Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review[Jones] offers a good introduction to the subject in a work aimed at art educators, students, gallery owners, curators, museum trustees and professional staff and professional artists themselves…. The work concludes with useful (to US readers) coverage of grants and foundations, returning to the fiduciary issues raised at the start that involve art and museum professionals and trustees. A useful work, then, with application above all in the USA. * s *
This comprehensive guide to art law serves multiple audiences from the artist to the art appraiser to the museum professional. In it, Jones provides current information on repatriation disputes along with guidance for the museum professionals tasked with the complexity of understanding ownership, copyright and other issues of intellectual property law. This book is a valuable resource for the museum community. -- Katherine Burton Jones, Director of the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, Harvard Extensions School
Here is an invaluable and compelling canvas of insights on the palette of current art law. The book offers a blue chip gallery guide and experience on the current legal labyrinth; it provides historical and contemporary factual narratives that illuminate grey areas and renders in high detail, necessary guiding principles that inform on the full spectrum of inherent challenges and change active on the surface of today’s art scene and populace. -- Patrick McCay, Chair of Fine Arts, Senior Faculty Fellow, New Hampshire Institute of Fine Arts
Michael Jones navigates art world issues of concern, not only to artists, but to collectors mindful of authenticity, museum curators mindful of thefts and forgery, and art writers mindful of copyright and reproduction constraints. Eloquently, Jones argues for the moral rights of artists that transcend the freedom of expression guaranteed by the First Amendment. -- Christopher Busa, Founder and Editorial Director of Provincetown Arts Press
Professor Michael Jones' Art Law is a superbly instructive guide book for all stakeholders in the world of fine arts, including artists, curators, museum and art teachers, cultural advisors, gallery dealers, auction houses, and art specialists. -- Susel Garcia Castellanos, Director ADAVIS and National Council of Plastic Arts, Havana, Cuba
Table of Contents1.The Professional Artist’s Life 2. Navigating the Art World: Movements, Critics and Merchants 3.Art, Artists and Museum Law 4. Acquisitions: Good Title, Theft, Forgery and Authentication 5.Who Owns the Past: Ethical and Legal Challenges of Nazi-era Art and Cultural Property 6.Buying, Selling and Consigning Art 7.Protecting Art: Copyrights and Reproduction Rights 8.Moral Rights of Artists 9.Free Expression, Privacy, Publicity and other Artist’s Rights 10. Grants, Foundations and Funding of the Arts