Who’s Smiling Now? Nirvana and Marc Jacobs Settle Logo Lawsuit.


Oh, that lawsuit Nirvana filed against the fashion line Marc Jacobs for using its smiley face logo without permission?

Nevermind. After more than a half-decade of litigation, the sides have agreed to settle.

The corporate entity representing Nirvana sued Marc Jacobs International in 2018 after the fashion line announced it would release a “Bootleg Redux Grunge” collection of clothing that featured a smiley face logo the lawsuit called “virtually identical to Nirvana’s copyrighted image.”

Nirvana’s smiley face has an uneven head, X’s for eyes and a wavy smile with a tongue sticking out on the right side of its face. Marc Jacobs’s smiley face, which was part of both clothing designs and general marketing promotion for the collection, looks the same but swaps in an “M” and “J” for the X’s.

The rock band has used its smiley face logo since the early 1990s. In addition to the poster for the release party for the “Nevermind” album, the symbol has been included on T-shirts, hoodies, shot glasses and other merchandise.

The Marc Jacobs collection was a callback to the eponymous designer’s 1992 grunge collection for Perry Ellis, which both got him fired from the company and announced his arrival as a major force in the fashion world.

Marc Jacobs’s 2018 campaign also included several references to Nirvana songs: “This bootleg sure smells like teen spirit,” read the webpage for each product. One promotional photo for the collection included in the lawsuit shows Jacobs wearing a smiley face T-shirt above the text “COME AS YOU ARE.”

The yellow-on-black styling of the logo and the typeface used on the shirts were also too similar to Nirvana’s recognizable designs, the band’s lawyers argued.

The compounding similarities were part of a campaign to associate the collection with Nirvana without permission, “so as to make the ‘Grunge’ association with the collection more authentic,” the lawsuit reads.

In response, Marc Jacobs International pursued a counterclaim alleging that the band had not filed proper copyright registration for the logo and questioning its lawyer’s story that the Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain had drawn it.

The terms of the settlement, which was announced in a July 9 filing, have not been disclosed in court documents, and lawyers for Nirvana and Marc Jacobs International did not respond to requests for comment.

The settlement also resolved a legal challenge from Robert Fisher, a former artist for Geffen Records, who claims that he created the smiley face logo.

Copyright litigation is common in the entertainment world. The Supreme Court ruled last year that Andy Warhol did not have the right to use a photographer’s portrait of the musician Prince in Warhol’s own work, limiting the scope of a fair-use defense against copyright infringement, especially for commercial purposes.

Marc Jacobs did not pursue a fair-use case, which Daniel Lifschitz, a litigator who specializes in copyright law, said would have been challenging because of the company’s commercial purpose of selling clothes.

Mr. Lifschitz, who works for the Beverly Hills law firm Johnson & Johnson and teaches the Nirvana-Marc Jacobs case as part of a course at U.C.L.A.’s extension school, said the key issue at hand was selection and arrangement.

You cannot hold a copyright for the idea of a smiley face, he said, but you can have a copyright for specific characteristics arranged in a certain way.

“Marc Jacobs overplayed its hand in the designing phase, thinking that, ‘Oh, this is just a basic smiley face, this couldn’t be protectable by copyright,’” he said. “That was dumb advice.”



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