Mobile app version of vmapp.org
Login or Join
RJPawlick971

: How to manipulate a photograph so that it becomes original artwork? After finding an image on Google images – I altered and added many different effects to the point where it is not recognizable

@RJPawlick971

Posted in: #Art #Copyright #Legal

After finding an image on Google images – I altered and added many different effects to the point where it is not recognizable from the original composition. However, when does the shapes and colors taken from a photograph become a separate piece of artwork from the original image?

How much manipulation is needed in order to ensure that copyright or the photographer's rights are not violated?

If only color and shapes are left.

10.02% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Login to follow query

More posts by @RJPawlick971

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

 

@Samaraweera207

There is no set amount of manipulation or alteration of a copyrighted piece of work that will get you to a point where you can consider the work to be your own or 'safe' from infringing the original copyright.

Many people will tell you that there are rules regarding a certain number of 'points of difference' (I've heard 7 and 5 quoted for this number) which need to exist between the original and the copy in order for copyright to not apply. This is categorically not the case.

There are also theories regarding the percentage of your design that is made up of elements borrowed from copyrighted material. The idea being that if only a small percentage of your design is identifiable as being part of the source material then that's acceptable. This is also not true.

The copyright rules for this kind of work are quite simple: If there is anything left in your creation that would allow anyone to identify the source material, then you have infringed the copyright of the person who created the original image. End of story. Regardless of whether you have distorted, blurred, recoloured, flipped, inverted or completely redrawn the original; if it still looks like the same thing (or part thereof), then it's the same thing.

That said, there are images that are in the public domain to which copyright does not apply so using these as your start point would be a safe route. Also, if you have manipulated and worked on your design to the point that nothing of the original remains, then you should be fine.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


 

@Si6392903

I do not know. But take a look at some interesting cases to confuse you more:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama_%22Hope%22_poster www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/wp/2015/05/25/a-reminder-that-your-instagram-photos-arent-really-yours-someone-else-can-sell-them-for-90000/
One is the case of the "Hope" poster of Barack Obama, where the photographer that took the original photo sued the artist that used it as a basis for the poster.

The other case is an "artist" that sold Instagram photos of other people.

But this could be something that is happening since forever.

Duchamp's fountain (1917): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain_(Duchamp) was a pice of art just because he sayed so, and does not matter the pice was another persons intelectual property.

One real option:

Stop thinking on "How to manipulate a photograph" and think more, a lot more on "it becomes original artwork!". Do something original.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Back to top | Use Dark Theme