YouTube logo Vimeo logo X logo LinkedIn logo Soundcloud logo Instagram logo Flickr logo Facebook logo Bluesky logo Threads logo
Home
From left, Yasmin Wall, Diana Ngonyama, Latifa Rahman, Miranda July, Natasha Hodes and Abhayanandi outside Miranda July’s Interfaith Charity Shop, 31 August 2017. Photograph: Hugo Glendinning

Artangel & Miranda July present...

Miranda July

31.08.17 - 22.10.17

Status: Complete

Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges

All the books and films on sale are written by women, shoes have been selected for either their “blingy” or “practical” qualities, and she has a particular penchant for an accordion pleat. It is also surely no coincidence that July’s charity shop is located directly next to Parisian collective Vêtements, which is known for giving cheap and second-hand looking clothing price tags that are anything but. – Louisa Buck, The Telegraph

There are more than 10,000 charity shops in the UK. For a short time in 2017, there was just one more. A shop within a shop, a participatory artwork, an unexpected retail experience: the UK’s first interfaith charity shop.

Situated on the third floor of Selfridges surrounded by designer boutiques, this shop was run and staffed jointly by four religious charities invited by July: Islamic Relief, Jewish charity Norwood, London Buddhist Centre and Spitalfields Crypt Trust. Although those who visited might have noticed the hand of artist Miranda July in the stock selection, everything else – from the fluorescent lighting through to the laminated signage – was designed to resemble any other charity shop. 


Image: From left, Yasmin Wall, Diana Ngonyama, Latifa Rahman, Miranda July, Natasha Hodes and Abhayanandi outside Miranda July’s Interfaith Charity Shop, 31 August 2017. Photograph: Hugo Glendinning 

Miranda July inside Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges, 31 August 2017. Photograph: Hugo Glendinning

Instagram Live: Miranda July in conversation with Caroline Issa

19:00 BST Monday 27 April 2020

Documentary: Open to the World

Miranda July looks back at her Artangel project, an interfaith charity shop that opened up unannounced inside one of the world's most famous department stores in August 2017.

Situated on the third floor of Selfridges, London, surrounded by designer boutiques, this shop was run and staffed jointly by four religious charities invited by July: Islamic Relief, Jewish charity Norwood, London Buddhist Centre and Spitalfields Crypt Trust.

This short documentary, Open to the World, is a featured extra on Criterion's new special edition release of July's Me and You and Everyone We Know (2005).


Cinematographer, Hugo Glendinning

Editor, Aaron Beckum

Second Unit Cinematographer, Tilly Shiner

Music, Summer Mastous

Still photography, Hugo Glendinning

Additional Still Photography, Andy Donohoe

Colour, Gabriel Chavez

Sound Mix, Nathan Singhapok


This video is also available to watch on Vimeo and YouTube.

Shop manager Diana Ngonyama and shop worker Latifa Rahman. Photograph: Hugo Glendinning

Distributing the Proceeds

Net sales are divided equally between the four participating charities, each in turn then donating 2.5% of their share to another charity of their choice as follows:

Spitalfields Crypt Trust: Providence Row

Islamic Relief: The Bike Project

London Buddhist Centre: Praxis Community Project

Norwood: Carers in Hertfordshire


Image: Shop manager Diana Ngonyama and shop worker Latifa Rahman. Photograph: Hugo Glendinning

Bric-a-brac for sale 4 September 2017. Photograph: Matthew Andrews

Items for Sale

Items for sale will be typical of those traditionally sold in charity shops: second-hand clothes, books, games, DVDs, kitchenware, toys ornaments and bric-a-brac. Prices are similar to those in any charity shop.

Books for sale 4 September 2017. Photographs: Matthew Andrews

Image: Bric-a-brac(left) and books (above) for sale 4 September 2017. Photographs: Matthew Andrews

Miranda July in conversation with Jeremy Deller

Miranda:...the shoes had to be either very classic or very blingy, I liked pleated skirts, I like objects that could be interpreted as sculptural but weren’t, I liked also, beyond lots of religious stuff I liked, because it was all mixed together, I also liked just kinky stuff in general. I wanted clothes for premature babies because my baby was premature but that’s actually really hard to find. Some basic things like winter jackets for kids, I feel those should never be bought new they just whip right through them and everyone should have access to cheap winter coats.
Jeremy: Importantly, this is the only charity shop in Britain where you can’t buy a book by Jeremy Clarkson
Miranda: Right! Only books by women, that was a subtle intervention.

Here Miranda July speaks with artist Jeremy Deller at Prince Charles Cinema, London, 19 October 2017 about how this project came about.

Also available to view on Vimeo and YouTube.


Director and Editor: Jared Schiller
Camera: Cressida Kocienski and Erin Hopkins
Stills photography: Hugo Glendinning
Additional footage: Miranda July

Miranda July, Personal Shopper: Seth Price

Artist Seth Price is in the market for some 90s UK gear. To his rescue comes Miranda July to assess his metaphysical and emotional needs when shopping.


Also available to view on Vimeo and YouTube

Directed and edited by Hugo Glendinning

Miranda July, Personal Shopper: Georgina Starr

Miranda July helps artist Georgina Starr choose outfits for Frieze Art Fair 2017.


Also available to view on Vimeo and YouTube

Directed and edited by Hugo Glendinning

Miranda July, Personal Shopper: Marcus Coates

Personal shopper Miranda July would like to get an idea of what artist Marcus Coates needs in his shopping experience at Selfridges. He wants to be fitter and richer but she's thinking red sequins.


Also available to view on Vimeo and YouTube

Directed and edited by Hugo Glendinning

Miranda July, Personal Shopper: Cornelia Parker

Miranda July acts as a personal shopper to artist Cornelia Parker. The two artists talk sleeve complexity, everyday kitchen utensils and whether or not jewellery is ageing.


