Will Round Two of Cariou v Prince Change Art Law Forever?


Will Round Two of Cariou v Prince Change Art Law Forever?


When Paintings are Easily Reproduced: Hrag Vartanian writing at hyperallergic.com on the issues about to be unleashed in the art world by affordable, high quality 3D printers:

“So far, the debate about artistic copyright has been safely in the realm of design and photography … . but how will that conversation change when anything can be easily reproduced and presented without proof of origin or even the original artist’s touch? … . A copyright lawyer by day, Steiner bought a glob-erific clown painting by Allison Schulnk … He then proceeded to have a replica of the work fabricated on a ZPrinter 650 3D printer. The result is a quite good monochromatic reproduction of the painting that is full of the brushstrokes and textures that until recently we thought we couldn’t so easily reproduce. Looking at the potential in this art work, I realized it was only a matter of time (months?) before paintings with their grooves and quirks could be churned out at will.”

photo of artwork at Palm Springs Art Museum © 2012 j.r.mchale

01/12/2012: 

I have a soft spot for artwork that involves text. A review of the new book “Art and Text” at I Love Typography. From the review: “It covers works that include some text, are made up of text, or are text. The subject of these works is often the intersection of art, philosophy, and linguistics. While a few older works are shown, the focus of the book is 1960–2008 with most of the work from the latter decades.”