Do
we find that in certain spaces, copyright law does not work? Or is neither
valuable nor relevant at all to the author of the original work?
Introduction
The
Goss-IPgirl has been fascinated by the anonymous British pseudo street artist Bansky’s,
one
month graffiti
spree in New York, (last month), which raised some very interesting questions,
in regards to the value of copyright law for art in urban spaces.
Street Art and the law
With an
international reputation as a “quality vandal,” and one who uses public
“canvases” for social commentary, the Goss-IPgirl wanted to address the
legalities of Graffiti art and whether illegal Graffiti art warrants copyright protection, and the scope of ownership offered by law for a Graffiti artist in respect of
their work?
Copyright
protection exists in "original works of authorship fixed in a tangible
form. With regard to Graffiti - copyright law places no judgment on the art,
the motivation behind the art, or the form in which the art takes. So long as the work involved meets the
threshold for originality (and is above de minimus/written tags may fall outside this
test); ownership over the copyright to graffiti will exist, regardless of its
legality.
But
who owns the physical copy?
Copyright Ownership Vs Physical Ownership & Cultural Intermediation?
Despite the men not owning the
intellectual property to the work, property
laws regulate the space where it occurs, and thus, the physical ownership to that
creativity. As one commentator in
an interesting article made the point, ‘Museums,
by and large, don’t own the copyrights in the works they exhibit, yet nothing
prevents them from charging a fee to those who want to see them.’
The sale of "Slave Labour,” which depicts a young boy hunched
at a sewing machine stitching Union Jack bunting, seems to highlight this point
entirely. The stencil first appeared last June in London, on the wall of
Poundland discount shop in the Wood Green neighborhood. In February 2013, the
mural was stripped from the wall, and a few days later appeared at Fine Art
Auctions in Miami, with a list price of $500,000 to $700,000, later selling in
a private auction for $1.1 million.
Copyright
law grants certain economic and non-economic rights to the creators of original
literary and artistic works, including the right to reproduce their work, but in
relationship to property law, copyright does seem to reach a brick wall, especially
when a Graffiti artist uses private or public property as canvass for their
work. The justifications for copyright protection suggest that copyright
protection offers an incentive to produce work. Yet, interestingly despite a
lack of enforcement of IP rights the sub-culture of Graffiti art such as
Banskys – seems to flourish largely without reference to copyright law. In a rare
interview released by the British artist in 2010, Bansky highlighted that
"Graffiti's isn't meant to last for ever [he’d] prefer someone draws a moustache
and glasses on one of [his] pieces than encase it in Perspex.”… “I've always
been uncomfortable with the way galleries put things on a pedestal.” He said, “I
think art should be a two-way conversation, not a lecture behind glass."
Commons approach - Lack of
enforcement of IP Rights &
Graffiti Vandalism
So what is the conversation for us stemming from Bansky’s month
long residency in New York? If anything that physical property laws can act in
conflict with intangible IP laws, especially when it comes to Graffiti art
sprayed in public spaces. Which is often either painted
over or removed by the original property owner. This tension is further exemplified by looking at vandalised graffiti work, (suffice to say the Goss-IPgirl still acutely notes that
even though its artistic merits can't be denied, illegal graffiti is still in
fact a form of vandalism) Bansky’s first Mural, titled "The street
is in play," stencilled in classic Banksy style on a Manhattan wall,
depicting two boys, one standing on the other's back and attempting to grab the
spray can in a sign clearly reading
"graffiti is a crime," was tagged by
other artists within hours – before being painted over and erased entirely.
(The Banksy's artwork "The street is in
play" before and after being whited out)
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Are IP rights relevant? But
in copyright space does this not raise issues of ‘moral rights’ for damage to
work? And does this right even exist for the street artist.
United States - Visual Artists Rights Act, 1990
In the US - through the Visual Artists Rights Act, 1990 (VARA), street
artists like Bansky are able to rely on, the right of “integrity” of the work
of art, which grants an artist “the right in [certain]
circumstances . . . to prevent
any intentional distortion, mutilation, or other modification of that work which would be prejudicial to his
or her honor or reputation,” and to prevent any destruction of the work...provided the work is of “recognized stature.” (In the UK,
the equivalent would be Article 80, the right to object to
derogatory treatment of work.)
However the rights afforded by the Visual Artists Rights Act are “subject
to the limitations which are expressly set forth in section 113(d), accordingly,
legal graffiti artists are protected by VARA, subject to the § 113(d)
limitations. In particular, illegality precludes VARA
protection, so unless Bansky was commissioned to do the work, which seems very unlikely,
seeing that, no one actually knows his real identity, and the elusive street
artist has never actually been seen. Illegal graffiti artist, Bansky, is afforded
no protection for his work under VARA.
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