loader from loading.io

Art of the Chase: Inside Art Auctions

The Art Law Podcast

Release Date: 05/10/2018

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act Gets Some Teeth show art The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act Gets Some Teeth

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve speak with colleague Eden Burgess about the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), its history, purpose, and requirements to repatriate cultural property and human remains to Native American tribes and Native Hawaiian Organizations, as well as new regulations that are leading major museums to remove or close exhibitions of Native American and Hawaiian objects while taking action to implement NAGPRA in consultation with tribes that have ownership claims.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram:  TikTok: 

info_outline
The Parthenon Marbles Dispute show art The Parthenon Marbles Dispute

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve take a deep dive into the history and current status of the Parthenon Marbles with Alexander Herman, director of the Institute of Art and Law in London and author of the recent book The Parthenon Marbles Dispute: Heritage, Law, Politics.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram:  TikTok: 

info_outline
Art Law Litigation Updates: Fraud, Fair Use, and Nazi Looting show art Art Law Litigation Updates: Fraud, Fair Use, and Nazi Looting

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve discuss three recent litigation updates. They discuss the outcome of the trial in the case brought by Dmitry Rybolovlev against Sotheby’s for aiding in the alleged fraud of Yves Bouvier, the most recent Richard Prince fair use copyright infringement cases brought by two photographers, and the Ninth Circuit decision applying Spanish law to deny return of a Pissarro painting to the family of Lily Cassirer, whose property was looted by the Nazis and is currently located in a Spanish museum.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram: ...

info_outline
2023 AI and Art Wrap Up show art 2023 AI and Art Wrap Up

The Art Law Podcast

Steve and Katie take a look at the many developments around generative AI and fine art, including debates and litigation on copyrightability and infringement as well as the policy concerns surrounding increased use of generative AI to create artworks.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram: TikTok:

info_outline
New Hurdles to Importing Art in the EU show art New Hurdles to Importing Art in the EU

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve talk with renowned art lawyer Pierre Valentin about the EU’s new and striking import regulations on cultural goods, including fine art and cultural property, that prohibit the import of applicable items not created in the EU into the EU if they cannot be shown to have been legally exported from their countries of origin. We discuss the impetus for these regulations, the problem with discerning ownership and export history of cultural property, and the key problems with the new regulation’s successful implementation and enforcement.   Notes for this episode:  ...

info_outline
Returning Returning "The Wounded Indian" Statue to Massachusetts

The Art Law Podcast

Steve and Katie talk with their colleague Tom Kline about his client, the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association (MCMA), and its decades-long quest to reclaim the dramatic marble statue The Wounded Indian by Peter Stephenson, modeled after the Roman sculpture The Dying Gaul. MCMA was founded by Paul Revere in 1795 and was gifted the statue in 1893. After vacating its storied headquarters in 1958, MCMA was told the statute had been destroyed. Only in 2023 did it get the statue back.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram: TikTok:

info_outline
What Can Artificial Intelligence Offer Art Authentication? show art What Can Artificial Intelligence Offer Art Authentication?

The Art Law Podcast

Steve and Katie speak with Dr. Carina Popovici, CEO and Founder of Art Recognition, an art and technology startup that uses AI systems to evaluation the authenticity of artworks. They discuss the problems with authentication in the traditional art market and the promise and limitations of AI in solving these problems along with some real-world examples.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram: TikTok:

info_outline
Do Market Players React to Court Decisions Impacting Art? show art Do Market Players React to Court Decisions Impacting Art?

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve speak with WIPO economists Alexander Cuntz and Matthias Sahli about their recent article, Intermediary liability and trade in follow-on innovation, published in the Journal of Cultural Economics in February 2023. Their research looks at how intermediaries in the art market altered their behavior after the Second Circuit’s decision in Cariou v. Prince, which was seen as greatly expanding permissible fair use in appropriation art. THIS PODCAST WAS RECORDED BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT’S DECISION IN THE WARHOL CASE, WHICH PULLED BACK ON THE TRANSFORMATIVE USE...

info_outline
SCOTUS Says Warhol Not So Fast: The Limitations of Transformative Use show art SCOTUS Says Warhol Not So Fast: The Limitations of Transformative Use

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve talk to Philippa Loengard, copyright expert and Director of the Kernochan Center for Law, Media and the Arts at Columbia Law School, about the much-anticipated Supreme Court decision in Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith, which resets and limits the applicability of “transformative” fair use as an exception to copyright infringement.   Notes for this episode:   Follow the Art Law Podcast Instagram: TikTok:

info_outline
Fashion, NFTs, and Artistic Expression show art Fashion, NFTs, and Artistic Expression

The Art Law Podcast

Katie and Steve talk to attorney Emily Poler, founder of Poler Legal, about the recent lawsuit between the iconic French fashion house Hermès and an NFT creator, Mason Rothschild, over Rothschild’s “MetaBirkin” NFTs. Hermès claimed that Rothschild infringed Hermès’ trademark in the name “Birkin.” Hermès prevailed on this claim (and others) in a jury trial earlier this year. Katie, Steve, and Emily discuss the contours of this lawsuit and the reach of trademark law to police fashion brands, copyright’s limitations, and trademark law’s applicability to artistic expression,...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

On this month’s podcast, we take a close look at art auctions – how they work, their place in the art market and the rules and regulations that confine/define them. Auctions at Sotheby’s and Christie’s now regularly net tens and sometimes hundreds of millions of dollars for a single work. Christie’s recently sold Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi painting for $450 million, by far the highest price ever garnered by a piece of art at auction. At the same time, much about the auction process remains secret. The identity of the buyer and seller is often known only to the auction house, and the reserve price (below which an artwork will not be sold) is known by the auctioneer but not the bidders. While the auctioneer may not sell a work of art below its reserve price, it can bid on the work below the reserve to get the auction going. Steve and Katie discuss these issues and others having to do with regulation, transparency and potential conflicts, and welcome famous Sotheby’s auctioneer Oliver Barker to take us behind the scenes of a big auction.

 

Notes for this episode: http://artlawpodcast.com/2018/05/10/art-of-the-chase-inside-art-auctions/

 

Follow the Art Law Podcast

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artlawpodcast/

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@artlawpodcast