Prisunic
Founded1931
Defunct2003 (2003)
Area served
France, Andorra, French possessions and colonies and Greece

Prisunic (Société Française des Magasins à Prix Uniques) was a French variety store chain that closed in 2003. Its stores were generally located in downtown areas. Over their existence they also operated stores in Andorra, Greece and the French possessions and colonies.

History

Affiche informant de l'ouverture du magasin Prisunic de Saint-Quentin, en 1933.

The Prisunic stores were founded by Maurice Farhi[1][2] Pierre Lanuionie, and Henry Reichenbach,[3][4] however accounts vary as to the exact details. At the end of 1931, Pierre Laguionie, majority shareholder of the Printemps department stores in Paris, created Prisunic chain of stores in order to compete with the Uniprix chain of stores, created in 1928 by the Nouvelles Galeries.

Prisunic aimed to offer a range of "cheap prices for everyday non-food products, with groceries, confectionery and some fresh products". An immediate success, despite political pressure from traditional retailers worried about competition.[5]

Affiliated stores followed. In a precursor to the commercial franchise, affiliated retailers benefited from the name and services of the central purchasing agency, SAPAC, created in 1934.[6]

When Nazi Germany occupied France in 1940, Prisunic CEO Maurice Farhi, who was Jewish, fled with his wife and children to the United States.[7] [8] Jewish shareholders of Prisunic were forced to transfer shares to non-Jewish owners in a series of complex transactions.[9]

In 1958, the designer Andrée Putman became artistic director of Prisunic.[10] In the early 1960s, with the help of Denise Fayolle, the company popularized ready-to-wear clothing, which was then in its infancy in France.[11] In 1965, Jean-Pierre Bailly designed the new Prisunic logo: a flowery target in the center.[12][13]

In 1968, Prisunic also started selling furniture, lighting and tableware by catalog, in a contemporary design, with designers such as Terence Conran, Olivier Mourgue, Marc Held, Marc Berthier, or Danielle Quarante.[14]

In 1970, the company had more than 350 stores in France, but in 1977 only 132 were operating.

Monoprix acquired the company in 1997 and at the time they operated 111 stores most of them in Paris and the Parisian suburbs.[15]

The stores, some of which were heavily loss-making, were dismantled and integrated into the Monoprix network of stores.[16] The company was completely dissolved in 2002. The last Prisunic store was closed in Noisy-le-Sec in 2003.[17][18]

The company's headquarters were located in the Pont-de-Sèvres Towers complex (called Tours Citylights since 2016) overlooking the Pont de Sèvres in Boulogne-Billancourt, not far from the former headquarters of the Renault plants.[19]

International stores

Over the companies existence international stores were also operated in Andorra, Greece (as Prisunic-Marinopoulos), Algeria, Cameroon, Djibouti, Guadeloupe, Lebanon, Madagascar, Martinique, Mauritius, Réunion, Spain and the UAE to name some.[20][21][22]

In France, like the "Renault worker", the "Prisunic cashier" has come to symbolize the typical proletarian in everyday language. The name of the store, Prisunic, is an emblematic example of the French consumer society born of the Trente Glorieuses. The sign is familiarly called "Prisu".[23]

In film

In the film Antoine et Antoinette, directed by Jacques Becker and released in 1947, Antoinette (Claire Mafféi) is a photo booth employee in the Prisunic on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.

In literature

Prisunic has been cited in books like Libraire, corps et âmes from the French commentator Dominique Reynié.[24]

Roger Grenier's novel, Ciné-roman, which won the prix Femina in 1972, depicts a woman named Christine who works at Prisunic .[25]

Prisunic is also mentioned in the famous Tintin comic book series.[26]

In song

The "Prisunic cashier" was mentioned in song lyrics.

In the 1950s, the legendary French actor and singer Bourvil sang a humorous song about Prisunic called En Nourrice, and Juliette Gréco and Lucette Raillat performed a song entitled "The Time of Peanuts" (Le Temps des cacahuètes), written by Claudine Garan:

On courait dans les rues en s'tenant la main,

On dévorait des yeux tous les beaux magasins ;
On n'osait pas entrer, sauf dans les "Prisunic"

Où on peut se prom'ner mêm' si on n'est pas chic.

En 1967, Henri Gougaud écrit une chanson sur les magasins Prisunic.

In 1967 the writer and poet Henri Gougaud wrote a song called "Prisunic" sung by Jean Ferrat, on the album À Santiago, which criticised consumerist society.

Prisunic aux soleils d'aluminium tout gris ;

La musique vous prend dans ses douces volutes ;
Prisunic Prisunic vos néons sont fleuris ;

Paraît que le nylon ça brûle en deux minutes.

Other songs that mention Prisunic include Les Antimémoires, by Bernard Lavilliers, Machine à laver by the French punk rock group Starshooter, On s'ennuie, by Alain Souchon on his Rame album, Musique vieille, written by Gérard Presgurvic, and sung by Patrick Bruel on the l'album De face en 1986, Guitarist, written by Charlélie Couture on the album Solo Boys, Poupée psychédélique by Thierry Hazard, Allongés sous les vagues, on the album Putain de camion, sung by Renaud as well as the humorous parody song by the comedians knowns as the Inconnus, It's You that I Love (C’est toi que je t’aime).

Songs continued to reference Prisunic well into the 2000s, with titles such as The Girl in Prisunic (La Fille au Prisunic), sung by Adrienne Pauly, and The Limiñanas' song entitled simply Prisunic, on their album Malamore.

In art

The French painter and sculptor Martial Raysse announced during his "Pop" period in the 1970s that the Prisunic are "the new museums of modern art".[27]

In an original and innovative move, at the cultural level, for a chain of so-called "general public" stores, the Prisunic chain sold, in "self-service", between 1967 and 1973, lithographs signed by artists. First of all, through a first edition with creators such as the Belgian painter and engraver Pierre Alechinsky, co-founder of the Cobra artistic movement, as well as the French painter, engraver and sculptor Jean Messagier. Lithographic works by the French-American painter and sculptor Arman, published and sold by Prisunic, can still be found in the auctions.[28]

Following these first sales, a new edition led other artists to participate in this commercial operation called "Suites Prisunic". We can mention Christo, Max Ernst, Asger Jorn and Niki de Saint-Phalle. In 1973, the collector and art critic Jacques Putman, who initiated this operation with the chain of stores, bought the stock of unsold works and then created the Société de diffusion d'œuvres plastiques et multiples (SDOPM).[29]

In exhibitions or museum collections

1980s

From June 15 to August 29, 1988, the Georges Pompidou National Center for Art and Culture in Paris hosted an exhibition entitled "Prisunic, an exhibition of new products"..

This exhibition is presented as an "evocation of the history of the creation of Prisunic stores through the great economic and cultural moments and the actions taken at different times. The exhibition, with a promotional purpose, was linked to the launch of a collection of stationery by the brand.[30]

2000s

From September 5 to November 30, 2008, the VIA gallery, located in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, organized an exhibition "Prisunic and Design, a unique adventure" on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the first mail order catalog published in 1968 by the brand.[31]

From November 22 to 25, 2018, the Design Fair Paris, installed at the Espace Champerret, organized the exhibition "Prisunic - The beautiful at the price of the ugly", taking up a slogan of the brand and bringing together a hundred posters, posters and furniture catalogs of the brand[32]

The Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris dedicated a space entirely to "Prisunic, a store for daily life "(Prisunic, un magasin au service du quotidien).[14][33]

References

  1. "Sara Robinson Will Be Bride Of Paul Farhi". The New York Times. 1981-02-15. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  2. "Pierre Chareau" (PDF). Centre Pompidou. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-06.
  3. "Pour l'amour de Léon Blum". leparisien.fr (in French). 2014-02-09. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  4. "Her Love for France's First Jewish Prime Minister Made Her Follow Him to Buchenwald". Haaretz. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  5. "L'histoire de Prisunic" (PDF). tout-prisu.net. Retrieved 5 May 2019..
  6. "Prisunic vous invite à découvrir l'histoire de son enseigne". tout-prisu.net. Retrieved 2016-12-15.
  7. "Maurice Farhi & Hélène Maus". farhi.org. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  8. CLAIMS RESOLUTION TRIBUNAL. "In re Holocaust Victim Assets Litigation Case No. CV96-4849 Certified Award to Claimant in re Account of Maurice and Hélène Farhi" (PDF).
  9. Verheyde, Philippe (1999). Les mauvais comptes de Vichy : l'aryanisation des entreprises juives. [Paris]: Perrin. p. 245. ISBN 2-262-01524-4. OCLC 41929383. l'aryanisation de la plus importante des sociétés de vente à prix uniques, la SAMPU, qui exploite une centaine de magasins Prisunic, est réalisée par le transfert des titres des membres juifs à des actionnaires aryens
  10. Pauline Fontaine. "10 choses à retenir sur Andrée Putman, la papesse du design". elle.fr (in French). Retrieved 2016-12-15.
  11. Musée des arts décoratifs (2021). Le Design pour tous : de Prisunic à Monoprix, une aventure française (in French). Paris: Beaux-arts Éditions. OCLC 1298191132.
  12. Joëlle Porcher (2015). "La victoire du prêt-à-porter". Vichy, mini, bikini. Carbonne: Loubatières. p. 58. ISBN 978-2-86266-728-7..
  13. Tony Côme (14 October 2008). "Retour sur un mythe : Prisunic et le design". nonfiction.fr. Retrieved 2016-12-15.
  14. 1 2 Véronique Lorelle (2021). "Prisunic et le beau pour tous". Le Monde (in French).
  15. "Monoprix and Prisunic - anatomy of a merger". www.managementtoday.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-06-18.
  16. "La fusion des magasins populaires Monoprix et Prisunic entre dans les faits". Les Echos (in French). 1998-07-09. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  17. Claire Sicard (3 February 2021). "Prisunic, Mammouth, Shopi... Ces 7 enseignes de supermarchés aujourd'hui disparues ont marqué leur époque" [Prisunic, Mammoth, Shopi... These 7 supermarket brands that no longer exist left their mark]. Capital (in French).
  18. "1958, ouverture du magasin Prisunic de Noisy-le-Sec". noisylesec-histoire.fr. Retrieved 2016-12-15..
  19. "Fiche "Prisunic Exploitation". societe.com. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  20. "Magasins & Sièges". La Saga (in French). Retrieved 2023-06-18.
  21. "Prisunic - Historie PDF" (PDF).
  22. "Al Ahlia Stores (Prisunic-France)". www.alahliagroup.com. Archived from the original on 2023-06-18. Retrieved 2023-06-18.
  23. Sainderichin, Ginette (January 1995). La mode épinglée... sous toutes les coutures (in French). Éditions n°1. ISBN 978-2863916674.
  24. Dominique Reynié (1994). Libraire, corps et âmes (in French). Vinci. ISBN 9782910313029. OCLC 32893688.
  25. Roger Grenier (1972). Ciné-roman (in French). éditions Gallimard. p. 173. ISBN 978-2070366675.
  26. Jean-Luc (18 October 2017). "COKE EN STOCK: DÉJÀ LES RAVAGES DU POLITIQUEMENT CORRECT". Tintinomania (in French).
  27. "Martial Raysse". slash-paris.com (in French). Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  28. Christine Siméone (2012). "Pour une histoire de la consommation avec Prisunic". franceinter.fr (in French).
  29. "L'estampe, un art pour tous des suites Prisunic à Catherine Putman" (PDF). koregos.org (in French). Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  30. "L'événement Prisunic". centrepompidou.fr. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  31. ""Prisunic et le design", la nouvelle exposition du VIA". femmeactuelle.fr. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  32. "Prisunic – Le beau au prix du laid". paris-art.com. Retrieved 5 May 2019..
  33. "Citroën LN / LNA : l'opportuniste". boitierrouge.com. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
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