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Paper: "The Originality Requirement"
Paper
"The Originality Requirement: Preventing the Copy Photography End-Run around the Public Domain"
Kathleen Butler
Thomas Cooley School of Law
Lansing
Comments prepared for the NINCH Copyright Town Meeting
Held at the Visual Resources Association Conference, April 5, 2000
© 2000 Kathleen Butler
Based on Kathleen Butler, "Keeping the World Safe from Naked-Chicks-in-Art Refrigerator Magnets: The Plot to Control Art Images in the Public Domain through Copyrights in Photographic and Digital Reproductions." The Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal, 21. Fall 1998
I haven't been to the Louvre. But I
know what the Mona Lisa looks like. I haven't been to the
Uffizi Gallery. But I know what the Birth of Venus looks
like. I've seen these paintings in art books and
projected on slides in an art history class. I've seen
them on television and in movies. I can summon an image
of scores of artworks that I have never stood in front
of, and I can do this because of the invention of the
camera.
Before photography, the public had
little opportunity to view works of art in any number,
because the works were inaccessible -- isolated in
museums, churches, palaces, and private collections
spread around the world. By reproducing art, the camera
allowed artworks to be in two places at one time, allowed
artworks to travel to the viewer rather than requiring
the viewer to travel to the art. One 19th century art
critic hailed photographic reproduction as the end of the
"old selfish aristocratic days of hoarding."
Not only does reproduction allow
the public to see art, reproduction allows the public to
use art. Sometimes the use is a Matisse sweat shirt,
selling for $24.99. But other times, reproduced art
illustrates a book on medieval dress or demonstrates a
lecturer's point about the differences between Italian
and Dutch portraiture. In the artistic tradition of
appropriation, art is incorporated into other artworks.
Or maybe it's stuck on the refrigerator door to preserve
a memory.
According to John Berger,
transforming art works into easily reproducible, usable
images, wrests art away from the few specialized experts,
away from any religious or ruling class preserve, and
gives it to the populace to apply to their own lives.
Instead of museums, Berger suggests, we should have
personal bulletin boards, papered with "letters,
snapshots, reproductions of paintings, newspaper
cuttings, original drawings, postcards." No one here
really wants to eliminate museums, but what Berger
describes through the lens of the art critic, is the
legal concept of the public domain, which for works of
visual art has practical meaning only because of
photographic -- and now digital -- reproduction.
The Copyright Clause of the United
States Constitution envisions and the Copyright Act
establishes a time when the exclusive rights granted
writers, painters, and sculptors are released to the
public. The works become public domain, and the public
may freely reproduce, adapt, distribute, perform, and
display the works or copies of them. The end of the
copyright monopoly and the release of rights to the
public was designed to balance the goal of protecting
artists' interests in the fruits of their labor with the
competing but equally desirable goal of granting the
public "free access to materials essential to the
development of society."
Public-domain artworks have a
different life from public-domain literary and musical
works. Because Shakespeare is in the public domain,
directors can portray As You Like It as occurring on a
cattle drive in the Old West or set Taming of the Shrew,
as I recently saw it, in the 1920s, with Padua as Oxford
and Petruchio's country home in Canada, complete with
moose heads repeatedly popping out through the scenery.
Not only can the directors stage their own
interpretations of Shakespeare, they can do so without
paying royalties to the Folger Shakespeare Library.
Public-domain works of visual art
lead a more sheltered and restricted life. Museums see
themselves as both guardians and beneficiaries of the
public-domain works in their collections, and they wield
aesthetic and financial control over them by controlling
their photographic reproductions. This is possible
because an artwork is a tangible, unique object, unlike
the Shakespeare script, and its owner controls physical
access to its content.
Museums can and do establish rules
for what occurs in their galleries. Some forbid
photography entirely. Others permit only the kind of
photography that will produce unpublishable results. Some
instruct visitors that they may use their own photographs
for personal purposes only, while others require visitors
to sign camera permits in which they agree not to
reproduce, publish, or distribute any images they have
shot inside the museum.
As stewards of art for the public,
museums must make works available to the public for use.
So museums routinely hire photographers to make
photographs and transparencies of the works in their
collections and will license or rent these images to
scholars and others, for a one-time use, for a fee, and
subject to various limitations.
And then, and this is the clever
part, the museums assert that the photographic
reproduction of the artwork is itself a copyrighted work
and that the museum holds the copyright to the
reproduction. By controlling access to the original
artwork, so that the public cannot make its own direct
copies, and also asserting a copyright in the only usable
photographic reproductions of a public-domain image, the
museum manages to control the public's ability to
exercise its rights in a public-domain work.
