Tag Archive for 'art'

Nan Goldin photo – 'not porn' shock

In one of the least surprising outcomes of a CPS consideration of merits of prosecution since, oh let’s say the cash for honours flasco, ‘Klara and Edda bellydancing’ has been decided to be ‘not indecent‘.

So, a photo previously ‘investigated’ for indecency in 2001 and found not indecent then, that has repeatedly been published in the UK, and that was to be exhibited in a contemporary art gallery has required a 6 week investigation to be ‘cleared’. Stunning work.

Perhaps it took 6 weeks because the prosecutors had apparently to address the utterly metaphysical dilemma of whether ’standards of propriety’ had changed since 2001. Is there no minimum period for the re-consideration of standards of propriety? Could it conceivably be a month by month or week by week task? What if there is a long trial? Could standards of propriety have changed by the end of the trial? And if so would the CPS be under a duty to disclose the change in standards?

However, the CPS did give deliver the understatement of the week:

Even if the photograph was now considered to be indecent, a defendant would be able to raise a legitimate defence, given that the photograph was distributed for the purposes of display in a contemporary art gallery after having been deemed not to be indecent by the earlier investigation.

That much was clear from the beginning, so what the hell was everybody wasting their time for? And the great unanswered question, why did the idiots at the Baltic call in the noted cultural critics of the Northumbria Police for their views in the first place?

A farce in a teacup, frankly.

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Honest Guv, it's a genuine da Vinci.

I am once more indebted to Victorian Maiden for noting the arrest of a senior partner in the recapture of the Madonna of the Yardwinder, violently lifted from Drumlanrig Castle four years ago.

Calum Jones of HBJ Gateley Wareing in Glasgow, a specialist in corporate finance and corporate insolvency, was apparently arrested in the course of a meeting with an insurer, a valuer and an art expert, and the painting was found in HBJ’s offices. HBJ say there was “an interesting, but benign, explanation” for Mr Jones’ involvement. Interesting, it should be. Mr Jones insists that he was helping with the painting’s ‘repatriation’.

VM wonders how difficult it is to say ‘give it back’. But the world of high end art theft and/or ransom is a very murky one, as the many recent cases involving paintings by Munch, Carravaggio and others tend to demonstrate. Once big money from insurance companies is involved, let alone the inherent shadiness of the art world, (oh and criminals) nothing is quite what it seems, including whether the painting is a Leonardo da Vinci at all.

For instance, what of the involvement of both the Serious Organised Crime Agency and the Scottish Crime and Drugs Enforcement Agency in the raid. Has SOCA incorporated the old Art Theft team? Was this a set up, or tip off? If so, by whom? Was the £1 million reward (presumably put up by the insurance company) involved?

What on earth was the painting doing on the premises of HBJ? That, by itself, would tend give a certain credence to Mr Jones’ version of affairs. It wouldn’t be the first time that a third party has acted as go between for the thieves and the insurers. But then what the hell was a corporate finance partner doing in this sort of set up?

Add in the second solicitor arrested, Marshall Ronald, who has, as VM notes, a very interesting history, and events get even murkier.

The Scottish police announced that the painting recovered has been examined and ‘found to be genuine‘. Well, for certain limited values of genuine. It is hotly disputed whether the painting is a Leonardo da Vinci, or a ’studio of…’. There are three versions of the painting in existence and Leonardo rarely if ever duplicated his own work. Many consider the Drumlanrig to be a ’studio of’, not a Leonardo. From the photos, I can see why. I’ll bet there have been some very intense discussions over insurance value, which the Duke of Buccleuch will have to repay if he wants the painting back.

This one should get even more unclear if and as the story comes out.

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Nan Goldin at the Baltic – don't believe the hype

[Edit 26 October 2007. Update on this story here]

Given my unusual, if not exceptional, melding of experience in law and contemporary art practice, I ought to have jumped at the news that Plod were investigating a photo by Nan Goldin, Klara and Edda Belly Dancing, for a possible offence under the Protection of Children Act 1978. Instead I left it to VM at Ruthieslaw and Head of Legal to have a go.

Why? Partly because I was knackered, as mentioned before, but mostly because the story was a non-story from the get go.

Item one. Plod didn’t raid the Baltic gallery looking for child porn. They were asked for an opinion by the gallery directors, pre-opening. Nothing has been seized.

Item two. This same photo was part of the Saatchi Gallery Kiddie porn scare of 2001. It went on show.

