Suicide Girls Reappropriate Art That Appropriation Artist Richard Prince Appropriated — At A 99.9% Discount
from the that's-how-it's-done dept
Yesterday, we wrote about appropriation artist Richard Prince and his slightly bizarre exhibit of other people’s Instagram photos, with just the addition of a nonsensical Richard Prince comment — and then selling them for $90,000 a pop. As we noted, Prince comes off like a complete jackass in almost every way here, but he doesn’t care. In fact, his Twitter feed is like an art exhibit of not giving a single fuck — retweeting or mocking many of the angry tweets coming his way, and joking about the $90,000 fees for the photos (saying that he thought it was twice that price).
In that post, we noted that one of those whose photos was used tried to “reappropriate” things by releasing a press release claiming that his artwork was being displayed in an exhibit “organized by” Prince. Some folks noticed that a bunch of the images Prince used were actually from the well-known Suicide Girls instagram feed. And now it appears that the Suicide Girls have hit back with their own bit of reappropriation as well — selling versions of basically the same prints as Prince’s for… $90, rather than $90,000. And, yes, the Suicide Girls reappropriation includes Richard Prince’s nonsensical comments… but they also added one of their own:
Do we have Mr. Prince?s permission to sell these prints? We have the same permission from him that he had from us. 😉
Also, any profits are being donated to EFF, so that obviously rocks as well.
Again, there are interesting questions about fair use and transformative work here — even if it’s pretty widely agreed that Prince is being a total jackass about the whole thing. But, what’s much more interesting than the copyright question is how people are responding to this. There’s a social cost involved here. Prince doesn’t care, because that social cost has no impact on his ability to sell ridiculous $90,000 prints to people who care more about “names” than art. But others are building off of the controversy and doing unique things to have an impact without having to resort to the “obvious path” of copyright law. This is a point that often gets lost in these discussions. Even if a copyright claim is a possible path, that doesn’t mean it’s the best path. It appears that many have recognized that there are better ways to deal with this than using the sledge hammer approach that copyright law provides.
Filed Under: appropriation art, copyright, fair use, instagram, richard prince, suicide girls
Companies: instagram
Comments on “Suicide Girls Reappropriate Art That Appropriation Artist Richard Prince Appropriated — At A 99.9% Discount”
How much do you want to bet that Prince files a lawsuit?
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Ooooorrr, he’ll copyright troll it up and agree to settle for slightly less than the cost of a lawsuit.
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Sucker’s bet right there.
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What are the odds that a guy named Prince would file a copyright lawsuit?
If anyone pays Suicide Girls (EFF) $90 for that image, it’ll be because of the value added to it by Richard Prince – not the value added to it by Suicide Girls. So he ultimately did them a favor by appropriating their work and they’re capitalizing on that rather than suing.
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How much is a 67x 55 print on canvas?
And then how much profit is left from $90?
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Or else they just want to support the EFF.
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Then just donate the money directly. There’s a big donate button on their homepage.
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Suicide Girls? Why not the Awesome Sauce Girls?
It seems more appropriate. 🙂
tranformative
They’re shooting themselves. His work was transformative. We can debate the quality of his work in whatever frame you want (copyright, moral, artistic,etc) But I do believe there is enough of the transformative argument not only with the work itself, but with the debate itself. It has value to critique and debate it from a lot of stand points. What the Suicide girls are doing is petty and not transformative at all. However you debate the merits of the work itself the SGs fall short of the fair use/transformative test and are violating his copyright.
I support fair use / transformative works. As much the transformation can sucks sometimes, it’s not for the non creator to decide.
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Then the SG version is equally ‘transformative’. How can the SG fall short of ‘fair use’ and ‘transformative’ when it’s their original content?
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Are you just trolling, are do you actually believe the bullshit you’re posting?
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(Shhh. It’s performance art.)
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Where’s OOTB to bitch about copyright as property?
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Why is his commentary on their work transformative but their commentary on his not?
Re: tranformative
you don’t get it. Suicide girls already “own” the original image. They “own” their added byline. The only thing they are appropriating is the added text by Prince.
The Prince text is being transformed by the addition of the added byline. Transforming someone else’s work does not give you the right to lock it up, preventing them from using it.
Re: tranformative
Your argument is weak as hell and full of hypocrisy.
There is nothing transformative about his work. He needed to actually change the actual image, all he did was add actual text to the bottom of the page. That IS not transformative.
