In this case, Jeff Koons used Art Roger's photographs of his wife and eight puppies to create a group of 20 sculptures for a 1988 exhibition. Koons acknowledged that his source matieral was a notecard of Roger's "Puppies." Not only did he use Roger's idea, he also copied the expression: the composition, the poses, and the expressions. Koons claims that his work is fair use because he argues that "his scuplture is a satire or parody of soceity at large. He insists that 'String of Puppies' is a fair social criticism." The Court, however, ruled against him, saying that it does not comment on the original work.
For my essay, I will highlight the discussion on satire and parody. The Court agrees that both are "valued forms of criticism" and foster more creativity protected by copyright law. However, the Court also argues that the parody or satire must comment on the original work or there would be no limitation to fair use; credit must be given to the original work. The Court does not prevent Koon's expression, but says that Koon must recognize any such exploitation requires "paying the customary price." I agree with this assesment, and wonder if satire could somehow incorporate acknowledgment of its source, could it be treated more similarly to parody, ie as applicable to the fair use clause?
tagged copyright decherney fair_use koons parody roger satire by sheribr ...and 2 other people ...on 25-NOV-08
This article is an important source bringing together the ideas we have been discussing in class about ownership, parody and the public domain. It would be a very important source in discussing and interpreting the Koons v. Rogers case in more depth in terms of the public domain, the economic factors, and the First Ammendment Act. The test for economic harm is whether the copy takes so much from the original that it "serves as a replacement for that original". A photograph of String of Puppies in a gift store of an art gallery may very well do just that. In other words people may be more incline to buy a postcard of the more famous artist, Koons' work, than from some less well-known artist, such as Rogers.
This book expresses clearly why Koons defense lost on the account of parody as fair use. It goes through the four factors of fair use and explains why it breaches the doctrine comparing String of Puppies directly with the original black and white photograph by Rogers, Puppies. It clarifies first and foremost that the copied work is not a parody of the original, as no one would have any idea of the object, Puppies photograph that Koons is parodying. Secondly, fair use is more applicable to factual than fictional work, and Roger's work is a fictional piece. The third factor, the amount and substantiality used are certainly breached, because Koons work is an almost exact copy of the black and white photograph. Fourthly, whether the copy would affect the market of the original also seemed to fail meeting fair use standards.
Most importantly it clarifies why String of Puppies is not parody, and it points out why Koons v. Rogers is such an important case in the discussion of parody and what is fair use.



