They revolutionized shopping, with tea sandwiches on the side
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


They revolutionized shopping, with tea sandwiches on the side
Geraldine Stutz, one of the three department store executives at the heart of “When Women Ran Fifth Avenue,” sitting behind her desk at Henri Bendel in New York in 1965. In “When Women Ran Fifth Avenue,” Julie Satow celebrates the savvy leaders who made Bonwit, Bendel’s and Lord & Taylor into retail meccas of their moment. (Arthur Brower/The New York Times)

by Alexandra Jacobs



NEW YORK, NY.- In 1980, Donald Trump made the front page of The New York Times after assaulting a pair of scantily clad women at a Fifth Avenue department store.

That the women were made of stone and were attached to the building of Bonwit Teller, in the process of being razed and replaced by Trump Tower, was of little comfort to the trustees at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which had been promised these art deco bas-relief beauties — long hovering over pedestrians, now shattered.

The sculptures’ significance was allegorical as well as architectural: Department stores, though erected mostly by men, have always been feminine domains. “The Ladies’ Paradise” is the English title of Émile Zola’s 1883 novel, set at a store modeled after Le Bon Marché, still standing in Paris despite the ravages of e-commerce. Patricia Highsmith framed her 1952 lesbian romance “The Price of Salt” at the fictional Frankenberg’s, based on Bloomingdale’s.

Now Julie Satow has written a group biography of the department-store doyennes who ran the show — and these places in their heyday really were a form of theater — for the male founders and owners whose names adorned the facades.

She nimbly braids together the stories of Hortense Odlum of Bonwit, which moved locations but basically disappeared by 2000; Geraldine Stutz of Henri Bendel, shuttered since 2019; and Dorothy Shaver of Lord & Taylor, which after slow decline was delivered a definitive death blow by the pandemic. Cover the stores’ coffins in the faded iconography of their shopping bags: respectively, a spray of violets, brown and white stripes and a single red rose.

It was clever to convene these three queens from different periods, along with shorter sketches of figures farther from Fifth Avenue, like Black entrepreneur Maggie Walker, who in 1905 opened the St. Luke Emporium for her community in segregated Richmond, Virginia; and Beatrice Fox Auerbach of G. Fox in Hartford, Connecticut, the inspiration for savvy scion Rachel Menken of Menken’s on “Mad Men.”

Each might not have sustained a biography of her own, though Odlum did write a dissembling memoir, “A Woman’s Place,” long out of print, from which Satow draws. Considered in aggregate, they are a force. You can imagine them milling around the great perfume counter in the sky. After “Suffs,” maybe “Spritzes”?

Stutz, who died in 2005, is still remembered by a certain cadre of Manhattan aristocracy, and her portrayal is fleshed out by interviews conducted by the author, who has contributed to the Times (including the Styles section, where I used to work) and previously wrote a book about the Plaza hotel.

Not that “fleshed out” is a phrase readily applied to Stutz, who these days would have almost certainly been canceled for fat-shaming; under her oversight, Bendel’s only stocked up to the equivalent of a contemporary size 6. But she also revolutionized retail with a winding “street of shops” that opened inside the store in 1959 (“Street of Flops,” sneered the then-president of Bergdorf Goodman after he toured it). At a weekly open call known as the Friday Morning Lineup, young artisans vied for a coveted spot in her inventory as if trying to get into a nightclub.

Shaver had arrived in New York long before, from Arkansas by way of Chicago, on a lark with her sister, who would design popular and weird Little Shaver dolls featured in Lord & Taylor’s Christmas windows.

Hired by the store’s president, a third cousin of her mother’s, Dorothy worked her way up through the ranks (eventually getting his job) and changed its practices: opening the Bird Cage, a famous restaurant serving tea sandwiches; introducing the kind of personal shopping refined to a high art by Betty Halbreich at Bergdorf; promoting American designers in a French-obsessed era; and, in general, establishing “that department stores could rival galleries, and even museums, as cultural arbiters,” Satow writes. Abashed to be granddaughter to a Confederate who joined the Ku Klux Klan, Shaver also used her power to promote racial equality, up to a point.

