Good points, Mark.
P51Mstg wrote:
"ART" Actual paintings on canvas are works that are copyrighted. JDK IS WRONG and you cannot make a copy for personal enjoyment (known as a derivative work). Art gallaries are off limits to cameras (except for ones that may allow photos of "OLD" works (well outside of copyright expiration generally the creator's life plus 75 years in the USA).
I do much prefer to be WRONG than plain old 'wrong'. It sounds so much more CERTAIN.
I wasn't suggesting you turn up and bang off batches of photographs in a gallery.
Actually, most galleries are quite happy for you to take copies of their artworks if you are
sketching or painting. This runs back to one of the original purposes of galleries, which was to provide inspiration for copying for training and education, of artists.
Today, most galleries have restrictions stopping painting, but this is to do with issues over paint, easels and long sharp objects in the gallery, not the resultant creation. However, you can, and I have done, make sketches of the artwork. Turning up with a Camera Obscura might be briefly amusing to see how far you can push it. And if you did a batch of drawings and started selling them off outside the gallery, I think you'd have your collar felt. Hence, your own original creations (photography is not original in in this context) for your own educative use. (As I'm working from memory and experience, rather than statute books, I'll check the details with my tame art historian...)
(Perhaps this is where we also mention that copyright law isn't global, and isn't US copyright law. However, the board principles are similar, and worth being aware of.)
The issues over copyright is why many galleries have examples from their permanent collection on website, but travelling exhibitions including loan art from other venues is often not shown, as the copyright is a minefield.
Regards,