Except that only some of Troy's work was "remaking" well-known album art and scenes, and those things could never be mistaken for the real thing. It's basically a cover version. © Bart Van Hemelen
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Exactly. © Bart Van Hemelen
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As if Andy Warhol bothered to ask Monroe's permission. And that's just one of many examples of Warhol's art where he took other people's likeness and used it. © Bart Van Hemelen
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How, praytell, does one ask permission of a dead woman?
[Edited 11/14/12 13:15pm] We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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He may be flattered, we don't know.
I do agree that he does need to know how to nurture a "fandom." He treats fans like 2nd rate citizens compared to some other artists/acts. **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose! http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad | |
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EXACTLY?!? **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose! http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad | |
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Except Prince is a celebrity. In reality he has very little legal grounds, but he's just being a bully and threatening someone hoping that will put an end to it.
Go to a supermarket and look at the magazines at the check-out. Go look at TMZ. Notice anything? PICTURES of CELEBRITIES. Made by photographers who sell them to magazines. Magazines who publish them so they'll sell more issues.
http://www.avvo.com/legal...75263.html
© Bart Van Hemelen
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It's like getting mad at someone for continually cheating on you but staying around because you think someone will change... this doesn't surprise me one bit. | |
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Yeah, because Monroe was the only celebrity Warhol ever painted. I just pointed out one example, there are plenty more: Presley, Brando, Mao, Jackie Kennedy, Liz Taylor,.. Or how about his art that used well-known brands, like Coca-Cola, Campbell's Soup,... © Bart Van Hemelen
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Everybody check it before its gone!
It's really great work! Sorry the legality got in the way. I never buy anything anymore anyway. I just make it myself!
Prost! "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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It just wasn't the same in 1962. The trend of family estates looking out for their deceased family members' interests and protecting the value of their image is a fairly recent phenomenon.
In Monroe's will, she left her personal effects to Lee Strasberg (founder of the Actors Studio). He later sued the children of four photographers, trying to determine rights of publicity (which permit the licensing of images of deceased people). In 2007, a judge ruled that Monroe's rights of publicity ended with her death.
So what Warhol did was perfectly legal. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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rdhull said:
yay! Bart's here!
. .. Yes it does. Painters and the paparazzi are not the same – and neither is their creative output. While the output of both fall within the protections provided by the First Amendment, a painting is protected under the “free speech” clause while a celebrity photograph is protected under the “free press” clause. In short, paparazzi can sell celebrity photographs [and publishers can publish them] because what the celebrity is doing, or not, in the photograph is either “news” or it forms part of a “news” story about the celebrity. A painting of a celebrity, on the other hand, is not news and is not protected under the free press clause. It may, but only may, be protected speech. The complication is that selling a painting of a celebrity runs square up against the celebrity’s “right of publicity” –that is, the celebrity’s exclusive right to use his or her image for commercial gain. The rule in California is that a painter MAY sell a painting of a person [to someone other than that person] if the painting “contains significant transformative elements or that the value of the work does not derive primarily from the celebrity's fame. “ The controlling case states that “Another way of stating the inquiry is whether the celebrity likeness is one of the ‘raw materials’ from which an original work is synthesized, or whether the depiction or imitation of the celebrity is the very sum and substance of the work in question. … We ask, in other words, whether a product containing a celebrity's likeness is so transformed that it has become primarily the defendant's own expression rather than the celebrity's likeness. And when we use the word ‘expression,’ we mean expression of something other than the likeness of the celebrity.” So … if your painting is a merely a faithful likeness of a person then you need that person’s permission to sell the painting. But if your painting conveys other, significant information in a way that does not simply trade on the person’s likeness, then you do not need that person’s permission to sell the painting. You need to have an intellectual property attorney make that call – and explain to you that even if your painting is “transformative,” the celebrity can still sue you and you would have to pay lots of money to defend that lawsuit. Prince did an interview with a woman at Record World. They talked about whatever, then he asked her: "Does your pubic hair go up to your navel?" At that moment, we thought maybe we shouldn't encourage him to do interviews. | |
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The 1960s were a different time. Folks weren't as litigious. Free publicity was free publicity. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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it's funny people acting like they now the laws on this but don't bother to research. By the way that is not aimed at anyone in particular...just the thread. [Edited 11/14/12 13:41pm] [Edited 11/14/12 13:46pm] | |
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Exactly. You ask their estate. In fact, Madonna had a kerfuffle with Marlon Brando's estate for using his likeness in a video on her tour. "New Power slide...." | |
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Those are licensed. With their names on them. Very different. And it's selling the ACTUAL DOLLS>..Troy never did.. And licensed (Star Wars) merch. Had Troy used the symbol...that is trademarked...buut he didn't and he changed it enough that he could file for a copyright and get it. (recall that Princes symbol was ripped from an symbol for soapstone). I would LOVE to see a lawyer who represents artists to get involved and smack Princes ass legally. Partly becasue it is a matter for any artist who deals with celebrity images.