Item Three. Well, how bloody often do we have to have this same story recycled in one way or another. Sally Mann, Tierney Gearon, Robert Mapplethorpe et bleeding cetera. Still, at least this version of the story has got Elton John in it.

The story does have me a bit worried, though. What the hell did the Baltic organisers think they were doing calling the police in for a ‘pre check’ on whether their art was porn or not, after they had damn well curated and collated the show? Did some bean counter or insurer have palpitations? For pity’s sake, it is art (not necessarily good art, but art nonetheless) and you have put it in your show.

At what point do you then think ‘perhaps I’d better see if the police think it is art or a bit porny’? The Library of the University of Central England had so much more bottle faced with a prosecution over a Mapplethorpe book. Baltic administrators, this is your job – to go ‘this is art and fuck you’ when some pillock calls the police in. You don’t get them to pre-approve your exhibitions.

Unless of course it is done for, cough, marketing purposes. The fact that this is more than plausible might say a hell of a lot about the current art world, the media and the rest of society at the same time.

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Art and copyright 2

Table of contents for Art and Copyright

  1. In the red corner, art, in the blue corner, copyright.
  2. Art and copyright 2

Following on from this post, which suggested a strong incompatibility between contemporary art practices and copyright law in terms of the potential failure of copyright to cover some contemporary art, I’d like to take a quick look at the reverse – how contemporary art approaches copyright.

This should be a shorter post, because the brief answer is that current art practice generally fails to understand or consider copyright.

A basic tenet of contemporary art, as I mentioned before, is that the found object, or ready-made, is capable of becoming a work through context shifting alone. This includes pre-existing images, which may then be read as both a commentary on the pre-existing image and on the art context. This metaphoric eye will see no distinction between objects that are out of copyright and those that aren’t. In fact, in some cases the more present the pre-existing image in the current culture, the suitable for appropriation.

From Duchamp on, and most certainly since Warhol, mass culture has been subject to appropriation, even where, like Warhol’s Monroe images, the image duplicated is subject to copyright. Warhol may, with the emphasis on may, have made a significant alteration to his source, but would probably, in england, fall foul of the ’substantial part’ approach of Designers Guild Ltd -v- Russell Wiliams (Textiles) Ltd (No 2) (2001). But then what of the work of someone like Richard Prince, who re-presents Marlboro Country?

Artist’s understanding of a ‘common culture’ is, in general, more concerned with the image/object repetoire that surrounds us than with the dates of copyright expiration. Sometimes, as with Prince, there are specific concerns about the ownership of rights in something all pervasive involved in the work. More generally, though, I think it is fair to say that there is an unarticulated presumption that public imagery is just that.

This presumption has come back to bite artists. In the US, Jeff Koons ‘String of Puppies’, based on a postcard, resulted in a successful claim against him by the photographer. Interestingly, the Court did not accept a ‘fair use’ defence – not available here – that use of the image was ‘criticism or commentary’ on commodity society. That is exactly the artworld understanding of the work. The Court required criticism/commentary to be of the work reproduced specifically. A later case, Blanch -v- Koons, concerning a partial use of an image in a larger work, had the opposite verdict, the copied image was used as ‘raw material in a novel context’ See also Hoepker & Dabney -v- Kruger & Others (2001), although the failure to register copyright that was part of Kruger’s defence would not apply in England.

In England, we have little in the way of case law. Humbrol’s case against Damian Hirst for ‘Hymn‘ was settled out of court. Anthony Robert’s case against Glenn Brown for ‘Loves of Shepherds’(2000) was likewise settled. (Interestingly Robert is usually described as an illustrator or commercial artist, Brown’s versions of artworks by Auerbach, Dali and others have not attracted any challenge. Once more, the artworld version of originality is far from the legal or even commercial one).

In many cases, it will obviously simply not be worth bringing a claim against some East end garrett dweller, which may partially explain the lack of cases.

Overall, though, the deep divide between an artworld view of ‘common culture’ and the legal view is clear. However, as the use or appropriation of pre-existing imagery is increasingly likely to come up against powerful opposition potentially more concerned with reputation or brand maintenance than any damages for infringement, this is likely to become a more fraught area. John Keane’s experiences with Disney over ‘Mickey Mouse at the Front’(1991), involving trademark rather than copyright as far as I recall, may become more common. Keane had the advantage of an institutional backer in the Imperial War Museum (and photos of the specific scene involved), a lone artist may feel less confident.

