Fair Use: What's Mine is Yours: Darren Bader, Bethany Collins, Troy Lamarr Chew II, Simon Denny, Laeh Glenn, Trevor Paglen
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Western modernism and post modernism have hinged on the artistic practice of appropriation or mechanical and digital reproduction of scavenged or found images. That lineage is regularly visible in the most significant global contemporary art of the 21st century as well. Fair Use: What’s Mine is Yours brings together artists working at this moment, in disparate locations, using markedly different styles, but all indebted in some way to the practice of appropriation. Together their works point to the critical and ongoing artistic practice of questioning existing power structures and challenging value systems through the strategic use of borrowed and reproduced visual material.
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Fair Use: What’s Mine is Yours is a project born of conversations between Alison Gass, Executive Director and Chief Curator at the ICA San Jose and her brother Andy Gass, partner at Latham Watkins and Copyright law expert. As Alison gave Andy a crash course in the history of appropriation and pastiche in modern and contemporary Western art practice, as he prepared to represent the Andy Warhol Foundation, the idea was born for an exhibition looking at the various ways these legacies extend into artists practice today in relevant and critical ways. The theme felt like a natural fit for the Altman Siegel gallery program with a few additional artists. “Working with Claudia and the artists in her program to explore these themes has been an exciting way to test this exhibition idea. The response of artists to the prompt of thinking critically about themes of appropriation, borrowing, scavenging and scraping, made me realize there is something here that deserves further attention!” Alison explains.
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With this precarious moment for appropriation art as its backdrop, this exhibition looks broadly at the norms and practices of appropriation and transformative art practice that owe a conceptual debt to the artists of the Western modern and post-modern era and perhaps a legal debt to the scholars who argue for the “Fair Use” standards. Today, images are reproduced, shared and re-used at a rate unimaginable to the earlier artists who were commenting on the new languages of pop culture or celebrity culture. Our current technological infrastructure and a culture of accessible imagery and shared usage makes “Fair Use” a necessary tactic for many artists doing the job of reflecting, investigating, or challenging the reality of our global experience. Beyond the confines of the art world, issues of copyright, intellectual property and fair use remain at the surface of Silicon Valley conversations, as innovators build upon existing platforms to further imagine our 21st century reality.
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“Fair use has for nearly two centuries served as a cornerstone of the culture of creative expression in the US. The ongoing fight to define its scope—both with respect to works of visual art, and with respect to rapidly evolving technologies—is in some respects a fight for the future of First Amendment freedoms.”
— Andy Gass
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Thursday, July 22, 2021
Alison Gass moderates a discussion with Andy Gass, Trevor Paglen, and Sara VanDerBeek exploring the legal framework of "Fair Use" and artistic approaches that question existing power structures and challenge value systems through the strategic use of borrowed and reproduced visual material.
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For more information and artists' bios please contact info@altmansiegel.com or 415.576.9300.