and I guess you all mossed the links to books of charicatures of lots of clebrities that likely did not have to get permission? I think you all forget that the doll was a send up of Prince and the Thunderbirds marrionettes. It was not a spot on likeness. [Edited 11/14/12 13:48pm] [Edited 11/14/12 13:51pm] | |
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Prince hasn't got a leg to stand on. You have a right to parody in the US. If I made a porno called Lord of the Cock Rings the Tolkien Estate would lose a lawsuit every time.
Also, anyone remember the story of the symbol guitar? Supposedly a fan who was also a guitar builder made one and sent it to him. Prince became pissed, perhaps sued the guy for infringing on the trademark of his symbol shape and then turned the gift guitar over to Jerry Auerswald who in turn made a copy for Prince which is the symbol guitar we first saw him with. I don't know if that's totally true, but it fits the behavioral pattern of Prince.
In his quest for control and appearing to be a well of ideas, you can present him with the greatest idea in the world for his career and he would aggressively oppose it because you're telling him what to do. Exactly the same reason he would never let anyone "produce" him. It's part of his schtick to be the absolute and supreme controller of his destiny. This is, of course, totally his perogative. He's still a douche. | |
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Actually this is exactly the point I am making.
There is NO mistaking that Troy's merchandise/calendars was/is Prince's likeness. If they DIDN'T look like Prince (and all of his cute outfits), who would buy them? He didn't/doesn't have rights to produce Prince dolls and get paid for it.
Mattel had to get PERMISSION (and pay $$$) to sell anything with Cyndi Lauper's face on it...from Cyndi Lauper. They can't sell it without her permisson.
Sideshow collectibles couldn't just advertise/sell the MJ doll without permisson to his likeness (and likely his unique clothing items).
Lucasfilm has THE RIGHT to Harrison Ford's likeness. He gave them permission and got paid. That means: Dolls, calendars, posters, anything that has Harrison Fords face on it. If it looks like Harrison Ford, he gets/got paid from/through Lucasfilm at some point.
It doesn't matter if it's a doll, or a selling a book full of pictures of the doll. Hell Star Wars fans can buy entire posters with only dolls on them. Whomever produces the poster has to obtain permission from Lucasfilm, who received permission/bought the rights from Harrison Ford. Then they are licensed.
The whole point to this whole thing is that Troy does not have license to make $$ from Prince's likeness.
Another example:
Here is a picture from The Ghostbusters cartoon. Know why the characters don't look like Bill Murray, Dan Ackroyd, Harold Ramis, and Ernie Hudson?
[img:$uid]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss73/shawnsolo3000/735111-2377383-GBAd.jpg[/img:$uid]
The actors did not give the studio that owns Ghostbusters the right to their likeness' aka their faces for this purpose. [Edited 11/14/12 14:10pm] "New Power slide...." | |
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will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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And he wonders why some of us hate him | |
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Of course, you ask their estate - now. But in the 60s (again), it was totally different. Most artists did not have established "estates" that protected their interests posthumously. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
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I Love U, John. (Baddest Mamma-Jamma on the 7-string)
Prince is definately a "taker". (or should i say a 'receiver'?)
