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Date: | Wed, 5 Apr 2006 16:25:26 -0500 |
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Any way of looking at this would be to compare it to using the interior of
the museum as a movie set and making the decision using those criteria.
janice
Janice Klein
Director, Mitchell Museum of the American Indian
[log in to unmask]
www.mitchellmuseum.org
-----Original Message-----
From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of Lonn Taylor
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 4:20 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Real World Problem Assistance
One way to approach this problem is to ask yourself this question: is
the photographer's request consistent with the purposes of the
museum? Does publishing a blurred photograph of a gallery in order to
illustrate a work of fiction further the museum's educational
mission? I suspect that the answer to the question would be negative,
and then you need to probe no farther; the other questions are
irrelevant.
Lonn Taylor
Fort Davis, Texas
On Apr 5, 2006, at 2:23 PM, =?windows-1252?Q?Nicole_Moore?= wrote:
> To add more information to the problem I orginally posted
> I am looking at a real world problem where I need to come up with a
> solution to a photographer wanting to take pictures inside the
> gallery of=
>
> a fictional museum for a magazine article. The objects would be
> blurred =
>
> and the museum would be credited for their gallery.
> Questions arising from this (that I hope to base my research on) are:
> 1. Have other museums allowed this?
> 2. Are the objects in the gallery part of the museum's permanent
> collection?
> 3. If the items are blurred and not easily identified, will there
> be a =
>
> need to obtain photo copyrights from the artist.
>
>
> If there is anyone who has dealt with a similar situation or knows
> where =
> I
> can find sources on it, I would greatly appreciate it
>
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