Our current relation to beauty is contradictory. On the one hand, artists, in the wake of the calamitous upheavals of two world wars, have largely abandoned the concern for beauty on the grounds that it represents an escape from, rather than an engagement with, the horrors and injustices of the modem age. At the same time as art has become de-aestheticised, however, there has been a growing aestheticisation of everyday life as manifested in the increasing emphasis on stylisation from the design of urban spaces to the packaging, advertising and display of commodities and the fashioning of personal appearance. I argue that these two trends, though apparently opposed, are in fact interrelated and are symptomatic of a crisis in the aesthetic. ...