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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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The Wizardry of Department Store Windows

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A minor mystery of American culture has been the public's enduring fascination with department store windows, especially at holiday time. Though computer-generated images can whoosh us to exotic vistas from the comfort of our laptops, we still line up at the giant glass panes to see dolls creaking their heads as they celebrate Christmas in Edwardian England. Virtual reality has yet to kill living theater, even when the actors are figurines.

The modern store window is a marvel of applied psychology. Before its invention, retailers just piled their wares in their front windows to show what was inside, explains William Leach in his book "Land of Desire: Merchants, Power and the Rise of a New American Culture." But in the late 19th century, as factories started flooding America with their products, the economic elite saw new urgency in creating a popular lust for things folks didn't strictly need.

The store window's job was no longer acting as a catalogue of the shop's contents. It now had to do something more abstract: It had to build desire in the hearts of passersby for a "good life" that would be consummated through consuming. Designers began to place only a few items in the big windows of the new department stores and surround them with fantastical visions of a dazzling tomorrow.

And who better to provide the blueprint than L. Frank Baum, author of "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz"? Before the book came out in 1900, Baum designed store windows. Like the phantasmagoria he piled into the children's story, Baum filled these new show windows with revolving stars, glittering crystals and currents of colors.

Baum was the man behind the store-window curtain, creating an Ozian dream for a public not then enlisted into a consumer culture. With no little cynicism, he urged window designers to "arouse in the observer the cupidity and longing to possess the goods."

If items are properly displayed, he said, "the show window will sell them like hotcakes, even though (the goods) are old enough to have gray whiskers." And "even the male mind, naturally obtuse upon such matters, is forced to marvel at the beauty of the display." He founded the National Association of Window Trimmers to promote his brand of retailing showmanship.

Heirs to Baum's "gorgeous carnival" store windows, today's versions are a toast to manipulation.

But aren't they a wonderful world? That the illusions are created with real things made with magicians' hands only adds to their emotional impact.

The humanity in the creation, as well as in the shared audience experience, has also kept live theater in business. The 18-screen cineplexes, videocassettes, DVDs and now video downloads threaten each other more than they do legitimate theater.

How interesting that one of the most passionate audiences for Broadway shows these days are the "tweens," girls roughly ages 10 through 13. These young people grew up with computers. They teethed on iPods and can download off iTunes with demonic speed.

But the tweens and their older sisters are so fanatical about live musicals that Broadway producers are seeking productions directed at them. The girls now pack the rows for "Legally Blonde," and they paint their faces green for "Wicked," a musical based on the Wicked Witch from "The Wizard of Oz." Baum would totally get this trend.

The craftsmanship of theater still has something over the clicksmanship of computers. Fabulous store windows may be one reason why many downtowns and malls have survived the onslaught of online retailing and the drab big-box stores. Nothing lifts spirits on a dark December afternoon like the unearthly glow of a dreamy window.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2007 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
Social Security Administration Commissioner Michael J, Astrue 6401 Security Blvd Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401 February 20, 2009
Dear Commissioner Astrue:
The number one Social Security problem is the failure of the Social Security Administration to decrease payroll taxes to match Benefits paid out annually. During the past 10+ years, the taxpayer has been overcharged by more than two trillion dollars. The payroll tax Income has exceeded Benefits by about $200 Billion per year during this period.
The Social Security program has been a very successful pay-as-you-go system for the past 60 years and should continue successfully for the next 100 years.. The tax rate started at 1.0 % with a $ 3,000 income ceiling and has been increased during this 60 year period to 6.2% with a $ 100,000 ceiling in order to meet the exploding growth in Beneficiaries from one million to 50 million.
Michael, you were sworn in as Commissioner of Social Security on February 12, 2007 and took an oath to serve the American People. Here is your opportunity to step up to the plate and deliver on your promise.
I recommend that you take steps to decrease the Social Security payroll tax rate to 3.0 % for the next 5 years, or for as long as it takes to return the two trillion dollar SS Trust Fund to the rightful owners; the Tax Payers. You have the authority to adjust Social Security Tax Rates.
This would be a great Stimulus Package; $400 Billion each year for 5 years would create Buying Power in the hands of 160 million workers and their associated Employers.
The Social Security Program should continue to be successful for at least the next 100 years by having each future generation pay for the Benefits of their generation; just as all the past generations have done. The pay-as-you-go System should continue to work successfully. There is no need to maintain a two trillion dollar Trust Fund in order to bail-out future generations.
I hope that you will provide the Public with full accountability and transparency regarding your plans to stop overcharging the taxpayer and the return of the $2 trillion surplus to the rightful owners; the workers who are paying Social Security taxes and their associated employers.
By the way, I did not receive an acknowledgement from your staff for my October 13, 2008 letter.
Copies to: Sincerely
President Barack Obama Peter P. Koliss
USA Today Retire Bell Lab Engineer

Comment: #1
Posted by: Peter Koliss
Sun Feb 22, 2009 2:53 PM
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