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So if I do a screen grab at instagram and print it out I’ll get exactly the same picture?
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You don’t know what transformative means.
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It’s not “transformative”.
If transformative works really have such a low bar Napster would still exist (converting a CD to MP3 would create a transformative work based on the CD), There would be no such thing as movie (or tv) piracy (converting the format to a different codec would be transformative), and one could sell their own version of any novel they please simply by adding some foot-notes.
Right I’m off to republish Harry Potter with some minor changes and footnotes and get rich… I’m sure JK Rowling will be cool with my transformative work.
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For what feels like the ten-millionth time: it’s about the context of the art, it’s “character, purpose and meaning”, not the physical act of format-shifting or the material changes to the content.
If people are just going to keep ignoring that and spouting this nonsense about how it’s the same as ripping a CD, then I don’t know what else to say…
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Some of us get it.
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A transformative work does not necessarily need to alter the content itself. That’s not what transformative means.
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WELCOME TO COPYRIGHT AMBIGUITY 101!
The AMA for this was a disaster: https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/37hzrn/i_am_missy_suicide_founder_of_suicidegirls_artist/
Reddit was arguing that SC basically cheats the models and photographers anyway as a part of their core business. It’s just terrible all the way around.
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Well their other big thing at the moment is that they fired a girl and put all her correspondence on the website, including her dismissal letter. If you read through that they come off looking like a scam of sorts.
Also, the $90 version would be considered transformative, at any rate, because the $90 image adds two new lines of text.
Huh?
People pay $90,000 for a stupid online photo reprint?
That should be the headline here – Not news about the “Prince formerly known as artist”.
This is an odd case. I’m all for fair use, but I’m also aware of history, and if there’s anything that absolutely should not be considered Fair Use, it’s what Mr. Prince is doing, because this is literally the problem that copyright was first created to solve: publishers appropriating a creative work in its entirety and selling it without compensating the author.
We already have horrendous laws like the DMCA enshrine in law a publisher’s right to abuse people rather than curtailing it. If we now say that this is fair use, it would seem that Copyright’s journey to the Dark Side is now complete.
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But Prince isn’t a “publisher”, really. He’s not mass-producing copies of these works and dominating the market for them. He’s transformed them into single pieces that are being sold in an entirely different market (high art) than the one the originals could be considered to be a part of. Moreover, the pieces were already published – openly, freely, widely and publicly – on Instagram.
I doubt there’s a single piece of business that Prince blocked the photographers from getting. I doubt one of the people who paid $90k for these works would have bought the photo from the originator, at either the same price or a different one. If there’s any measurable effect on the market for the photographers’ work here, it’s almost certainly growth. Prince clearly contributed more to the market value of these works than the photographers – if you put a blank canvas signed by Prince, and one of these photo-prints not created by him, on sale next to each other at an art gallery… well, I know which one would sell for more.
So is that really what copyright was created to solve?
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Copyright was created to solve a simple problem – as pulishing became a big business, became mechanized, and presses could crank out thousands or more copies per day, instead of hand-assembled book bindings – suddenly copying people’s works became quite lucrative. We see the same thing at play today, where making purses and slapping a Prada or Gucchi label on it (or “Rolex” on a watch) makes for massive profits for those who are creative enough to do so.
Charles Dickens, for example, went bankrupt chasing people who copied his works. Some even used the “transformative” excuse, reprinting “Christmas Carol” and changing some of the scenes and claiming they’d “improved” it so copyright didn’t apply.
By this logic, yes, both Prince and SG are transformative; but also Perez Hilton’s paintshop-drawn penises on celebrity photos are far more transformative (hence artistic?) than Prince. (In fact, PH uses the same argument – he changed the photos, therefore he can freely use them without paying the photographers any royalties.)
To me, the essence of a work is what it is. A transformation significantly alters it;
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Not really sure I follow you… What about all that is supposed to prove that these works shouldn’t be protected?
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Also I think you have that Dickens story wrong. He sued over the Christmas Carol thing and won, then the publisher declared bankruptcy and Dickens ended up stuck with the legal bills.
He never went bankrupt. He made a good living his entire life, often through speaking & reading tours more than publication. He died wealthy, leaving substantial sums to his children and ex-wife, and a meaningful bonus to all his servants (which, yes, he had). So let’s not go shedding tears and painting a picture of him as one of his own starving urchins and pretending a lack of strong copyright is at fault.
