a­tions. After all, you could make a strong case that the fashion-​​aspect of steam­punk evolved out of Goth cul­ture, and so it’s not unrea­son­able to believe that it will con­tinue to evolve and frac­ture off into other sub-​​cultures. We already have terms like clock­punk and dieselpunk, even if these terms don’t have the same trac­tion in the zeit­geist that steam­punk has right now.

The nice thing about a genre and an aes­thetic that is based heav­ily on a his­tor­i­cal period is, it prob­a­bly never really goes out of fash­ion. There will always be some small sub­set of fans inter­ested in the time period. Let’s face it: steam­punk is freak­ing cool, and it’s going to take some­thing pretty dras­tic to change that. Even if that does change, it’s not like being uncool has ever stopped fans from lik­ing something.

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    4 Responses

    1. art donovan says:

      Yours is one of the best arti­cles on Steampunk that I have read to date.

      You asked if Steampunk has peaked. I agree with you that the true Steampunk genre, because of it’s his­toric basis, has not. It is a bona design move­ment and will be adopted and altered– as all great artis­tic gen­res are. Thank you so much for the post.

    2. Jeremiah Tolbert says:

      Art,

      Thank you for the kind words. I just checked out your web­site, and your steam­punk lantern is fan­tas­tic, as well as the rest of your work. It’s great to see the ways steam­punk is influ­enc­ing dif­fer­ent areas of art!

    3. jaan says:

      I think most peo­ple feel they could learn to put watch pieces together. Not very many believe they could learn to man­u­fac­ture cir­cuit boards.”

      Funny how peo­ple think that, but it’s prob­a­bly quite the oppo­site in most cases.

      I had the great for­tune to work in a machine shop with one of the coolest guys I’ve ever met, Steve Grimes, before he passed away. His com­pany, SK Grimes, is still in busi­ness mod­i­fy­ing large for­mat cameras.

      Steve was really into cool mechan­i­cal design, and repaired cam­era shut­ters as well, not very dif­fer­ent from mechan­i­cal clocks. He was also a col­lec­tor of clocks with inter­est­ing work­ings and is often the case, you had to repair the clock your­self if you wanted to see it work. That stuff is just not that easy to fig­ure out and must be much harder to design from scratch. I’ve designed cir­cuit boards, to me they were easy in com­par­i­son, very two dimensional.

      I’m hop­ing that steam­punk, once it’s aban­doned by the pseudo-​​hipsters who jump on any new trend, ingrains itself into the under­ly­ing cur­rent of design. Steve taught me a lot about what was actu­ally cool in mechan­i­cal design, the clev­er­ness that’s found in old hand crafted pieces…he taught me to see the ele­gance in the sim­plic­tiy. We would be walk­ing through a swap meet and he would pick up some­thing and say, “look at how they made this latch”. The guys who wrap their TV’s in burlap just don’t get it (really, how lame is that?).

    4. Jeremiah Tolbert says:

      Great com­ment, jaan, and I cer­tainly don’t mean to under­mine the skill and crafts­man­ship that goes into such things. Steve Grimes sounds like he was a fas­ci­nat­ing per­son. I won­der what he would have thought of the steam­punk craze?

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