if the artist is present, i ask if i can take a photo and respect whatever they decide.
when i used to post to flickr, i had two of my shots downloaded from the site and then used in adds for various things. that i consider theft, but taking a photo of something in a public place for non-commercial use, i dont
that stinks.
i've also had work taken, not from flickr, but personal+private websites, stuff submited to clients that
were not supposed to be used &c. my mentor used to have be barely fix proofs, and we'd put a rubber stamp
on them to make they useless, its not that ez these days. the majority or people i think are respectful
and honorable, but the bad ones .. couldn't give a $4!T ... oh well, nothing you can do about it.
art work hanging in a museum, people take iphone shots; art student sit in front and make "copies", practicing, and encouraged to do so; photographers are allowed
to take pictures at museums, ("no flash" please)... all inappropriate or theft?
if it is allowed, its fine, if it isn't allowed, or the people who own or are displaying the artwork, than it isnt fine.
another example is the woman who was eating in a chipotle who was asked if she wanted to be photographed in the restaurant
she said NO, and REFUSED to sign model release. they photographed her anyways, photoshopped her a little
bit and used her just the same hoping they wouldn't get caught.
they got caught and she is clogging the court system with her case now ...
and getty ( or was it corbis this time ) snatching the work from the LOC and claiming ownership of
a donated collection.. its not passerby or people who don't know any better ...
again, if someone says its OK to take photographs ( film, digi, who cares ) or paint/sketch the subject, or
make a film or video with it in the background great, but if the owner &c says no, its not ok..
i don't know what the owner of the works or shop in the OP said, i was just speaking from a "commercial"
point of view, having had to deal with issues like this on a professinal level for 25-30 years, and one of
respecting people's privacy, not some sort of knee jerk anti current technology propaganda.