Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 1 | Page 74

70 Popular Culture Review Boucicaut’s Bon Marche had a reading room and an art gallery, and was the site of many concerts, attracting thousands (Miller 167-169). At Siegel-Coopers in New York City, one could not only purchase myriad staples but also view the world’s largest photographic gallery and peruse one of the largest pet stores anywhere (complete with lions and tropical birds) (Leach 23). One could now be enthralled by, and at, the department store in the same way one would be by having a night or afternoon out. There were forms of theatre (ranging from fashion shows to window shopping), music (in the form of orchestras, bands and trios playing in various places), dining (stores featured a variety of culinary options ranging from fine dining to quick meals), and of course culture. The most commonly associated comparison with department stores was the museum. The fashion show, which originated in the US about 1907, became a major event in the entertainment life of stores in most major cities and would attract thousands (Leach 102, 103). The department store—in particular, the American department store— came about at the same time as the birth of the modem museum and thus, it possesses, or at least historically did possess, many attributes of the museum. According to Neil Harris, “like museums, department stores were selective concentrations of merchandise, merchandise grouped by functional categories rather than by age and nationality” (Harris 63). Many department stores began to take on a museum-like atmosphere, complete with “dark wood cases” and “cluttered interiors” (Harris 65). Art exhibits were quite common, as were themed rooms, both of which borrowed heavily from the conventions of the art gallery and the history museum. Department stores were often the first place that patrons saw both modem and American art. The Gmbel brothers, after viewing the Armory show (1913) became “among the most ardent supporters of modem art, buying up Cezanne, Picasso, and Braques and displaying them in the store galleries in Cincinnati, New York, Cleveland and Philadelphia” (Leach 136). The art, the decor, the general international flavour of the stores reflected the fact that they were now competing with museums and virtually every other existant entertainment offering. Department stores came to be seen as “micro-worlds,” fairs, places where one could go and sample and see the material history, food, fashion, and culture from all over the world (Harris 65). Store windows in themselves became huge attractions and were, in some cases, elevated to forms of art. Frank L. Baum, future author of the Wizard o f Oz, created theatrical scenes of unparalleled creativity. In some cities, the windows were covered on Sundays, out of respect for the Lord’s Day, which made Mondays a particularly anticipated day (Leach 57-63, 70). The glass window allowed the shopper or viewer to see their own reflection but it also serves to act as a visible barrier that keeps the contents out of their grasp (Twitchell 235). As a surrogate for the art gallery, museum, fair, carnival, theater, music hall and restaurant, the department store became the repository of entertainment