Art and Copyrighting

    Sometimes amateur artists neglect to copyright their artistic work. This neglect can lead to copyright lawsuits. Amateur artists, who believe, their artwork may have been copied can contact a law firm in Denver. The legal and remunerative benefits of copyrighted artwork should not be overlooked. Every artist should copyright their artwork. Copyright protects artists’ creative ideas. Copyright increases the value of the artwork. Copyright protects the artists’ clientele from purchasing fraudulent artwork. Artists should copyright their artwork to protect their creative ideas and thoughts, increase the value of these creative ideas, and prevent funds from being diverted to fraudulent art dealers.
   Copyright protects artists’ creative ideas. Artwork that is placed on the World Wide Web cannot be shared, if the artist has taken steps to copyright it. Art differs from music in this instance. Copyrighted music can be shared on home computers. A copyrighted painting cannot be copied, then hung in different rooms. Copyrighted artwork cannot be altered in any form. The artist may intend this rule to include a painting’s mat and frame. Copycat artists cannot reverse an image or take words from a sentence, if that image or sentence is copyrighted, and claim it for their own artwork. Copyright protects artists’ creative ideas from being shared, altered, or copied by copycat artists.
   Copyright increases the value of the artwork. Copyrighted artwork cannot be reproduced without the artist’s written consent and without remuneration. Artists may pro-rate the cost of their artwork, from originals to Giclees, by copyrighting their artwork. Pro-rated work increases an artist’s clientele and revenue, as not all art buyers can afford an original. Copyright allows artists the ability to pursue new creative ideas and art forms. Copyright increases the value of artwork by allowing artists to limit reproduction, pro-rate their artwork, and pursue new creative ideas.
   Copyright protects buyers from fraudulent art purchases. Copyrighted artwork displays the artist’s name on either the front of their work or on the back. It places a number on each artwork or the word, “original”, on it. The date the artwork was created is also placed on the artwork, to better monitor its increase in value over time. Copyrighted artwork protects buyers from fraudulent art purchases, because it assists buyers to identify original work cues: the artist’s name, its unique number and the number of prints in circulation, and the date the artwork was created.
Every artist, amateur or not, should copyright their artwork. Copyrighted artwork protects artists’ creativity, it increases the artwork’s value, and it protects the artist’s clientele from purchasing fraudulent pieces. Vikki Reed is an example of an artist who copyrights her artwork.

Related posts:

  1. Maps are a Form of Artwork
  2. Investing in Art

This entry was posted on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011 at 4:09 pm and is filed under Art, Law. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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