Also available to view on Vimeo and YouTube

Directed and edited by Hugo Glendinning

Books for sale 4 September 2017. Photographs: Matthew Andrews

Book: Miranda July

£39.99 from Prestel Publishing

This chronological retrospective documents Miranda July’s performance and video projects, award-winning films, digital multimedia, and written pieces which chart the multidimensionality of her work. The book includes photography, stills, and archival ephemera, and is narrated by friends, collaborators, curators, assistants, and audience members as well as July herself.

In one of the book’s essays, Artangel Co-director Michael Morris provides behind-the-scenes commentary about the process of developing the interfaith charity shop. Read an excerpt.

  • Published by Prestel Publishing
  • 224pp
  • Illustrations colour
  • Hardback
  • ISBN: 978-3-7913-8521-1

Image: Books for sale at the interfaith charity shop, 4 September 2017. Photograph: Matthew Andrews

Bric-a-brac for sale, 31 August 2017. Photograph Hugo Glendinning
Miranda July inside Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges, 31 August 2017. Photograph Hugo Glendinning

Miranda July

Miranda July is a filmmaker, artist, and writer.

Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges was her first ever UK commission.

Her movies, performances, and web-based projects have been presented at MoMA, The Brooklyn Academy of Music, and in two Whitney Biennials in New York.

Her participatory artworks include the website Learning to Love You More (2000-2007; now in the collection of San Francisco Museum of Modern Art), Eleven Heavy Things (a sculpture garden created for the 2009 Venice Biennale), Somebody (2014; a messaging app created with Miu Miu) and New Society (2015; a performance).

She wrote, directed and starred in the films The Future (2011) and Me and You and Everyone We Know (2005; winner of a Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and the Camera d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival). Her debut novel, The First Bad Man, was a New York Times bestseller in 2015 and her collection of stories, No One Belongs Here More Than You, from 2007, won the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award; both books are published in twenty-five countries.

Her writing has also appeared in The Paris Review, Harper’s, and The New Yorker. It Chooses You was her first book of nonfiction. Earlier this year The Getty Research Institute acquired the archive of July’s Joanie 4 Jackie project, an underground video distribution network for women she founded in 1995. She is the recipient of a 2016 USA Artist Fellowship Award, and is a member of The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. July lives in Los Angeles.

Images: (left) Bric-a-brac for sale, 31 August 2017. Photograph Hugo Glendinning; (above) Miranda July inside Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges, 31 August 2017. Photograph Hugo Glendinning

The fashion-savvy will appreciate the humour of positioning a real charity shop directly next to Vetements, a brand that has notoriously mined the thrift-store aesthetic and once offered T-Shirts emblazoned with the DHL logo for £185. Such juxtapositions are of course part of the game. — Hettie Judah, inews

Selected Press

The shop is as much a curated art piece as a functioning retail venue and it has July’s distinctive style, with the offbeat and sometimes bizarre tone that infuses her films and books. — Hannah Ellis-Peterson, Guardian, 31 August 2017
‘It’s ultimately up to the viewer, as in any piece of art, if they find meaning in it,’ July explains. We certainly do. She uses the high profile nature of the Bond Street location to propel us into thought, playing on one of the city's ubiquitous pastimes, July is selling us a complex, performative artistic idea in a package we can all buy into. — Elly Parson, Wallpaper*, 6 September 2017
It seems important to July that the 1% are confronted with the simulacrum of what they might never engage with – bargain bins and racks of pre-loved (and pre-stained) nightdresses and formal shirts – if left to their own devices. The multi-faith backing of the retail space, too, feels timely. — Emily Watkins, Plinth, 15 September 2017
Shop manager Diana Ngonyama and Miranda July adjust a wall display, 31 August 2017. Photograph: Matthew Andrews


Image: Shop manager Diana Ngonyama and Miranda July adjust a wall display, 31 August 2017. Photograph: Matthew Andrews

Miranda July, Michael Morris and Sam Collins at a stock meeting for Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges, 2017. Photograph: Andy Donohoe

Production Credits

Artangel

Michael Morris, Co-Director
Sam Collins, Head of Production

Marina Doritis, Production Coordinator

Interfaith Charity Shop

Diana Ngonyama, Store Manager

Margareth Harris Conyard, Deputy Store Manager

Sophie Cundale, Deputy Store Manager

Design

Mike Mills, Designer

Thea Lorentzen, Designer

With special thanks to Turnbull Grey

Set Works

Tim Meaker, Co-Director

Andy Turnbull, Co-Director

See more production credits.


Photo: Miranda July, Michael Morris and Sam Collins at a stock meeting, London 2017. Photograph: Andy Donohoe

Who made this possible?

Credits

Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges is made possible thanks to the particular generosity of Mala Gaonkar and Oliver Haarmann and Sigrid Rausing, Publisher, Granta Books, and with the kind collaboration of Selfridges.

Artangel would like to thank Leith Clark and Sophie Carruthers for their styling contribution and The Beaumont Hotel - Mayfair for their support of this commission.

Artangel is generously supported by Arts Council England, and by the private patronage of The Artangel International CircleSpecial AngelsGuardian Angels, and The Company of Angels.

Supported using public funding by Arts Council England logo
logo.png
Norwood-Logo-Strip-Final-(1).png
lbc-logo-vector-blackwhite.png
Logo_SCT.png
Logo_Selfridges.png
Miranda July takes a selfie with a visitor to Artangel & Miranda July present Norwood Jewish Charity Shop, London Buddhist Centre Charity Shop & Spitalfields Crypt Trust Charity Shop in solidarity with Islamic Relief Charity Shop at Selfridges. Photograph: Matthew Andrews, 8 September 2017