Art in the Courtroom
By (Author) Vilis R. Inde
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
25th March 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
The Arts
345.7307
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
624g
Providing legal analysis and touching upon social history and art history themes, this work offers an objective review of five art trials. Spanning the last 20 years, specific areas of law are examined with each trial: First and Fifth Amendments, copyright law, contract law, evaluation of art and misrepresentation. Art, outside of the legal vacuum, has been embroiled in a battle initiated by social conservatives to promote decency. Three trials involving this struggle and the National Endowment of the Arts are analyzed. The valuation of art is examined in the context of Andy Warhol's estate and copyright law is considered because of the appropriation of contemporary images by Jeff Koons. Although each trial is reviewed distinctly, all are interwoven to present major issues relating to contemporary art. Entertaining aspects of each trial contribute to the education of art and law. For art students, copyright, contract and constitutional analysis in the context of actual hearings is a valuable resource outlining afforded protections and options. To scholars interested in contemporary art and its encounters with the law, this text bridges the gap between two seemingly disparate worlds.
[A]rt in the Courtroom should appeal to members of art, legal, and many other communities.-The Law and Politics Book Review
"Art in the Courtroom should appeal to members of art, legal, and many other communities."-The Law and Politics Book Review
"[A]rt in the Courtroom should appeal to members of art, legal, and many other communities."-The Law and Politics Book Review
VILIS R. INDE is an attorney, who has practiced law in New York and Minnesota.