I have no particular conclusions to draw, beyond noting the gulf in understanding of such key terms as originality, common culture, even ‘artwork’ itself between artworld and law. This gulf is likely to become a greater issue than it has been so far, both in the protection of artworks and in claims against ‘appropriation’ works. However, artists (and many other ‘creatives’) are largely unaware of the legal landscape in which they work, and I would suggest it is clear that both existing legislation and the Court’s interpretation of it, is inadequate for dealing with contemporary art.

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In the red corner, art, in the blue corner, copyright.

Table of contents for Art and Copyright

  1. In the red corner, art, in the blue corner, copyright.
  2. Art and copyright 2

For reasons unconnected with work, I have been taking a stroll through IP law lately, particularly copyright. As I mentioned before, my previous career was art related and, although I knew something of the history of copyright, I have been struck by what seems to be a fundamental incompatibility between contemporary art practices and copyright statute and case law as it applies to art. (By art, I mean what were once called the plastic arts, or sometimes visual art, and is now just Art – best defined by what it isn’t: theatre, music, design, etc.).

In fact, I suspect that this incompatibility is so fundamental that there are two entirely different concepts of art and of the artwork in operation. I think this difference is clear both in what constitutes an artwork for each, and in attitudes to the use of pre-existing imagery. Having a foot in both camps might make recognition of the problem easier, but I’ve had two voices trying to talk over each other throughout. So, these are some first thoughts on the matter, hopefully to be developed later. As these are lengthy thoughts, two posts are required.

First, in this post, the issue of the artwork in contemporary art and in copyright.

Throughout the 20th Century, and particularly since the 1950s, art practices have involved exploring or testing the nature and boundaries of art. Many works were based on a testing of what, if anything, could be considered to be fundamental to being art. Whether art required a physical manifestation, and if so, whether this had to involve skill and labour, was one of the matters tested. It rapidly became clear that this was not necessary for an artwork (although some record was usually involved). It also became clear that art could also simply involve a context shift for a pre-existing object or image. For a discussion of this, see A.C. Danto’s ‘Art after the end of Art’.

That art might have little or no physical manifestation, or might be solely a recontextualising of a pre-existing object has been taken pretty much for granted by artists since the 1980s as just another set of means or techniques, not a problem at all.

However, I think this does raise quite serious problems in relation to the conception of art and artwork embodied in copyright law. To consider what the problems might be, here is a question. Would copyright subsist in Marcel Duchamp’s ‘Fountain’, 1917, under current law, particularly the CDPA 1988?

This is deeply hypothetical, not only because of the changes in law since 1917, but because there have been no comparable test cases in England that I know of. I’ll add in a proviso – in 1917, Fountain was not considered as a work of art, or only by a very few people, but it most certainly is now, so let us say that its status as an artwork is not an issue. What ‘Fountain’ has become is the iconic progenitor – the touchstone and lodestone- of much art since the mid 1950s, which is why it is a good example.

The question of originality, in terms of the CDPA and case law, is key. The traditional view that it is the skill and labour involved that makes a work original for the purposes of copyright, as stated in Catnic Components Ltd v Hall & Smith Ltd (1979)

It is hard to argue that Duchamp placed any physical or technical skill and effort into the work, as his material contribution was the addition of the pseudonymous signature and placing the urinal on its back. Arguably this version of originality would simply fail to recognise ‘Fountain’.

What of the undoubted originality involved in Duchamp’s ideas about the nature of art?

If we take ‘Fountain’ as an expression of an idea, let’s say an idea about the conditions of becoming ‘art’, there may be a very limited copyright, following Kenrick v Lawrence (1890) because, arguably, the idea involved is a fairly general one, so that any subsequent work that wasn’t actually a complete duplication, down to the details of the signature, would be unlikely to be an infringement. The idea of the ‘readymade’, as Duchamp termed it, certainly had very many different subsequent expressions and arguably prior ones too.

In Hanfstaengl v Baines (1895), it was suggested that there could be a category of work in which the artist’s ‘design and the idea to which it gives birth, are both of them so novel and exceptional that it would be difficult, if not impossible, for another author to create the same idea without trenching upon his design’. At first sight, this might seem to offer a route for works such as ‘Fountain’ where the idea, or concept, to a great extent is the work

However, I would suggest that ‘Fountain’, like many (not all) subsequent ‘conceptual ‘works involves the physical manifestation as an illustration, example or enactment of the idea rather than its necessary expression, and so not the inextricable entwining of the two Hanfstaengl envisages.

