While this Kat is currently absorbing as much US trade mark culture as he can, during his all-too-brief visit to Dallas for the International Trademark Association Meeting, that reliable and helpful Katfriend Miri Frankel (Aegis Media Americas) has been penning this guest post that reflects on lots of questions: the balance between trade mark protection and free speech, the interplay between parody and the design aesthetic and an old favourite: whether Americans really get irony or not
[on which see items here, here and here]. Miri writes as follows
[Merpel adds a naughty word advisory]:
Supreme
Free Speech
A streetwear brawl in New York is pitting
trade mark rights against parody and First Amendment free speech. Supreme, a men’s streetwear brand, is suing Married
to the Mob (MOB), a women’s streetwear brand, for trade mark infringement. Supreme, which uses a logo of the word
Supreme in white Futura Bold Italic font within a solid red rectangular box,
claims that MOB’s apparel designs featuring the words “Supreme Bitch” in Futura
Bold Italic font within a solid red rectangular box infringe the Supreme's trade mark.
There is no denying the similarity of the
logos used by the two brands. In fact,
MOB founder Leah McSweeney acknowledges that she designed the Supreme Bitch
tees in 2004 as a statement against the misogynistic values embedded in the
Supreme brand. At that time, she showed
her t-shirt design to Supreme’s founder James Jebbia, and Jebbia agreed to sell
the MOB shirts in his retail store.
So why is Jebbia suing McSweeney so many years
later? The catalysts are likely twofold:
McSweeney filed a Class 25 trade mark application for the use of Supreme Bitch
on apparel and hats. In addition, superstar
Rihanna was recently photographed (right left) wearing a Supreme Bitch hat, which instantly
(and unsurprisingly) increased the MOB brand’s credibility and fame, as well as
its sales.
In
response to the lawsuit filed by Supreme, McSweeney issued this statement:
“As some of you may have heard, Supreme is suing me for
$10 million over my "Supreme Bitch" design. I've been using this
design since the first MOB collection in summer 2004. I even sold it as a tee
at Union, a store owned and managed by Supreme's founder James Jebbia, who gave
the design his blessing. Now, he's claiming that the design infringes his
trade mark rights.
… Supreme Bitch is one design of many; one slogan of
many. And the use of the design has always been to make fun of the misogynistic
vibe of Supreme and the boys who wear it.
Bottom line is this: I don't think Supreme should be able
to squash free speech or my right to utilize parody in my design aesthetic.
It's one of the most powerful ways for me to comment on the boy's club
mentality that's pervasive in the streetwear/skater world. The fact that
Supreme is coming after MOB and me personally is just another example of the
hostility that MOB -- the first women's street wear brand -- has faced from Day
1. And it's why the Supreme Bitch message is so important. …”
Supreme, in fact, is quite familiar with
the concept of parody. Supreme regularly
appropriates other brands and cultural references into its apparel designs,
doing so presumably under theories of parody and free speech. Even more basic, Jebbia acknowledges that he
himself created his logo by appropriating the work of another: if the red and
white text boxes remind you of the work of iconic artist Barbara Kruger, you
would be correct in your association.
Jebbia used Kruger’s anti-capitalist and feminist artwork as the
inspiration for his Supreme brand’s logo.
Given
that Supreme is challenging the validity of the incorporation of parody into
apparel products, which it does regularly itself, and that it approved and
allowed MOB’s sales for more than eight years before filing this lawsuit, Supreme
is certainly a less-than-sympathetic plaintiff. It seems to me that MOB will have the upper
hand as this dispute continues.
Acclaim magazine succinctly summed up this
lawsuit:
“Now, it’s up to the courts to decide who is
legally in the right here. But on ideological grounds, surely the inherent
irony of a company that’s built a large part of its reputation by producing
unlicensed parodies time after time after time, then turning around and
deciding to sue for trademark infringement isn’t lost on anyone. I mean, it’s
almost as ridiculous as a brand that claims to be attacking the misogynistic
world of streetwear and championing women’s rights by boldly printing the word
‘Bitch’ across their chests.”
What
does Kruger have to say about this trade mark battle? When asked for comment by Acclaim, she
responded by emailing this Word document notably titled “fools.doc”:
History of Supreme and MOB, and link to
MOB’s Answer to the Complaint, here
left?
ReplyDeleteThanks, anonymous, this is one of my worst nightmares. I've corrected the blog post.
ReplyDeleteI've fought left-right confusion since I was taught as a child that "right is the hand you write with", though I was left-handed. This week, with a partially non-functional left arm, I've been doing lots of things with my right that normally belong to my left, and I think it has made my confusion worse.