Did the Ansel Adams Trust renew the negative or the different prints?
In the context of the 1909 Copyright Act, copyright registration attached to a specific
published work (the print/reproduction in a publication), not the physical negative itself. Under that framework, protecting the published work inherently protected the underlying image captured on the negative.
Here is how that technicality plays out in the current debate regarding
Moonrise:
1. The Legal Ground: What Had to Be Renewed
Under the 1909 Act, a photographer didn't copyright a "negative" in the abstract. Copyright was triggered by
publication with notice.
- Moonrise was first published in the U.S. Camera Annual 1943 (released in late 1942).
- To maintain protection for that image, a renewal application had to be filed with the U.S. Copyright Office during the 28th year following that specific publication date (between late 1969 and 1970).
2. The Current Dispute: Did They Miss the Renewal?
The ongoing debate stems from the fact that legal researchers hired by the Danziger Gallery
could not find a standalone renewal record for Moonrise or the specific 1943 U.S. Camera publication in the standard copyright databases during that 1969–1970 window. Because of this apparent clerical gap, the gallery’s legal team asserts that the underlying image technically slipped into the U.S. public domain.
3. The Trust's Position: Protecting the Manifestation of the Prints
The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust strongly disputes that the image is free for commercial exploitation, but noticeably, their public pushback has leaned heavily into
moral rights, trademark, and the right of publicity (trading on Adams' name and reputation) rather than a simple copyright infringement claim.
Furthermore, from a pure photography standpoint, copyright protects distinct
derivative works. Even if someone argues that the
original, flat 1943 publication lacked a renewal:
- Adams spent decades heavily manipulating, burning, and dodging the negative to create his famous late-career prints (the ones with the deep, dramatic black skies).
- Each substantially altered, newly published master print iteration can carry its own separate derivative copyright protection based on the extensive human darkroom artistry involved.
So, while the gallery claims the
original 1941 capture is in the public domain due to a missing 1970 renewal entry, the Trust maintains active stewardship over Adams' legacy, his name, and the specific, iconic modern print iterations that everyone recognizes today.