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Andy Warhol estate loses US supreme court copyright fight over Prince paintings - The Guardian

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Andy Warhol’s estate lost its US supreme court copyright fight with the celebrity photographer Lynn Goldsmith on Thursday as the justices faulted the famed pop artist’s use of her photo of the singer Prince in a silkscreen series depicting the charismatic rock star.

The justices, in a 7-2 ruling authored by the liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor, upheld a lower court’s ruling that Warhol’s works based on Goldsmith’s 1981 photo were not immune from her copyright infringement lawsuit.

The case has been watched closely in the art world and entertainment industry for its implications regarding the legal doctrine called fair use, which promotes freedom of expression by allowing the use of copyright-protected works under certain circumstances without the owner’s permission.

Warhol, who died in 1987, was a foremost participant in the pop art movement that germinated in the 1950s. He created silkscreen print paintings and other revered and financially valuable works inspired by photos of celebrities including the actor Marilyn Monroe, the singer Elvis Presley, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, the Chinese leader Mao Zedong and the boxer Muhammad Ali.

At issue in the litigation involving Goldsmith was Warhol’s Orange Prince series.

Vanity Fair magazine had commissioned Warhol to make an image of Prince to be published accompanying a story about the rocker, giving credit to Goldsmith for the source photograph. Warhol created 14 silkscreens and two pencil illustrations based on the photo Goldsmith had taken of Prince for Newsweek magazine in 1981, most of which were not authorized by the photographer.

Goldsmith, 75, has said she learned of the unauthorized works only after Prince’s 2016 death. She countersued the Andy Warhol Foundation in 2017 after it asked a court to find that the works did not violate her copyright.

A key factor courts have used to determine fair use is whether the new work has a “transformative” purpose such as parody, education or criticism.

Echoing a recommendation from Joe Biden’s administration, the supreme court focused on the specific use that allegedly infringed Goldsmith’s copyright – a license of Warhol’s work to Condé Nast – and said it was not transformative because it served the same commercial purpose as Goldsmith’s photo: to depict Prince in a magazine.

Sotomayor distinguished that use from Warhol’s pop art, like his famed prints of Campbell’s soup cans.

“The Soup Cans series uses Campbell’s copyrighted work for an artistic commentary on consumerism, a purpose that is orthogonal to advertising soup,” Sotomayor wrote.

Justice Elena Kagan, a liberal, wrote a dissent joined by the conservative chief justice, John Roberts, arguing for the artistic value of appropriation with nods to artists ranging from the playwright William Shakespeare to the painter Edouard Manet to the rock musician Nick Cave.

“All that matters” in the ruling issued by the court’s majority, Kagan wrote, “is that Warhol and the publisher entered into a licensing transaction, similar to one Goldsmith might have done. Because the artist had such a commercial purpose, all the creativity in the world could not save him.

“In declining to acknowledge the importance of transformative copying, the court today, and for the first time, turns its back on how creativity works,” Kagan said.

Sotomayor wrote that dissent written by Kagan “misses the forest for a tree”, and that its “single-minded focus on the value of copying ignores the value of original works”.

The last time the supreme court ruled on fair use in art was in 1994, when it decided that the rap group 2 Live Crew’s parody of the singer Roy Orbison’s Oh, Pretty Woman made fair use of the popular 1960s song. The justices ruled in a software copyright dispute in 2021 that Google LLC’s Android mobile operating system made fair use of Oracle Corp software code.

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Andy Warhol estate loses US supreme court copyright fight over Prince paintings - The Guardian
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