Department Stores Don't Know It's Christmas
11/20/06 at 4:47 PM
The consolidation of department stores a trend cooling only because there's nothing left to merge leaves Manhattan as the last hospitable environment for that Norman Rockwell tradition, the holiday window display. The city's flagships Barneys, Bendel, Bergdorf, Bloomingdale's, Saks, and Macy's began unveiling their windows over the weekend, and, as usual, they're secular spectacles. Out: Santa, model trains, gingerbread men. In: scary, postmodern vignettes.
So which ones are worth wistful gazing? We've rated them according to four categories: holiday cheer, narrative, a sense of childlike wonder, and set design. Check back daily for three installments, culminating on Wednesday when the winner is revealed. Today, Henri Bendel and Barneys battle for the ultimate sell-out.

Amanda Hesser's revenge.Photo: Everett Bogue
Holiday cheer: 1
Narrative: 1
Childlike wonder: 2
Set design: 3
Total: 7 (out of 40)

In Warhol's world, Santa did a lot of coke.Photo: Everett Bogue
Yes, the Warhol-idays do share some values with our own. What was the Factory if not an extended family? (Be thankful this season that Viva, Ultra Violet, or Sylvia Miles are not members of your own.) And in an attempt at redeeming uplift, Barneys recruited the students of the East Harlem School to paint their own portraits of Ole St. Andy. The results, naturally, are for sale.
Holiday cheer: -1
Narrative: 7
Childlike wonder: 4
Set design: 8
Total: 18 (out of 40)
Greg Lindsay
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