I honestly had no idea that Mr. Prince’s photographs of
magazine ads were allowed. He is just photographing other artists’ works from
magazine ads and reprinting them to show in his own shows. At one point he even
stated, “I never associated advertisements with having an author.” And it’s
allowed! His borrowing is, as the article states, “protected by fair use
exceptions” to the copyright law. I cannot help but compare this to the recent
battle between Robin Thicke (and Pharrell) and Marvin Gaye’s family who claim
that “Blurred Lines” is a rip off of Gaye’s song “Got to Give it Up.” After the
judge compared the sheet music and audio of each song, it was found that “Blurred
Lines” was a rip off and the artists had to pay Gaye’s family millions of
dollars. Now how does that decision get made, yet Prince is literally allowed
to take the exact photograph from another artist and reprint it and make money
off of it. That is mind blowing to me, and I didn’t know that sort of thing was
happening. “Blurred Lines” is at least a spin on Gaye’s song, with creative
differences and some originality. Prince is literally using the same exact
photograph. How can copyright laws for pieces of art differ so much? It
probably even happens a lot more than I think, and it was only brought to my
attention through the media lens because “Blurred Lines” was such a hit.
In the
music industry, some songs even include “samples” in them, like when Etta’s
James’ song “Something’s Got a Hold on Me” was sampled in “Good Feeling” in
2011. In these cases, credit is not given to the original artist, but the voice
of the original artist is present and every listener knows that the sample is
from a previous piece of work. While Prince might be “sampling” it is not clear
from a photograph that he is “sampling” from Krantz because in most ways, a photograph
is a photograph is a photograph.
The simple
solution that is suggested in the article would be to give the original artist
credit. Krantz wants his name to appear and get credit for the Marlboro prints
that Prince is showing, and somehow that will make it all better. While I agree
that credit should be given (Gaye’s family wants Gaye to have song writing
credits, just like Tom Petty received after the court ruling of Sam Smith’s “Stay
With Me”), it still to me seems like that is not enough. But I’m being
hypocritical because I believe that Gaye and Petty should not receive any
credit because their music inspired
these recent hits (sometimes unintentionally). However, the other side of me believes
that simply putting Krantz’s name on a photograph does not repay the fact that
Prince is using his exact image. But I suppose I’m feeling this way regarding
the conflict of inspiration vs copying. Is Prince “inspired” by Krantz’s
photograph and making his own art from it? I don’t really think so. But it’s
legal.
1 comment:
I think this is so crazy too!! Last semester I took a class called Art and Law and we also talked about this Prince case. It's kind of sad too because one of the artists he copied/reused work from was really poor. That artist didn't get any money from what Prince did, and Prince made so much! It was such an unfair outcome.
As I was reading this I also thought of the photographer we discussed in class who photographed the photographs of Dorothea Lange and others At least in the title she gave credit for the "ideas" (if that's what you want to call them) to the original photographers, but it still seems a bit strange. I understand that this was during the age of post-modernism though... I'm not sure what to call Prince's "work."
Post a Comment