BrianShaw
Member
For some reason Brian, I can;t quote your post. It says the requested post can no longer be found.
I left the tea party; don’t do well in rabbit holes. Enjoy…
For some reason Brian, I can;t quote your post. It says the requested post can no longer be found.
Danziger clearly states his process. There is no subterfuge. It's clearly conceptual.
The exercise didn't generate an artwork conceptually distinct from the original. Conceptually, the original and the colourized one are identical.
Here. I "uncoloured" the AI version.
View attachment 425960
This is the original (from Wikipedia):
View attachment 425961
Copyright for photos produced after 1978 are in effect for 70 years, not 10, after the death of the artist. Congress extended the protection to protect heirs. That seems a considerable amount of time. It will protect your photos for your great, great grandchildren into the 2100s.Well, Alan, if the copyright begins when the photograph was taken, in my case, the heirs of my estate might have only 10 or so years left after inheritance before it is hypothetically in the public domain and free for anyone to pirate as they please. Thankfully, I'm not on anyone's radar. But what if you or I, or anyway else, was? How would you feel? And there have been three times in my own lifetime when a dedicated gallery was serious proposed by others
than myself, including relatives with the means. Nowadays pirates don't even seem to care about the visual quality of their ripoffs; they just want a piece of the monetary pie. They could offer a discounted "copy" online or whatever, and at the same time, ruin the quality reputation of the original if people had never actually seen it.
I already told the story of how one of my aunt's works was plagiarized just ten years after she painted it. Nobody back then spoke about some "transfomational" appropriation; they just stopped giving that particular artist new commissions, since he hadn't bothered to coming up with his own composition anyway. Who can trust someone like that? It ended his career, and should have.
In this Moonrise incident, the offender should at least be made aware he smells like a skunk.
Lol ethics/congress.
It's ok to express your disagreement with the 70 year after death copyright protection. But political and personal attacks on me or the US government are not allowed here and are offensive.Even funnier:
If no one else is going to bite I guess arguing with yourself is the thing to do.
In a somewhat ironic jesture, here is what AI has to say about Sherri Levine's series:
Sherrie Levine’s After Walker Evans is not simply a copy—it is a conceptual intervention that:
- dismantles the myth of originality
- critiques patriarchal authorship
- exposes the constructed nature of documentary images
- mourns the loss of modernist ideals
- interrogates the art market’s fetish for uniqueness
It remains a landmark of postmodernism precisely because it forces viewers to confront uncomfortable questions about authenticity, ownership, and the politics of representation.
What moron would pay $183 million for a Jackson Pollock?
Here's my transformative art - on sale now for the low, low price of $9,999.99.
If you argue that doing these things to photos that are in the Public Domain are wrong, then you’re arguing that Copyrights should exist in perpetuity.
I think, technical copyright issues aside, what most of us are saying is the this is an appropriation of an image with minimal alteration (really, months of work by man and machine for that?) for personal profit, not for any real artistic or social addition or commentary. Additionally, it is an iconic image with a deep history of reinterpretation by its creator, already.
Addition of some more true icons of the southwest, like a saguaro (I know, they don't live here--I do) or somehow introducing gender issues to the image might be transformative and worthy of a new conversation. But this is not, other than the one we are having.
... what most of us are saying ...
Transformative:
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