The United States Supreme Court treats originality as the sine qua non of copyright. How can this abstract quality best be recognized under the law, particularly in the difficult case of multiply produced works? This article grapples with controverted definitions of original and copy, analyzing the positions and interests of various players in the art world with respect to what should count as an original work. Using the case of bronze sculptures that various parties seek to attribute to Auguste Rodin and discussing their status under national and international laws, this article identifies and calls for these laws to converge upon a legal definition of originality that is best informed by theories of authenticity, history and market ...
Most, if not all, copyright laws distinguish between ownership of the incorporeal copyright, and own...
Copyright is intended to incentivize the production of new creative works and protect authors’ conne...
The Supreme Court’s copyright jurisprudence of the last 100 years has embraced the creativity trope....
The American legal system is unable to continue avoiding the question of art versus non-art. In p...
The original is not only an aesthetic term but also part of copyright terminology. As such, the orig...
In order to be copyrighted, a work of art must be \u27original. Critics have persuasively argued th...
This article contends that a definitive account of originality as a legal construct is not possible ...
In 1903, in Bleistein v Donaldson Lithographing, Justice Holmes famously concluded that judges are i...
Originality is a central theme in the efforts to understand human evolution, thinking, innovation, a...
Aesthetic judgments are “dangerous undertakings” for courts, but they are unavoidable in copyright l...
This article addresses an emerging and significant problem in the realm of copyright and art law: th...
ThIs Article focuses on the problem of how artistic values affect determinatlons of copyright manage...
This contribution defines the legal status of copies from a copyright, contractual and tax law stand...
In copyright law, the marriage of beauty and utility often proves fraught. Domestic and internationa...
Aesthetic judgments are "dangerous undertakings" for courts, but they are unavoidable in copyright l...
Most, if not all, copyright laws distinguish between ownership of the incorporeal copyright, and own...
Copyright is intended to incentivize the production of new creative works and protect authors’ conne...
The Supreme Court’s copyright jurisprudence of the last 100 years has embraced the creativity trope....
The American legal system is unable to continue avoiding the question of art versus non-art. In p...
The original is not only an aesthetic term but also part of copyright terminology. As such, the orig...
In order to be copyrighted, a work of art must be \u27original. Critics have persuasively argued th...
This article contends that a definitive account of originality as a legal construct is not possible ...
In 1903, in Bleistein v Donaldson Lithographing, Justice Holmes famously concluded that judges are i...
Originality is a central theme in the efforts to understand human evolution, thinking, innovation, a...
Aesthetic judgments are “dangerous undertakings” for courts, but they are unavoidable in copyright l...
This article addresses an emerging and significant problem in the realm of copyright and art law: th...
ThIs Article focuses on the problem of how artistic values affect determinatlons of copyright manage...
This contribution defines the legal status of copies from a copyright, contractual and tax law stand...
In copyright law, the marriage of beauty and utility often proves fraught. Domestic and internationa...
Aesthetic judgments are "dangerous undertakings" for courts, but they are unavoidable in copyright l...
Most, if not all, copyright laws distinguish between ownership of the incorporeal copyright, and own...
Copyright is intended to incentivize the production of new creative works and protect authors’ conne...
The Supreme Court’s copyright jurisprudence of the last 100 years has embraced the creativity trope....