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Athena, the brand behind Tennis Girl, goes up for sale

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July 10, 2026
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Athena, the brand behind Tennis Girl, goes up for sale
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Athena, the poster retailer that decorated a generation of British bedrooms and gave the world the Tennis Girl, is up for sale, offering entrepreneurs and investors a rare chance to buy one of the high street’s most recognisable names outright.

BPI Asset Advisory, a RICS regulated team of surveyors and business advisors specialising in valuation and asset disposal, has been instructed to market the trademarks owned by Athena Licensing Ltd. The package comprises two recently renewed UK trademarks, covering the name and stylised logo, together with a recently renewed EU trademark.

For anyone who grew up in the 1980s or 1990s, Athena needs little introduction. Founded in 1964, the chain grew to more than 160 stores nationwide at its peak, selling the posters, prints and gifts that shaped the visual identity of teenage bedrooms, student houses and first flats across the country.

Monochrome New York skylines, jazz photography, fantasy artwork and surreal imagery all passed through its tills. Its most famous image, the Tennis Girl poster of 1976, remains globally recognised half a century on, alongside landmark pieces including L’Enfant, Beyond City Limits and Jimmy Cauty’s 1976 Lord of the Rings artwork.

Andrew Cromack, director at BPI Asset Advisory, said: “Athena is a name that immediately resonates with generations of people across the UK. Brands with this level of recognition and cultural connection rarely come to market, making this a unique opportunity to acquire a genuine piece of British retail history.”

For SME owners, the sale is a useful reminder that a brand can outlive the business that built it. Athena joins a long list of high street names that have disappeared from Britain’s town centres, yet its trademarks, kept renewed and in good order, remain a marketable asset decades after the last store closed its doors.

That is no accident. A registered trademark can be licensed, sold or even used as loan collateral, which is why advisers urge founders to think carefully about whether to trade mark a business name, logo or both early on. Athena’s owners renewed both UK marks and the EU registration before bringing them to market, keeping the asset clean for a buyer. Anyone curious about what is protected can check the UK trade mark register held by the Intellectual Property Office.

The commercial logic for a buyer is equally clear. Heritage names carry ready-made recognition that would cost millions to build from scratch, and nostalgia marketing has proven pulling power, with research suggesting consumers loosen their purse strings when reminded of happier times. Athena’s continued presence in popular culture, most recently referenced in Alan Carr’s television series Changing Ends, suggests the affection has not faded.

The obvious route for a new owner is licensing the intellectual property rather than reopening shops: putting the Athena name on prints, homeware or publishing through partners who carry the manufacturing risk while the brand owner collects royalties.

BPI says the sale will suit investors, brand owners, licensing businesses and media groups seeking an established intellectual property asset with strong historic recognition and ongoing cultural relevance.

Whoever buys it will acquire more than two logos and a word mark. They will own a shorthand for an entire era of British youth, and in a crowded market, that kind of instant recognition rarely comes up for sale.

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