Fr. 130.00

Art and Authority - Moral Rights and Meaning in Contemporary Visual Art

English · Hardback

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Description

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People engage with authored works all the time. They buy paintings, read books, and download songs. They might even be artists themselves. And yet they tend to take the concept of authorship for granted. The basic idea that an artist as author maintains some kind of claim to his or her creation, even as it circulates in the world at large, seems natural. It is the basis for copyright law and moral rights legislation which protect the rights of authors. But what is an author, and why do artists receive special legal recognition and protection that the creators of other kinds of artifacts do not? It is often assumed that artists have a special bond with their artworks, but the nature of this bond, and its function as the source of an artist's authority over his or her work, often goes unquestioned.

Art and Authority is a philosophical essay on artistic freedom: its sources, nature, and limits. Artistic freedom can mean different things depending on the context in which it is invoked. K. E. Gover argues that the most fundamental form of artistic freedom involves the artist's authority to accept or disavow the works that he or she produces, to curate the works that bear his or her name, and that represent his or her artistic oeuvre. Our very concept of what an artwork isthe intentional expression of the artist, for its own sakedepends on this second-order endorsement by the artist of what he or she has made. Using real-world cases and controversies in contemporary visual art, Gover argues that the leading accounts of artistic authorship in the legal and philosophical literature have overlooked the significance of this moment.

List of contents

  • 1: Introduction

  • 2: Art, Authorship, and Authorization

  • 3: When the Work is Finished

  • 4: The Artist and the Institution

  • 5: Boundary Issues: Reconsidering the Artist's Sanction

  • 6: Taking Pictures: Appropriation Art, Copyright, and Intentionalism

  • 7: Conclusion

About the author

K. E. Gover is currently a JD candidate at Harvard Law School. She was a philosophy professor at Bennington College from 2005-2019, and held a visiting professorship at Columbia University in 2019-2020.

Summary

Art and Authority explores the sources, nature, and limits of artistic freedom. K. E. Gover draws upon real-world cases and controversies in contemporary visual art to offer a better understanding of artistic authorship and authority. Each chapter focuses on a case of dispute over the rights of an artist with respect to his or her artwork.

Additional text

The central ideas are worth engaging with, and on the whole, I believe the book makes a valuable contribution to the literature.

Report

Surely the law could benefit from contributions as interesting, varied, and opinionated as those in Gover's book. Brian Soucek, British Journal of Aesthetics

Product details

Authors K. E. Gover, K. E. (Philosophy Professor Gover
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 28.02.2018
 
EAN 9780198768692
ISBN 978-0-19-876869-2
No. of pages 196
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Antiques

Theory of art, PHILOSOPHY / Aesthetics, ART / Criticism & Theory, Philosophy: aesthetics, Copyright Law

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