peter bialobrzeski, shanghai, 2001 (#57). image from h. & d. zielske, nanpu bridge, shanghai,...
TRANSCRIPT
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Peter Bialobrzeski, Shanghai, 2001
(#57). Image from
www.pdnonline.com
H. & D. Zielske, Nanpu Bridge, Shanghai, 2002. Image from zielske.de.
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Bialobrzeski denounced the Zielskes and told websites that the pair had actually called years earlier for advice about exposures, film, and vantage points.
The Zielskes, who claimed in an open letter that the images "had nothing in common," were soon fending off a charge that hasn't been leveled in fine-art circles for a while:
PLAGIARISM.PLAGIARISM.
Bialobrzeski
The Zielskes
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There is a fine line between copying and homage.Homage = Inspiration.Copying = Plagiarism.
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We all know that ideas come from many sources: they recur, regenerate, take new forms, and mutate
into alternative forms. In the world of art and design, there seems to be an
implicit understanding that any original work can and will evolve into the work of others, eventually
working its way into our broader visual culture.
Is it acceptable to use the work of another when it might be a critical part
of the final artifact?
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Visual Plagiarism?
Galliano advert, c. 2007 William Klein, c. 1992
http://www.epuk.org/The-Curve/456/visual-plagiarism
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While copying a process or design may be part of learning and developing your creative process, your finished artifacts must either elaborate an idea or develop and move forward what someone else has done.
You can do this by changing something in the original that will create a unique effect and
new artwork:
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Jeff Koons, String of Puppies, 1988. Polychrome on wood;
62 x 37 ins.
Photograph: Art Rogers, Puppies, 1985. Offset lithograph on coated paper; 4 5/8 x 5 3/4 ins. © Art Rogers
http://observatory.designobserver.com/entry.html?entry=6467
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CAN BE DEFINED AS:A quotation of visual media, such as:•artwork•photography•popular culture•music videos•films•technology etc.
By quoting visual media for your own art work, you change its meaning. You create a new context. Your art work has a different meaning from the original.
http://education.qld.gov.au/tal/tips/02523.html
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Examples of Appropriation:
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While copying a process or design may be part of learning and developing your creative process, your finished artifacts must either elaborate an idea or develop and move forward what someone else has done.
You can do this by changing something in the original that will create a unique effect and
new artwork:
![Page 11: Peter Bialobrzeski, Shanghai, 2001 (#57). Image from H. & D. Zielske, Nanpu Bridge, Shanghai, 2002. Image from zielske.de.zielske.de](https://reader036.vdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062322/56649f3a5503460f94c58187/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
• http://mikerbaker.com/knack/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/mona_blair_tn.jpg• http://www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu/~dvess/ids/fap/mona7.htm• http://www.art.com/products/p14452957-sa-i1754892/the-mona-lisa-says-goodbye-
when-the-painting-is-stolen-from-the-louvre-paris.htm?sorig=cat&sorigid=0&dimvals=0&ui=1c4d773ed72b42c18668544182f7198d&searchstring=mona+lisa• http://www.art.com/products/p13719389-sa-i2731708/andy-warhol-double-mona-
lisa-c1963.htm?sorig=cat&sorigid=0&dimvals=0&ui=1c4d773ed72b42c18668544182f7198d&searchstring=mona+lisa
Mona Lisa Appropriations citations