Copying (art)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In art, copying is understood to mean various forms of expression, methods and performances with which a creative act is repeated or imitated.

Definitions

For a more precise distinction one designates:

  • Replica or replica generally as a repetition
  • Recapitulation as a repetition by the hand of the artist
  • Copy or replica as a repetition of a work by another hand
  • Counterfeit as a replica, without posing as such and with fraudulent intent
  • Pastiche as a painting or other fine art work that imitates the style of a well-known master
  • Reproduction as a repetition in the original technique, if the artistic technique provides for it (printing techniques) or technique transferred by others (art print, musical recordings, etc.)

In the fine arts, one-off copies are also created by repeating one's own work in a different technique by one's own hand . B.

  • a sculptor later chisels a cast plaster sculpture in stone one-to-one or
  • a graphic artist works out an offset template from the positive slide of a pen drawing on the light table or
  • a painter uses a slide projection to trace the contours of the original as an enlarged painting.

For all visual artists (especially in the common area of drawing ) study copies based on famous models are an important part of their artistic training to this day. Since the Renaissance, collections of ancient sculptures have been created for the purposes of viewing sculpture , while some museums issue special permits for students of painting to copy works of art immediately before the originals on request.

In particular, artists repeated their famous main works, mostly at the request of clients. Eugen Bracht painted Hannibal's grave 18 times, Andy Warhol even made repetition a system.

Legal

If replicas public display or placed on the market are, are copyrights observed. If it is claimed here that this was the original subject, is that as forgery in fraudulent viewed intent.

It may also be inadmissible to make replicas indirectly from replicas and not directly from originals .

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Peter Weibel (Ed.): Art without an original. Multiple and sampling as a medium: Techno-Transformations of Art, Cologne 1999
  2. Peter Weibel (ed.): Art without unique / art without the unique. edition atelier 1985-1998, Cologne 1998 (cat. Neue Galerie, Landesmuseum Johanneum, Graz)