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azed Magazine declared 2016 "The Year of the Meme." The internet community would doubtless have been quick to agree, had they not been so busy memeing. As one of the internet’s most dominant cultural forces, memes have also started to gain acceptance as works of art in communities online and off. Similar to pre-internet art, distinct meme movements have emerged, among them, surreal memes, which are defined by Know Your Meme as “artistically bizarre in appearance and whose humor derives from their absurd style.”

Considered poignant by some and pointless by others, the jury is out on whether surreal memes serve to push the world of meme art forward. Below, we’ll discuss two ways in which surreal memes take meme art to new heights and two ways surreal memes reach only the heights of banality.

It Represents Progress in Art

Surreal memes are derived from a varied line of modern art traditions.

Surrealist memes find cultural forbears in the pre-internet art movements of Dadaism, Surrealism and Pop Art. Surrealist memes approach the absurdity of contemporary life in the same manner as Dadaism, which contended that art doesn’t need to make sense if governments and societies don’t make sense either. Surreal memes incorporate Surrealist and Dada styles, utilizing Salvador Dali-inspired meme bases, and montages that are reminiscent of collage techniques popularized by the Dada movement. The medium by which most memes are produced, with image macros that lays text over premade images, speaks to mass manufacturing, a focal point of the Pop Art movement. By referencing Dali in the same image as Pepe the Frog, surreal memes accomplish another central goal of Pop Art – to mix high and low culture and elevate ordinary, daily items into the world of fine art. This ongoing dialogue between various art movements and surreal memes points to the latter’s power as a driving force in the progression of meme art.

No message necessary.

A central criticism of surreal memes is that they don’t have any point, that they are devoid of any distinct message. To these critics, I (along with troves of surrealist memers) say, so what? Art needn’t have a particular message in order to qualify as art, or even to qualify as good art. As The Guardian art journalist Jonathan Jones points out, distinguished artists like Mark Rothko and Nobel prize-winner Bob Dylan took pains to avoid meaning of any kind being attached to their work. Jones opines, “The most deadening influence on art in our time is the belief that content matters more than style.” Surreal memes evade easy understanding or categorization. They challenge their audience to accept that which cannot be easily googled, understood, and shared. Their seemingly meaningless content thwarts the easy consumption that meme culture propagates, making surreal memes no less an act of artistic rebellion than Dadaist Marcel Duchamp’s The Fountain.

It Is Taking Art Back Centuries

Surreal memes are internet elitism at its worst.

Well, okay, more like decades. Still, that doesn't change the fact that the internet underground is famously proprietary about its memes. Imageboard website 4chan has long claimed ownership of the internet’s most popular memes, and its users regularly scorn sites like 9gag and Reddit for their use (and hence, their popularization) of memes originally posted on 4chan. Surreal memes are but one manifestation of internet insiders’ preoccupation with keeping memes out of the hands of mainstream internet users. Because surreal memes deliberately avoid cultural references of any kind, they are not easily consumed or absorbed into the internet mainstream. Unlike the art world’s Dadaism, which sought to translate the confusing of the times to anyone who looked upon a Dadaist piece, surrealist memes actively repel audiences by using content that will only resonate with a select group of internet insiders (go ahead, pretend you understand any of these). This pretension to exclusivity runs counter to the common axiom that art should be for the masses.

Lost in translation.

The nihilism of surreal memes reveals their regressive nature. At its core, art is about evoking emotion and sharing our experiences of the world. Art writer Linda Weintraub writes “If art doesn't sensitize us to something in the world, clarify our perceptions, make us aware of the decisions we have made, it's entertainment.” Internet memes, both popular and obscure, do give their audiences pause, drawing attention to the ills of our world with humor or shock value. But surreal memes in particular are unable to sensitize or clarify, because they intentionally lack both sense and clarity. They traffic in absurdity for absurdity’s sake, which leaves them little hope to evolve into something meaningful or new. Surreal memes can only “progress” through the intensification of nonsense ad nauseum. As the Art Factory said of Dadaism, “The DNA of Dada was self destructive [sic]”; so too is the DNA of the surreal meme.

Where Do You Stand?

Bottom Lines: The codification of surreal memes as a regressive or progressive element in meme art is as subjective as the art of memes itself. Where do you stand? Are surreal memes small works of irreverent, anti-establishment art in the spirit of Dadaism, or are they merely dog whistles for the fraternity of internet insiders?


This article was written in collaboration with The Perspective, where you can get both sides of the big debates and trending news stories.


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Comments 22 total

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Penultimate Keyboard Cat

I get it- it's referencing the future.

0

InsignificantWeeaboo

How many more types of memes are we gonna develop until we have as many categories of memes as the amount of genders proposed by SJWs?

-2

Teddy Sadcat

Usually nonsensical surreal memes for nonsense humor's sake are fine to me, it's the most unaccessable kind of meme out there as this has the "dank meme community" deeply rooted in its foundation, an in-joke if you will.
I don't care as much, but I sure chuckled at many of them

0

lil fella

In general I think it’s becoming a problem that most jokes nowadays use the same setup: they don’t have punchlines. They all just try to revel in their own absurdity and rely on non sequiturs and expect people to laugh.

Guarantee that’s why they’re so common nowadays, too. It takes less effort to think of something absurd and "lol random" than to think of something that at least has some sort of punchline or meaning. It’s post-ironic Penguin of Doom levels of “lol random” humor at best.

1

a

Frontpage description: "the community of surreal meme makers are still growing."

I'd think people would be more careful with subject-verb agreement around SAT times…

5

Qnomei

Sometimes I find them funny, other times the only thing I get out of it is "LOL RANDOM". The line is thin and blurry.

7

shadow_lepus

There seems to be this assumption here that you have to understand surreal memes to be able to enjoy them, but is that really true?

Things like this are nonsensical, but this one still kills me every time I look at it. What's wrong with nonsense for nonsense's sake?

16

a

The best surreal memes have an underlying, if unrealistic and childlike, progression of logic.

9

Penultimate Keyboard Cat

They remind me of YouTube Poop- Just enough storytelling and talented editing to make you THINK it’s going somewhere so you keep watching, but in the end you’re just left with your mind spinning and having no idea what happened.

9

Penultimate Keyboard Cat

This is what I mean – This is god level stuff right here
This should be played at retirement homes

2

Jack the Dipper

I'm not sure where I stand. I like some surreal memes, but even within a single meme (and this goes for most memes in general), it depends on the content and execution of each individual example. As surreal and "dank" (I now hate that word) memes have become more popular, many creators have made their humor and style as predictable/formulaic as "regular" memes (the line between them and dank/surreal ones blurs every day). But then again, as with other art, some memes can be surreal and up-their-ass pretentious to the point of obnoxiousness, but sometimes that itself can be amusing too. I'll say this: some surreal memes are alright (and it's better when they don't refer to themselves as such), but anything called a "dank meme" at this point can fuck off.

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