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Plagiarising Prince Ep73

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Manage episode 291435019 series 2117968
Content provided by Modern Art is Rubbish. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Modern Art is Rubbish or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Accidental Vandals

Live artwork does not mean participatory artwork

An untitled piece by graffiti artist JonOne was painted in front of an audience in Seoul in 2016. The artwork currently hangs in Seoul, where it was inadvertently defaced by a visiting couple.

The couple thought the paint and brushes, used in the original artwork and displayed as an integral part of the work, were an invitation to contribute.They were not, but organisers will not be pressing charges for this honest mistake. There is now a small fence in front of the artwork, with signs saying “ Do not touch”.

Accidental black marks centre right of the image

Is it a Prince?

His name was Prince..and he didn’t look different enough for Lynn Goldsmith.

Celebrity photographer Lynn Goldsmith claimed the Andy Warhol Foundation infringed her copyright by presenting her 1981 photo of Prince in a way that didn’t constitute transformative use. This claim has been upheld in a ruling that goes toward clarifying the conundrum: when is transformative use an infringing derivative ie not allowed versus when does transformative work constitute fair use, which is allowed?

The legal bit: The Copyright Act uses the word “transformative” in defining derivative works. Fair use is a defence to copyright infringement. Creation of an unauthorized derivative work is infringement.

This is the second ruling on the case, with Judge#2 judging Judge#1. Judge Gerard E. Lynch of the 2nd circuit court of appeal said that Judge John G. Koeltl spoke in error and “should not assume the role of art critic and seek to ascertain the intent behind or meaning of the works at issue.” Koetl had said the Warhol images were fair use as they transformed the “ vulnerable, uncomfortable person” of Goldsmith’s photos into an “iconic, larger than life figure,” when he ruled in favour of The Andy Warhol Foundation in 2019.

Wise Picasso Words

Extra

You can hear Tom’s latest musical release below

Notes are by the Writer Amanda Hodgson you can listen to her poetry work here Amanda Hodgson – Listen to Poetry

Featured imaged adapted from image by Nicolas Genin from Paris, France – Prince, People au Défilé Channel, Printemps-Eté 2010 CC BY-SA 2.0

The post Plagiarising Prince Ep73 appeared first on .

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106 episodes

Artwork

Plagiarising Prince Ep73

Modern Art is Rubbish

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Manage episode 291435019 series 2117968
Content provided by Modern Art is Rubbish. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Modern Art is Rubbish or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Accidental Vandals

Live artwork does not mean participatory artwork

An untitled piece by graffiti artist JonOne was painted in front of an audience in Seoul in 2016. The artwork currently hangs in Seoul, where it was inadvertently defaced by a visiting couple.

The couple thought the paint and brushes, used in the original artwork and displayed as an integral part of the work, were an invitation to contribute.They were not, but organisers will not be pressing charges for this honest mistake. There is now a small fence in front of the artwork, with signs saying “ Do not touch”.

Accidental black marks centre right of the image

Is it a Prince?

His name was Prince..and he didn’t look different enough for Lynn Goldsmith.

Celebrity photographer Lynn Goldsmith claimed the Andy Warhol Foundation infringed her copyright by presenting her 1981 photo of Prince in a way that didn’t constitute transformative use. This claim has been upheld in a ruling that goes toward clarifying the conundrum: when is transformative use an infringing derivative ie not allowed versus when does transformative work constitute fair use, which is allowed?

The legal bit: The Copyright Act uses the word “transformative” in defining derivative works. Fair use is a defence to copyright infringement. Creation of an unauthorized derivative work is infringement.

This is the second ruling on the case, with Judge#2 judging Judge#1. Judge Gerard E. Lynch of the 2nd circuit court of appeal said that Judge John G. Koeltl spoke in error and “should not assume the role of art critic and seek to ascertain the intent behind or meaning of the works at issue.” Koetl had said the Warhol images were fair use as they transformed the “ vulnerable, uncomfortable person” of Goldsmith’s photos into an “iconic, larger than life figure,” when he ruled in favour of The Andy Warhol Foundation in 2019.

Wise Picasso Words

Extra

You can hear Tom’s latest musical release below

Notes are by the Writer Amanda Hodgson you can listen to her poetry work here Amanda Hodgson – Listen to Poetry

Featured imaged adapted from image by Nicolas Genin from Paris, France – Prince, People au Défilé Channel, Printemps-Eté 2010 CC BY-SA 2.0

The post Plagiarising Prince Ep73 appeared first on .

  continue reading

106 episodes

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