Skip to content

Socialist Review  
Search
Back issues
2010
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
June
Jul
   
2009
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2008
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2007
Jan
 
 
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2006
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2005
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
 
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
More back issues
Links
Search for text
Subscribe
 RSS feed
Pay in advance
By Direct Debit
Payments
Order copies
More About Us
Write to us
Book group
The magazine
The website

 

The Overall Sale Experience

Column by Noel Douglas, March 2006

Anyone entering the Selfridges store in London for their new year sale in January may have wondered if the store wasn't doing its best to put off potential customers.

Bold red, black and white signs incorporating phrases extolling the distortion of desire that comes with commodity fetishism were everywhere. It was as if a bunch of Marxist subvertisers had crept in late at night and hijacked the space. Critiques of consumerism sourced from Malcolm X, Charles Baudelaire and Edgar Allen Poe, among others, were everywhere - as part of a collaboration between New York artist Barbara Kruger and the store.


Barbara became famous in the 1980s for her strong graphic social commentary and straplines such as "I shop therefore I am". These were often displayed in public spaces on billboards, and critiqued the rightward drift of culture. Some 20 years later, rampant privatisation and its corollary, the foreclosing of cultural subsidies by the state, has had the damaging and ironic effect of creating a bastardised version of the avant-garde dream of bringing art into everyday life. This example shows that this has been achieved but with one small proviso - public art must have a company logo and a sponsorship deal attached. In this corporate-friendly climate, Selfridges, like many companies aiming at a cultured middle class consumer, has positioned itself as both patron and site for the arts. It regularly commissions work for its window displays - and this is a small part of the blurring of the concerns of commerce, fashion and fine art.


The Selfridges campaign has been part of a three-year collaboration between Kruger and the retailer, which was developed by Mother - an "edgy" advertising agency who specialise in "anti-advertising". Mother's campaigns tend to reverse the standard cliches of advertising in an attempt to reach jaded audiences. They are responsible for the Orange mobile phone ads you may have seen at the cinema, which play on the idea that you don't want corporate culture ruining your movie - as a way of reminding you to turn off your phone.


Kruger has not commented on her involvement with Selfridges. Maybe she thinks that this is the perfect venue for her work. But the recuperation by corporate capitalism of her ideas and signature style seems a heavy price to pay for someone who has built their reputation on being critical of the way corporate images control and limit human consciousness and potential.

Whatever she may think, James Bidwell, Selfridges' marketing director, is under no illusions. Discussing the campaign, he said, "There seems to be a standard template for sale advertising among retailers, but we wanted to do something completely different. Kruger's work engages on several levels and will add to the overall Selfridges sale experience."

Comments?

Email letters@socialistreview.org.uk

Contents

Complete list for this issue

Donate

Access to this website is free - help us keep it that way. Please make a donation.

Subscribe

Letters

Get each issue
delivered - and save money
as well!