0 a piece of art, music, literature, etc. that intentionally copies the style of someone else's work or is intentionally in various styles, or the practice of making art in either of these ways:
Yet the writer had no information at his disposal beyond two legendary names and essentially produced a rather thin pastiche of folklore and wonder tale.
These passages of pastiche are interleaved with the more severe, serial music, creating abrupt and disorienting stylistic juxtapositions.
The right angle ruled, the gridded facade maximized the partnership of structure and light, and anything suggesting historical pastiche was condemned as kitsch.
If one could sketch a pastiche of that historians' folk wisdom, it might look something like this.
Many teachers rely on the familiar pastiche of theory-based training.
The tautology - and consequent restricted expressive means - is preferred over the use of symbol, pastiche or 'artistic' invention.
He develops a whole series of subcategories: allusion; parody; travesty; pastiche; copy; cover; translation; and many classes of remix.
This performance, however, is less parody than fragmentary pastiche.