Duchamp, under another pseudonym, did once suggest that ‘Fountain’ involved finding a new aesthetic value in an object not previously considered in that way and thereby transforming it. This may satisfy the ‘artistic’ component of the test of artistic craftsmanship in Vermaat and Powell v Boncrest Ltd (2001), but the necessary ‘craftsman’ component would have to be sadly lacking, so it is doubtful that ‘Fountain’ would come under CDPA 1988, s.4(1)(c).

On the whole, it looks likely that the originality of Duchamp’s conceptions would not get past Buckley LJ’s statement in Catnic that “the labour and skill devoted to developing some idea or invention communicated or depicted by the ‘artistic work’” is not protected by copyright.

So I think that it is likely, or at least strongly arguable, that ‘Fountain’ would not have copyright subsisting in it. If ‘Fountain’ hypothetically hasn’t, then the same could well be true of a whole swathe of modern and contemporary art that depends on the ‘idea’ as the work, with an absent, minimal or appropriated material ‘expression’. For instance, in Michael Craig-Martin’s ‘Oak Tree‘ (1973), would anything except the authored text and perhaps the assembly instructions (which are not part of the work) attract copyright?

For a US based illustration of how conceptually based work makes a tangle of copyright law…

Photographs by Walker-Evans taken in the 1930s, which have since become highly valued works, had fallen out of copyright by the early 1980s. Sherrie Levine produced a series called ‘After Walker Evans‘ which consisted of photographs of Walker-Evans photographs, shot and produced to be effectively the same images. The work was concerned with questioning the artistic and financial value attached to authorship and authenticity. Ironically, Levine then had copyright in her photographic reproductions of the Walker-Evans.

Recently another artist, in a project called ‘After Sherrie Levine‘ has produced pretty much identical reproductions of the Walker-Evans photographs and made them available for download. So, although Levine has copyright in her photographs of Walker-Evans photographs, she does not have copyright in either the idea of reproducing a Walker-Evans image as a new artwork, nor is there infringement of her copyright involved in making a work which may be to all practical purposes visually and materially identical, as long as it involves reproducing Walker-Evans images, rather than reproducing Levine’s reproductions of Walker-Evan’s photographs (themselves reproduced from a reproduction in a catalogue, which is arguably a copyright infringement, depending on when the catalogue photos were taken. See part 2).

Assuming that you have recovered from this vertiginous recursion, I’d have to say that this problem of copyright in some contemporary art has not been tested in a Court, as far as I can see, unlike the appropriation of copyright imagery in artworks, which I’ll come to in part 2. But a valid question is, does it matter? Is holding copyright in these works at all important for the artist?

On the one hand, probably not. The value placed upon originality by the art world – in the art world sense of being the first to ‘come up with an idea’, rather than the physical sense of originality of artwork underlying the law – means that there is no point in producing a copy. A reproduction that involves some context shift, or idea behind it, (pace Sherrie Levine) is generally acceptable in the art world because that is sufficient originality and does not affect or diminish the value (artistic or financial) of the ‘original’ that is reproduced. Quite the reverse, in this Alice world, works reproducing other works serve to enhance the originality and value of the reproducee.

In addition, control over reproduction is also quite easily achieved, as artworks tend to be owned and be under controlled access. Photographs of the artwork have their own copyright and thus reproduction is lucratively patrolled.

On the other hand, it might be very important. One clear example why is what happened to a work by Gillian Wearing called ‘Signs that say what you want to say and not signs that say what someone else wants you to say‘ (1992-3). The style, means and idea of the work – let’s say combining public persona and inner state – was duplicated by an ad agency for a Volkswagen advert. Wearing didn’t pursue a case, in part because of what had happened to Mehdi Norowszian in Norowszian v Ark Ltd (No 2)(1999), concerning a Guiness ad ripping off a film/work called ‘Joy’. It was decided that no copyright subsisted in ‘mere style and technique’, apparently no matter how distinctive or innovative the style and technique might be.

Contemporary art practice has long served as an unpaid R&D department for advertising, in part precisely to the extent that contemporary art is concerned with developing innovative style and technique. There is little or no financial gain in producing direct copies of works, but there is a lot of money to be made in using the ideas, style and technique. This is particularly so when it would appear that, as long as precisely the same physical elements aren’t used, or images re-used, there is no recourse to copyright for the artist.

For the artists, with their art-world concept of originality, this is offensive. All the more so as the ripoffs tend to lack imagination, wit and sophistication, and end up looking like banal caricatures. At this point, the incompatibility of contemporary art practice and current copyright law in their conceptions of value and originality becomes very clear.

However, as I hope part 2 of this might suggest, there may be a certain poetic justice involved in the artists’ being ripped off.

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