In other words, the museums manage
an end-run around the concept of the public domain and
end up with something close to a copyright in
public-domain art images by claiming copyrights in their
photographic copies. In fact it's better than copyright.
It's more enduring. Has your time run out? Take another
picture. This really straps educators who cannot always
afford the fees on their academic budgets. But the issue
isn't just financial. It is also aesthetic. The museums
are controlling how images may be used by the
restrictions they place on use of their reproductions.
Relying on the museum practice of
asserting copyrights in photographic reproductions,
digitizers such as Corbis have applied for and been
granted copyrights in their digital reproductions. This
is a significant move, because in the future digital
images will be the primary means of reproducing art.
So, are photographic and digital
reproductions truly copyrightable? The answer to this
question lies in the constitutional and statutory
requirement of originality. Both the constitution and the
copyright act limit copyright protection to
"original works of authorship." Without
originality, a work is not copyrightable.
Museums have assumed they are
protected because originality is a very low threshold. A
standard formulation is that a work is original when it
"owes its origin to the author, meaning it is
independently created and not copied from other
works." You'd think that the "not copied from
other works" part of the definition would
automatically mean that the museum photograph of a
Rembrandt is not copyrightable because it is copied from
another work. However, the Copyright Act recognizes
"art reproductions" as a type of
"pictorial, graphic, and sculptural work" that
may be copyrighted.
So, what is an original
reproduction?
To answer this, you must first
understand that copyright protection in art reproductions
is known as a "thin copyright." The copyright
act protects only those elements of the reproduction that
are not copied from the underlying work. By limiting
protection to the uncopied parts of the reproduction, the
Copyright Act explicitly seeks to keep reproducers from
using their copyrights in reproductions to affect
copyrights in or public-domain status of the works they
have reproduced.
Step number one, then, is to
determine whether the work contains uncopied elements.
Next, the court must determine whether the uncopied parts
of the reproduction are sufficiently original to merit
copyright protection. Because of the special nature of
the copyright in reproductions, the test for the
originality of the uncopied parts is not simply the
"owes its origin to" test.
Courts have applied two standards.
The first standard requires the copyright claimant to
demonstrate a substantial, distinguishable variation
between the reproduction and the original work. In Alfred
Bell v. Catalda Fine Arts, the plaintiff had commissioned
and copyrighted mezzotint engravings of well-known,
public-domain paintings from the 18th and 19th centuries,
including Gainsborough's Blue Boy and Lawrence's Pinky.
The defendant produced and sold color lithographs of the
plaintiff's mezzotints. When the plaintiff sued for
copyright infringement, the defendant argued that the
plaintiff's mezzotints lacked sufficient originality to
satisfy the Copyright Clause and so were not entitled to
copyright protection.
The Southern District of New York
and then the Second Circuit on appeal both disagreed. The
District Court explained that "Congress in the Act,
and the Copyright Office in the regulations adopted
pursuant to the Act, recognize that there may be in
reproductions of works of art an artistic element
distinct from that of the original work of art."
That distinct artistic element satisfies the
constitutional requirement of originality, and so it is
that distinct artistic element the law protects.
The district court concluded that
the engraver's handling of the painting in another medium
was original, that the process of using lines and dots
and shading to express what was in the painting created a
distinct artistic element. The second circuit agreed and
required new elements that were a "contribution from
the author, something more than a 'merely trivial'
variation, something recognizably his own."
Subsequent case law has refined the Alfred Bell
definition to require a "substantial
variation."
Changes in color and changes that
have been motivated by greater ease in mass production
have been found too trivial to merit protection. For
example, a manufacturer claimed that its foam Statue of
Liberty hats were original because the spikes were
uniform, but the spikes on the actual Statue of Liberty
are not. The court responded, "You did this because
it was easier, not to express an artistic viewpoint, and
so it's not original."
Because the court in Alfred Bell
found originality in the handling of the paintings in a
new medium, the question arose in later cases whether
handling in a new medium was per se original, but the
case law has determined that it is not. This issue arose
when the Bridgeman Art Library sued Corel for allegedly
infringing its copyrights in transparencies of
public-domain artworks. Bridgeman defended the
originality and thus the copyrightability of its
transparencies by arguing that its transformation of the
paintings to the photographic medium "established
sufficient variation from the underlying works to support
originality." The Southern District of New York
disagreed, relying heavily on L. Batlin & Son v.
Snyder, a 1976 case in which the parties disputed the
originality of plastic Uncle Sam Banks that reproduced
public-domain iron mechanical banks. The copyright
claimant relied on Alfred Bell and claimed that by
handling the banks in the new medium of plastic, he had
created an original work.
