Graffiti artists take revenge on Uptown H&M over ad campaign
MINNEAPOLIS -- Lots of people are pissed off at disposable fashion outfitter H&M. Lots of stealthy, risk-seeking people carrying spray paint in their backpacks, with a knack for using anything they want as a canvas and getting away with it.
Somebody recently scrawled giant black letters across the entire façade of the Uptown H&M, reading what looks like, Work Hard. It wasnt street art so much as old-fashioned vandalism something thats hit stores across the country as graffiti artists declare war on the company.
H&M found itself headbutting with graffiti artists after shooting an ad to promote a new athletic wear line where the backdrop was a handball court in New York City, featuring the work of a prominent Los Angeles artist named Jason Williams, a.k.a. Revok.
H&M didnt ask Revok for permission to make money off his art, and Revok was upset enough to send the company a cease-and-desist letter. But instead of retracting the commercial, some genius on H&Ms legal team decided to hit back with a lawsuit blasting the artist for giving up his intellectual property rights when he committed a crime by painting the piece in the first place, without authorization from New York City. Anyone could use the piece for free and for any commercial purpose, H&M argued.
Read more: http://www.citypages.com/news/graffiti-artists-take-revenge-on-uptown-hm-over-ad-campaign/477283093
H&M found itself on the wrong side of public sentiment when it sued a graffiti artist after using his work without permission in an ad campaign. Photo: Lora Elyse