Face Making

Artist Gwenn Seemel’s bilingual blog about all the faces she makes while painting faces.

Le blog de l’artiste peintre franco-américaine Gwenn Seemel. Les articles sont en anglais et en français, et souvent ils sont bilingues.

My copyright and my copy place

Thursday 13 January 2011 - Comments / Commentaires (3)

Like many artists, I have a copy place where I’m a regular.  I make most prints of my work there and also use their services to ship paintings.  It’s safe to say that many of the people who work there don’t know my name but they do know my work.

Recently I went to the shop to get my New Year’s cards printed, and imagine my surprise when the manager told me he’d protected my work from copyright violation just a few days before.  He was rather pleased with himself and gave me all the details about the culprit so I know who the criminal was.  It was one of my clients. 

Apparently, she came into the copy place with one of the cards that I’d printed for her—I always make a few greeting cards out of commissioned paintings as a gift for my clients.  She wanted to reproduce the card exactly as it was, but the manager told her he wouldn’t do it unless she obtained a written permission from me.



greeting cards with paintings

Through this experience, I learned two important lessons:

1) The people who work at my copy place respect my work.  As a copyright law radical I am opposed to what they did, but by protecting my intellectual property they showed me that they believe my work is unique and valuable.

2) I need to explain to my clients more fully my views about copyright.  If the client knew for certain that I would have happily given her high resolution digital images of the work or the PDF from which I had printed the original card, she would have come to me directly.  Instead, she was trying to make photocopies of a print.  To my mind, that’s just one more reason to be free with images of my work: I would rather have high quality prints floating around than reproductions of copies.

The whole situation reminded me what protecting intellectual property means to people…and how far we still have to go in the free culture revolution!


RELATED ARTICLES:
- About competition / Sur la concurrence
- How I make sure my art doesn’t get ripped off on the Internet
- To print or not to print


CATEGORIES: - Business of art - Free culture -



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(3) Comments / Commentaires: My copyright and my copy place

barbara weinstein...

I fully agree with yu. i think we should be happy and willing to share our images. it furthers art appreciation…and we ought to help appreciators to understand the difference between poor reproductions and good quality ones

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Joyce Ayline...

D’autant plus que c’est de la communication gratuite faite par des gens qui aiment votre travail à leurs proches, encore faut-il qu’ils distribuent une reproduction de qualité avec un petit liens sur votre site ou simplement votre nom !
Encore plus gratifiant d’être un support porteur de souhaits positifs !

Très Bonne Année créative et épanouissante

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Gwenn...

@Barbara: Good point re: art appreciation.

@Joyce: Oui, en effet, c’est bien quand ils mettent un lien avec l’image!  Et je trouve que mon nom écrit par quelqu’un d’autre a beaucoup plus de charme que quand je l’écris moi-même…

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