Prost! "Whatever skin we're in
we all need 2 b friends" | |
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"These peeps are crazy" will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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I see T-shirts with Michael Jackson's face on them Everyday, And dolls too. He's dead and you can't ask his permission for that, But You can Ask The Jackson's, Sony And the Lawyers who are In charge Of Michael's Copyrights and his legacy. | |
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funky Prince Shuts Down 'Le Petit Prince' Miniatures Artist
Le Petit Prince does 1980's "Dirty Mind" / Art and photo by Troy Gua
Troy Gua, creator of the Tiny Artist, gets a cease and desist
What was that we were saying about great ideas? Well, sometimes they're just quashed by the powers that be. In late 2011, Seattle artist Troy Gua combined his love for the outsize character of Prince and the surreal puppetry of "supermarionation" pioneer Gerry Anderson (Thunderbirds), and launched the Le Petit Prince project. He built a 1/6 scale version of the Purple One, sewed up some "tiny sets of funky clothes," and shot the miniature Artist in some of his most iconic poses. Quite naturally, the photo series took off.
But as of Friday, November 16 at 4 p.m. PST, Le Petit Prince must be erased from the Internet. As Gua has announced via LPP's Facebook page, the real Prince's handlers have hit him with what sounds like a very unpleasant cease and desist letter. "I will, of course, comply with their demands, whether I agree with them as matters of artistic freedom or not," he wrote, before this rather heartbreaking addition: "I simply do not wish to fight with my hero, and it is terribly disheartening to think that he may hold ill will towards me and this project."
It should be noted that despite considerable demand, the dolls have never been for sale and, so far, the images have been distributed freely. He had plans for a photo book and exhibition, but all of that should've been protected by fair use, considering these are an artist's interpretations of a pop icon, delivered as a combination of satire and tribute. However, in order to fund the project's potential IRL outcroppings, Gua had begun to sell a Le Petit Prince calendar, a couple of Prince-inspired art prints, and a T-shirt made from one of those.
As an intro to the LPP section of his website, Gua had initially written: "There is ONLY ONE Le Petit Prince, and he's NOT FOR SALE. As for the possibility of reproduction, I have no intention or desire to break any laws or piss off my hero, so without the express consent and cooperation from Prince himself, I will not be reproducing this artwork in doll form. I would love nothing more than to put Le Petit Prince in the hands of true fans, but without Prince, it can’t happen. Prince, if you’re out there, I’d love to hear from you." Now ... probably not so much.
He wrote that while he had originally intended to make only one outfit for his hairy little buddy, fans online began requesting looks from different eras, eventually resulting in the extensive collection of remade album covers and photo shoots found, for now, on the LPP site. Also found there: a testimonial from the world-anointed arbiter of cool, ?uestlove, who says, "Troy is a gifted artist with amazing vision and detail. The thoroughness in his works shines amazingly through. Truly in awe of his work and expect even more awesome things in the future."
The Le Petit Prince calendar is still available, so get yours before it hits the black market. Here's the full text of Gua's announcement, which includes a couple of paragraphs from the letter he wrote back to Prince's people. Sorry 2 C U go. But first, this:
Hello, Friends.
The press has got a hold of this now.... will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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Umm, didn't Disney just pay George Lucas over a billion dollars for the right to peddle his Lucasfilm stuff? I'm pretty sure Prince wouldn't give two snaps and toot if someone was paying him in excess of a billion dollars for the right to sell dolls of his likeness and artwork, etc either. But he's not. Why fans still act surprised/pissed in light of this is just bizarre. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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sad indeed, but he knew that was the risk | |
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Six!!!! "Climb in my fur." | |
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1. No he doesn't
2. Folks hating a pop star they dont know have issues lol. "Climb in my fur." | |
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