The Debbie Downer of the trio is Odlum, devastated after her husband, a Wall Street tycoon who’d bought Bonwit, left her for a manicurist at Saks (and later aviator). A salon colleague asserted in his own memoir that the scandal was the basis for the Clare Boothe Luce play “The Women.”

Odlum supervised innovations including moving hats (“harmless whimsies,” aka impulse purchases) from an upper floor to prominence, a club for men to ogle lingerie models while their wives shopped, and a bestselling novel by the head of advertising that romanticized the life of an assistant buyer.

“A big store adds such a lot of glitter and fun to the prosy business of everyday living,” read one line. This was certainly true when Salvador Dalí was commissioned to do displays, and crashed a bathtub filled with dirty water through Bonwit’s window in a fit of artistic pique.

Odlum married three more times but remained bitter, blaming her workload for trouble rearing her children. “When my grandmother died,” a grandson tells Satow, “I remember my father saying something along the lines of, ‘Well, the old witch is finally dead.’”

There is in fact something Oz-like about the Technicolor world of the department store, with its pneumatic tubes that swooshed cash and sales slips up to the ceiling; the display director who took one mannequin, Cynthia, everywhere, including El Morocco; the limitless variety of goods ranging even, at one store in Oklahoma City, to babies for adoption.

If the suburban mall did this institution damage, the 24/7 grand bazaar of the internet made it a ghost town. Satow’s book has one longing for that delightful hush when the gates rolled down, the doormen went home and shopping gave way to sleepytime.



Publication Notes:

“When Women Ran Fifth Avenue: Glamour and Power at the Dawn of American Fashion”

By Julie Satow

Doubleday. 320 pages. $32.50.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

June 4, 2024

Holocaust Museums debate what to say about the Israel-Hamas war

Anatomy of a success story: How one artist broke through

Exhibition takes viewers on a journey through visual styles and thematic experiences of the landscape

Philadelphia's University of the Arts announces sudden closing

Kulturforum in Berlin presents 'The Allure of Rome: Maarten van Heemskerck Draws the City'

Rocket-firing Boba Fett action figure sells for $525,000 to become world's most valuable vintage toy

They revolutionized shopping, with tea sandwiches on the side

Large-scale installation by Felix Gonzalez-Torres goes on view at Dia Beacon

Asian Art Spring Live auctions achieved US$70 million

Berkshire Museum to break ground this fall on comprehensive renovation

Akron Art Museum presents 'Michelangelo Lovelace: Art Saved My Life'

The man who rescued Dr No and gave James Bond a shaken rather than stirred Martini

National Gallery of Art appoints Arlene Williams as Director of Strategic Giving

Art Sonje Center opens 'Ho Tzu Nyen: Time & the Cloud'

Christie's announces Fine and Rare Wines Online: Featuring historical Vintage Port from the cellars of Raby Castle

Scottish Barbadian artist Alberta Whittle has created her first outdoor work in Scotland on the island of Bute

Embark on a cultural odyssey with the Cincinnati Art Museum in 'From Shanghai to Ohio: Woo Chong Yung (1898-1989)'

Zaynab Hilal named Curatorial Fellow at Houston Center for Contemporary Craft

Impacts of religions in West explored in Acts of Faith exhibition at Eiteljorg Museum

Dictionary drama revealed in a new exhibition at the Grolier Club NYC

For iconic Castro Theatre, Page & Turnbull named preservation architect in major revitalization

Back with a bang! The ninth edition of Photo London was hailed as a triumph by the photographic community

Clars Auction Gallery announces highlights included in its Important Summer Fine Art Sale

June Comics & Comic Art event features earliest Frank Miller 'Daredevil' cover Heritage has ever offered

Ultimate Guide to Flat Lay Clothing Photography

Beyond Entertainment: How Hologram Fans are Changing Advertising Landscape

How to Use Tubidy for Seamless Music and Video Downloads

Turn Memories into Masterpieces: Personalized Photo to Laser Engraving in Business

Harness the Power of Baccarat Strategies to Win BIG Bonus




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful