Nirvana accused of ripping off Dante’s Inferno merch

An heir of the late British artist C. W. Scott-Giles claims that the band used her grandfather’s illustration on merch dating back to 1989

Over the last few years, Nirvana’s iconic smiley face logo has caused more than its fair share of legal trouble, beginning with allegations of trademark infringement against Marc Jacobs in 2019 (after the designer reissued his “Bootleg Redux Grunge” SS93 collection) and reignited last year when a graphic designer claimed ownership of the original image. Now, though, another of the grunge band’s more recognisable merch designs is at the centre of a legal dispute.

In a new lawsuit brought against the band, an heir of the late British artist C. W. Scott-Giles alleges that they ripped off an image he designed. The map of hell was reportedly drawn by Scott-Giles for a translation of Dante’s “Inferno” dating back to 1949.

Though Scott-Giles died in 1982, the April 28 lawsuit is filed by the Jocelyn Bundy, who says that she noticed a version of her grandfather’s design on Nirvana merch in January this year. An image “virtually identical to the illustration” can be seen on Nirvana t-shirts, vinyl, keyrings, patches, and other merch, states the complaint (via Blabbermouth), and is recognised by fans as the “Seven Circles of Hell” or “Vestibule” design.

Source:    https://www.dazeddigital.com/fashion/article/52660/1/an-artist-is-suing-nirvana-over-dantes-inferno-merch-lawsuit-kurt-cobain