In the Sistine Chapel, there is a permanently employed guard whose sole 
function seems to
be to intone "No photo" in a deep but flat tone every time a visitor ignores 
the "No
photography" signs - usually with a P&S and its peanut flash.  We were in there 
for maybe
half-an-hour and there would have been several dozen iterations of the call!

John Coyle
Brisbane, Australia




-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D. 
Glenn Arthur
Jr.
Sent: Thursday, 26 July 2012 3:19 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: The real reasons why flash use is banned in galleries

I've been to at least one museum where they were pretty upfront about the 
copyright
motive:  photography was permitted but you had to promise not to publish the 
photos you
took (and not block anybody else's path with your tripod).  I don't recall 
whether flash
was permitted or not.

In the Smithsonian, restrictions on photography vary from one exhibit to the 
next (again,
I don't recall off the top of my head whether flash is allowed).  As far as I 
could tell,
you could take pictures of their permanent exhibits, but some travelling 
exhibits owned by
other organizations disallowed photography altogether.  (And they were both 
vigilant and
polite about enforcing that -- the guard barely seemed to take notice of my 
*istD when I
walked in, but as soon as somebody else lifted their point-and-shoot to aim it, 
the guard
was right there reminding them that wasn't allowed in that particular exhibit.)

OTOH, I've been to museums where they claimed that their reason for prohibiting
photography was that even _available_light_ photography somehow damaged 
pigments!  Hmph!

                                        -- Glenn

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