The Second Circuit rejected this
argument, reasoning that any time a work is translated
into another medium, trivial variation will necessarily
occur, and that such necessary variation cannot be
attributed to the reproducer who did not independently
evolve the medium. Protecting the variations that occur
solely because of a change in medium (it's flat because
it's a photograph; it's luminous because it's on a
computer screen) would produce the "ludicrous
result" that the first person to reproduce a
public-domain artwork in a different medium thereafter
obtains a monopoly on the underlying work in the medium
of the reproduction (because these would be flat or
luminous also and therefore infringing). The court
explained that "to extend copyrightabilty to
minuscule variations would simply put a weapon for
harassment in the hands of mischievous copiers intent on
appropriating and monopolizing public domain work."
The Bridgeman case reaffirms
generally that translation to a new medium does not
automatically establish originality and states
specifically that the changes in a photographic
reproduction that are inherent to the change of medium do
not constitute originality.
Distinguishable variation, though,
is not the only test available. In the 1959 case of Alva
Studios v. Winninger, the Southern District of New York
established an alternate test. In that case the plaintiff
had laboriously and accurately reproduced the Carnegie
Institute's casting of Rodin's Hand of God in a smaller
size. When a competitor also marketed reproductions of
the Hand of God, the plaintiff sued for copyright
infringement, and the defendant who claimed it had copied
the Met's original casting of Hand of God responded that
the plaintiff's reproduction was not original and hence
not copyrightable.
Indeed, plaintiff's reproduction
was so accurate, it couldn't satisfy the substantial
variation test, so the court made up a new test that
Plaintiff could satisfy. A work is original if it is
created by the reproducer's "own skill, labor, and
judgment without directly copying or evasively imitating
the work of another." Subsequent case law has
refined the definition to require "true artistic
skill" and not simply the use of "great effort
and time."
This is not an appropriate test for
the originality of art reproductions, and the reasons
could fill a separate talk. Briefly, there is the problem
that most art reproductions, unless made by a photocopy
machine, do require skill, labor, and judgment. The skill
test could bestow copyright too freely.
The Cliff Notes version of my
concerns is this. All reproductions require skill, so it
is difficult for a court to tell when the skill has
crossed the line into protectible skill. Also, it's
difficult to determine what is protected by this test,
since nothing new is created in the works it protects.
All the accurate reproduction does is to commodify the
art. It does not put any new image out there that wasn't
there before. If it protects skill, that permeates the
entire work, which causes the further difficulty that the
skill standard can be used to monopolize public-domain
images and harass subsequent reproducers of original
images.
The next question is whether
photographic and digital reproductions of two-dimensional
artworks would satisfy either the substantial variation
test or the skill, labor, and judgment test. The answer
should be no.
Under the variation test, a
copyright claimant could point to differences between the
reproduction and the original artwork. But if the
variations are not distinct, artistic elements,
substantial changes rather than mere by-products of
reproducing the art in another medium, they will not
satisfy the test. In addition, the grant of copyright
protection must not affect the public-domain status of
the original work being reproduced.
How, then, is a photograph or
digital image different from the painting it copies? The
color in a photograph or digitally produced image cannot
be true to the color in the painting. A photograph shows
the colors of a painting from a fixed angle and in a
fixed light, and subtleties and variations within color
are lost. The range of palate that film and printing inks
can capture is more limited than the range of pigments
available to the painter. This difference is not a new
contribution from the reproducer but a dilution of the
original produced by the inadequacy of the copying
medium. It is not a "distinct artistic element"
deserving protection. In a case involving reproductions
of public-domain Wizard of Oz lithographs, even
deliberate, distinct color changes were not substantial
enough to be copyrightable. Protecting the resulting
color dilution in a photographic or digital reproduction
of a work of art would create a monopoly on color
differences necessitated by the limitations of the medium
and thus prevent subsequent reproductions in the medium,
which would of necessity contain the same limited palate.
The surface of a reproduction is
different from the surface of a painting. The texture and
bulk of the paint is replaced by flat glossy paper or a
glowing screen. But again, this is a dilution of the
effect of the original necessitated by the switch to the
new medium. It is not the result of the reproducer's
"own artistic viewpoint," as required by some
of the cases.
Photographic and digital
reproductions are smaller than the originals, but in the
Hand of God case, reduction to a smaller size was not
enough to satisfy the test.
We know, too, from the Uncle Sam
bank case and from Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel that
merely reproducing the painting in the photographic
medium does not automatically satisfy the originality
requirement.
Because the inherent and therefore
trivial differences of color, texture, and size permeate
the photographic or digital reproduction, a court cannot
possibly isolate distinct, protectible differences.
