Lauren Cochrane 

From classic to disposable: Gap UK closures reveal muddied identity

Time will tell if alliance with Kanye West and plans for online-only presence will pay off
  
  

The Gap store in Oxford Street, London.
The Gap store in Oxford Street, London. Photograph: Mark Richardson/Alamy

The news that Gap is to close all 81 of its stores in the UK and Ireland will hardly come as a surprise to those in the fashion industry. Once a favourite of insiders looking for classic minimal pieces without the price tags of catwalk labels, its position has faded in recent years, replaced by brands including Arket, Weekday and Uniqlo.

Founded in 1969 in San Francisco, Gap came to the UK in 1987 and has long been known for American classics such as khakis, jeans and white T-shirts. After various sweatshop allegations in the 90s and early 00s, it positioned itself as the home of premium basics and kept its fashion relevance for a long time by balancing its blue-chip heritage with collaborations with buzzy young designers including Alexander Wang, Rodarte and Band of Outsiders. These names reworked classic designs that would showcase in slick adverts with supermodels including Liya Kebede.

1969 

The husband-and-wife duo Don and Doris Fisher open the first Gap store, in San Francisco. It initially sells only men’s Levis and music.

1974 

Gap has more than 25 stores selling Levis for men and women. The first Gap-designed products are unveiled, with jeans following in 1978.

1983 

Gap buys Banana Republic, which at this point is two stores in Mill Valley, California. The parent company now also owns brands including Old Navy and Athleta.

1984

The pocket T-shirt – now a Gap classic – is introduced. Michael J Fox wears one in Back to the Future the following year.

1987

Gap comes to the UK, with several stores opening in London.

1988

The blue logo with the long letters is introduced. A version of it – although redesigned in 2016 – is still used today.

1989

The Individuals of Style campaign is launched. It features celebrities including Spike Lee, Joan Didion and Whoopi Goldberg.

1993

The ‘Who Wore Khakis’ ad appears. Using archive imagery of people including Amelia Earhart and Ernest Hemingway, it aligned Gap with American heroes.

1996

Sharon Stone wears a $26 Gap turtleneck to the Oscars.

1999

No Logo by Naomi Klein is published. Each of Gap, Nike and Levis is branded a “brand bully” and each of Gap, Nike and Levis is shown to work with sweatshops in China and El Salvador.

2003

Missy Elliott and Madonna appear together in a Gap ad.

2004

Gap admits to using sweatshops and removes 136 factories from its approved contractors list.

2007

Gap is shown to have child labour in its supply chain, with a 10-year-old boy in India filmed making clothes for the brand.

2013

After the Rana Plaza disaster, Gap forms Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety to ensure better working conditions for workers in the country.

2014

Gap increases the starting salary of a sales assistant to $9 an hour. President Obama shows his approval by visiting a Gap store in New York.

2018

Female workers in Asian factories producing Gap’s clothes are often subject to sexual and physical abuse, according to allegations.

2019

Gap celebrate 50 years in business.

2020

A 10-year collaboration with Kanye West’s Yeezy brand is announced.

2021

Gap initiates the 2023 Power Plan. As part of this, it closes all UK stores.

Collaborations are still central to Gap’s culture. The alliance with Kanye West’s Yeezy, which is expected later this month at the earliest, is highly anticipated. But some partnerships have attracted negative press. As the West news was announced last year, it was also revealed that the company’s collaboration with Telfar, the Black-owned American brand famous for its bags, had been postponed indefinitely with Telfar’s team repeatedly following up on emails with no response. The designer Telfar Clemens criticised the brand’s behaviour, telling the New York Times there was “a vast power imbalance, perpetuated by the narrative of ‘inclusivity’” when designers of colour worked with big brands such as Gap. While Clemens was clear he was not a victim, the story was more bad publicity for Gap.

Gap’s fall from grace could arguably have been avoided if it had successfully tapped into the Normcore trend which began around 2014. The fashion movement focused on the kind of 90s preppy non-clothes worn by men such as Jerry Seinfeld and Steve Jobs. Douglas Coupland, the voice of generation X, even once said: “Gap clothing allows you to look like you’re from nowhere and anywhere” which is the aim of Normcore. The brand, perhaps resistant to looking retro, nodded to the trend in an ad campaign called Dress Normal, but the glossy images failed to capitalise on the moment. As the website Jezebel put it: “Gap’s blah Dress Normal campaign doesn’t get the irony of normcore”.

These days, it feels as if the identity of the brand has been muddied. In store, summer prints on easy dresses mix with sportswear and basics. While consumers know Uniqlo for its Airism cooling fabric, cashmere sweaters and UT graphic T-shirts, perhaps they are unsure what marks Gap out, what makes up its USP.

The news of the stores’ closures come as part of a review after falling sales in the pandemic and a change of guard. The unveiling of West’s first design for the brand last month was hailed as a new era, with all previous posts on the brand’s Instagram deleted. The 10-year deal implies Gap has put a lot of faith in West as the man to revitalise its fortunes, supported by the British designer Mowalola Ogunlesi as the design director.

Putting a positive spin on the news, Gap’s move to digital-only in the UK could be seen as part of a plan, a sign the audience it is looking to appeal to under West is a younger demographic who shops online-only, the consumers behind the success of Boohoo and Asos in the past year. Gap is betting that stores – expensive to run and suffering from less demand – are no longer necessary and that the digital-first trend continues as the world comes out of a pandemic. Whether or not this will work remains to be seen.

 

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