Phillips Has Left Vara Little Protection for Site-Specific Artists
Journal of Intellectual Property Law
Volume 16
Issue 2 Symposium - James Bessen and Michael J.
Meurer's Patent Failure: How Judges, Bureaucrats, and
Lawyers Put Innovations at Risk
Article 4
March 2009
Phillips Has Left Vara Little Protection for SiteSpecific Artists
Lauren Ruth Spotts
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Recommended Citation
Lauren R. Spotts, Phillips Has Left Vara Little Protection for Site-Specific Artists, 16 J. Intell. Prop. L. 297 (2009).
Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/jipl/vol16/iss2/4
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Spotts: Phillips Has Left Vara Little Protection for Site-Specific Artist
PHILLIPS HAS LEFT VARA LITTLE PROTECTION
FOR SITE-SPECIFIC ARTISTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I.
INTRODUCTION
Ii.
BACKGROUND ..............................................
A. SITE-SPECIFIC ART .......................................
1. Defining Characterisics ......................
2. Development ..............................
3. Thematic Elements ..........................
4. Competing Interests .........................
a. Interests of the Artist .....................
b. Interests ofthe Private Owner ...............
c. Interests of the Public .....................
d. Balancing the Interests .....................
B. VISUAL ARTISTS RIGHTS ACT OF 1990 ............
1. HistoricalBackground .......................
2. Works Covered ............................
3. Rights Conferred ...........................
4. Excqotions ...............................
C. PHILLIPS V. PEMBROKE REAL ESTATE, INC.......
1. Background ...............................
2. DistrictCourt .............................
a. Arguments ofArtist David Philips ...........
b. A naysis ..............................
3. Circuit Court ..............................
a. Arguments ofArlist David Phillips ...........
b. A nalysis ..............................
4. Commentary and Reaction ....................
5. Impact and Significance .......................
III.
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AN ALYSIS ........................................
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A. FINDING OF SITE-SPECIFICITY SUFFICIENT FOR
VARA EXCLUSION
..............................
B. MORAL RIGHTS PROTECTION FOR SITE-SPECIFIC ART..
C. A LEGISLATIVE FIX: ADOPTING SARA (SITE-SPECIFIC
ARTISTS RIGHTS ACT) ............................
IV .
CONCLUSION ..............................................
297
Published by Digital Commons @ Georgia Law, 2009
1
Journal of Intellectual Property Law, Vol. 16, Iss. 2 [2009], Art. 4
J. IlVTELL PROP. LV
[Vol. 16:297
Art is under no categorical imperative to correspond point by point
to the underlying tendencies of its age. Artists will do whatever they
can get away with, and what they can get away with is not to be
determined beforehand.'
-Clement Greenberg
I. INTRODUCTION
Artists pride themselves on coloring outside the lines. Throughout history, art
has progressively evolved from one movement to the next by artists taking
chances and breaking rules. In the past century, artists have exhibited this rulebreaking behavior by experimenting with ways to remove art from its traditional
forms and locations in unexpected ways.2 Site-specific art is one such product of
these pioneering artists. Unlike artists who create traditional paintings or
sculptures that stand alone and apart from their surroundings, site-specific artists
incorporate their own unique creation into the surrounding location so as to create
one complete work of art.3
Even as artists continue to find new ways to break the traditional rules of art,
those in the artistic community desire more legislative rules that would offer
greater protection for artists and their works.4 While Congress chose to exercise
its grant of constitutional authority to promote the useful arts by creating some
economic protection for artists under the Copyright Act of 1976, 5 Congress
declined to grant moral rights, such as the rights of integrity and attribution for
works of art.6 Eventually, after some hesitation, Congress passed the Visual
Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA) to specifically grant artists these moral rights
of attribution and integrity to their works of visual art.7
1 Clement Greenberg, AbstractArt, NATION, Apr. 15, 1944, at 450.
2 See FRED S. KLEINER ET AL., GARDNER's ART THROUGH THE AGES 1099 (1 1th ed. 2001)
(discussing site-specific art with pop and surrealism because "these artists insisted on moving art
out of the rarefied atmosphere of museums and galleries and into the public sphere").
' See id. at 1099-1103 (examining several well-known examples of site-specific and
environmental artworks).
' See Phillips v. Pembroke Real Estate, Inc., 459 F.3d 128 (1st Cir. 2006) (detailing arguments
by sculptor for protection of site-specific art under state and federal legislation); Kelley v. Chicago
Park District, No. 04-C-07715, 2008 WL 4449886, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 29, 2008) (discussing an
artist who argues that his nontraditional works of art should be granted moral rights protection from
destruction or removal).
5 17 U.S.C. §§ 101-810 (2000).
6 SeeJeff C. Schneider, Recent# EnactedFederalLegslation ProvidingMoralRights to VisualArtists:
A CricalAna.sis,43 FLA. L. REv. 101, 102-03 (1991) (observing that traditionally the American
legal system only allowed artists to retain the right to exploit the economic value of their work).
7 See Joseph Zuber, The VisualArtists RightsAct of 1990-What It Does, and What It Preempts, 23
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Spotts: Phillips Has Left Vara Little Protection for Site-Specific Artist
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PHILLIPS HAS LEFT VARA LiT7LE PROTECTION
299
While VARA seems to grant moral rights protection for all visual artists, recent
court decisions have made clear that site-specific art is not protected by this
statute.' In determining why site-specific art is being treated separately and
differently from other works of visual art, one should look to the competing
interests of the owner of the private property on which the art sits and of the
public that are unique to this form of visual art. Implied in t (...truncated)