Consequently, permitting copyrights in photographic and
digital copies of art would threaten rights to the
underlying works, because the reproduction as a whole
would have to be protected, and subsequent reproductions
of the original could falsely but convincingly be accused
of infringing the reproduction. If reproduction #1
contains only those differences inherent in a
photographic reproduction, and reproduction #2 contains
only those differences inherent in a photographic
reproduction, reproduction #2 will look just like
reproduction #1, and reproducer #1 can accuse reproducer
#2 of infringement. But if reproduction #1 had contained
substantial differences, and reproducer #2 had copied the
original public domain work, the second reproduction
would not contain the differences of the first, and a
court would be able to tell that the second reproduction
did not infringe the first.
Given the very poor chances of
succeeding with the substantial variation test, museums
and digitizers are more likely to argue that they deserve
copyright protection because of their skill, labor, and
judgment. This was the Bridgeman Art Library's second
argument. Photography requires talent and therefore the
transparencies are original, the lawyers argued. The
court disagreed, and it did so without exploring the
skill required for copy photography but instead by
examining the purpose of copy photography and the
resulting image. "The point of the exercise,"
the court wrote, " was to reproduce the underlying
works with absolute fidelity." This made them
"slavish copies," undeserving of copyright. The
"slavish copy" idea is not new to the Bridgeman
case. Even in the Hand of God case, the court said that
where the skill and effort involve "direct
copying" the skill test is not satisfied. Some
reproductions, however skilled, must fall into a category
of "mere copies" that cannot be protected. As
the Uncle Sam bank case explained, when a reproduction is
a "mechanical" or "mere slavish"
copy, it is not copyrightable.
The documentary photographer of
two-dimensional works of art strives to make accurate
copies, faithful to the original. The value of the copies
is that they do not interpret or add or change, because
the purpose of photographing two-dimensional works of art
is largely to provide information about the work or a
usable substitute for the work.
The camera or computer is merely a
sophisticated, mechanical copying device. The surrogate
image provided is a slavish copy, slavish in every detail
so that it can serve its purpose of providing accurate
information about the image in the two-dimensional work.
The accurate copy is achieved through a mechanical
process -- either photography or digital scanning. As
these are copies not only slavish but mechanical, digital
and photographic reproductions should not be
copyrightable. They should fail the skill test before the
issue of skill is ever reached.
If the court does address the skill
issue, it should find that photography and digital
scanning do not involve the kind of skill the test
requires. In Hearn v. Meyer, a 1987 case involving Wizard
of Oz lithographs, the Southern District of New York
found that Michael Hearn's year-long, painstaking
recreation of the lithographs did not satisfy the
originality requirement. Using pen and ink on acetate,
Hearn drew every mark by hand two or three times to
produce a single color and traced or redrew every color.
To produce secondary colors, he printed primary colors on
top of each other. At each stage he pulled proofs to
check the register and density of color and continually
redrew and reapplied mylar. Despite these laborious and
skilled efforts, Hearn failed to demonstrate the level of
originality and skill that afforded protection to the
Hand of God reproduction.
This does not bode well for the
photographers and digitizers. Physical skill, special
training, and "sheer artistic skill and effort"
have been ruled not enough to substitute for substantial
variation. I can find no copyright claimant other than
the plaintiff who reproduced Hand of God who has
succeeded under this test. All other copyright claimants
under this test have lost.
In Hearn v. Meyer, the court
observed that the reproduction of the Rodin required
"more than just the skill of the artisan doing the
reproduction; it took great creativity as well as skill
to interpret, project and transpose the original Rodin
work, in order to create a scale model thereof."
Copy photography of two-dimensional art objects requires
no projecting or transposing and demands as little
interpretation as possible.
Given the ease of the digital
scanning process, digitizers will probably emphasize the
technical expertise and creativity involved in making
adjustments to pattern, brightness, contrast, and color
after the scan is made. This, though, is a routinized
process, and the technician's greatest contribution is
time. But case law tells us that great effort and time
are not enough and true artistic skill is required. A
court should not find sufficient originality in digital
image capture to support originality.
Under either test, photographic and
digital reproductions are not original and therefore not
copyrightable. When these copyrights fall, the
quasi-copyrights in the public domain works they
reproduce also fall, and the public domain is
safeguarded. And yes, sometimes that just means that
novelty companies can put great works of art on neckties
and night lights and refrigerator magnets. But it will
also free teachers to project public-domain images on
individual viewscreens in their classrooms or post them
on course Web pages. It will allow scholars to use
royalty-free works in books. It will let artists continue
the tradition of appropriating and building from the work
of artists who preceded them.
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