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Hi Anne,

you are correct about the "closed to the class" or the campus part (not
because of any aspect of the law but because it is low risk), and I would
still suggest educating the participants in why this is so.  On the open
web, however, is a redistribution.  If the artists have websites, any
information about redistribution may be there, as you say, but US copyright
law (and the fair use right) is for the protection of US creators and US
publications/creations.  Each artist and work this class considers for use
on a public website would have to be considered on its own, in a case by
case basis.  The artists have the right to uphold the rights they have in
their home countries.  I don't know how much this information on Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries%27_copyright_lengths can be
trusted, but it is a start.  And if the class is working with contemporary
artists, then I think one should assume the artist still holds exclusive
rights to the display of their work.  Do others agree with this
interpretation of how to handle non-US contemporary artists and their
work?  I'd be interested to hear.

Thanks,
Janis

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Date:    Tue, 23 Apr 2019 17:22:10 +0000
From:    "[log in to unmask]" <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Copyright question

Hello Collective Wisdom,

A faculty member here has asked me about something and I thought I would
throw it out there, since I can’t imagine I am the only one getting these
kinds of questions.
Her class on Art and Politics in Africa is putting together an online
exhibit, via a Wordpress site. The students are dealing mostly with
contemporary artists, and I think I am right to advise that if the site is
closed to all but the class, and maybe even to the college community, that
permissions wouldn’t be needed.  And if an artist’s website has a statement
about  use, that would tell her what she’d need to know about that artist.
She also would like to know, however, how this would change were they to
make it more open. I assume that this would absolutely require permissions
to show images in the ‘exhibition’. Of course, contemporary art has been
the fly in the ointment for a very long time..  I just wanted to check and
see if there are any new workarounds-the fact that this is African art, as
well as contemporary, feels like a lot of roadblocks would stand in the way
of a timely solution!

I’d welcome any advice!
And thanks in advance.
Best,
Anne


Anne B. Haas
Art Librarian
Liaison to Art, Asian Studies, Theater/Dance
Bowdoin College
Brunswick, Maine 04011
207-725-3690
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
------------------------------------------

*JANIS DESMARAIS, *MA MS
College of the Holy Cross
*Visual Literacy & Arts Librarian*
Librarian for the Divine Cluster
*phone: *(508) 793-2453
*office:* Dinand Library 101C
Worcester, Massachusetts


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