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While I think I understand your explanations of “transformativeness” I have an issue with this rationale. It comes off as “fair use is for famous people.” If I had done this same thing, no one would have paid anything for it; does that make it less legitimate fair use?
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I don’t really think it’s about the payment, it’s just that in this particular case, the payment serves as a good demonstration of how wildly Prince changed the context of this art. The argument in this instance might be harder to make if no galleries were taking the pieces and no rich folk were buying them, but not impossible.
Plus, remember, I absolutely believe the opposite should hold true (even if the sad fact is that it often doesn’t). If you go to a gallery where a painting is on sale for $90k and snap a photo of it to share to Instagram, in my mind that is clearly transformative work as well: your shared instagram pic has an entirely different purpose, character and meaning than the five-figure painting.
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“this is literally the problem that copyright was first created to solve: publishers appropriating a creative work in its entirety and selling it without compensating the author.”
This is a shallow justification of copyright. I fail to see the implied mandate that someone making money by copying the works of others should compensate the artist they are copying. This just shows that artists can’t compete with one of the natural properties of information: it’s easy to copy. It also ignores that culture builds on culture. You can’t create new “original” works without the existence of prior works. If the goal is to enable artists to be compensated for their labor, then copyright is completely the wrong way to go about it. Adopting a mindset that creative works should be treated like exclusive property is contrary to reality when exclusivity is not natural to the object in question. If the goal is to maintain a monopoly on copying and distribution, you’ve failed as soon as you publish your works.
The proper solution is a mindset that leads to adapting to the reality of what the artist truly has control over. The truth is, you only have control over your own will. So it follows that artist and audience would be better off forming an agreement prior to the act of labor which produces the creative works. It also shifts your focus onto serving the people that are willing to pay you and accepting that copying is just part of marketing.
Copyright is the model of doing the work today and hoping that people will agree to pay you tomorrow. Don’t do that; get your just compensation settled before you do any work. Everything else is dealing with plagiarism.
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For the first 300 years of printing, authors did not have copyright. Various censorship and licensing schemes granted a printer the right to produce copies of a work, and also prevent direct competition in production of a title. The second aspect is what the printers missed when the licensing schemes were abolished. That is why the printers lobbied for copyright, and eventually got their way in part, they did not like the limited term, when they spun copyright as an authors right. Note however authors still created manuscripts, and sold them to printers during the first 300 years of copyright.
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Oops,, that last word should be printing.
Let the fans decide
whether they want the $90,000 or $90 version but you don’t need to include violence via copyright in this matter at all.
Why would anyone want to pay any amount of money for this crap in the first place? But, if I were so inclined, I would buy the one that donates 100% of the sale to the charity.
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I will pay for my viewing of the picture with the sound of my money.
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Why? My guess would be rampant stupidity.
Does this mean I can appropriate any art, slap a few lines of text on it, then claim it to be a transformative work and profit?
Can I sell prints of the Mona Lisa this way? What about copies of Martin Luther King’s dream speech?
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you can do whatever you like with the mona lisa she’s 140 odd years older than copyright itself.
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What? Impossible, as so many people and companies(who I’m sure are totally unbiased) are constantly selling, everything must be owned, as such I’m sure it’s impossible for the Mona Lisa to be free to modify, someone must own the rights to it!
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Can I sell prints of the Mona Lisa this way? What about copies of Martin Luther King’s dream speech?
IANAL, but short answer, yes and yes.
The Mona Lisa painting is free of Copyright entanglements, and you can always go to where it is hanging and take a picture of it (provided the museum doesn’t have any restrictions on photography or you are able to do so without getting caught if it does,) and there are public domain and royalty free pictures of the Mona Lisa already available online.
Martin Luther King’s dream speech, on the other hand, may get you into trouble after you copy it, slap a few lines on it, and distribute it, but there is nothing preventing you from doing it. The King estate may sue you for it, but they may not, or you may have a fair use claim which will cause the courts to side with you. The simple fact is that you can be sued at any time for any reason, and copyright is one of those times where the lawyers want to keep it purposefully vague. Sadly, you won’t know until you are successful and defending your use.
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you can always go to where it is hanging and take a picture of it (provided the museum doesn’t have any restrictions on photography or you are able to do so without getting caught if it does,)
There are no restrictions on photographing it, though the huge crowds of people and bulletproof glass make getting a good shot tricky.
Free Market for the win.
This prince is a real dick
Its unbelievable to see the scumbags defending this jackass losers who cant make art. Welcome to watermarks, everywhere, all the time.