For a dramaturgy class project at Texas State, I used images of Tennessee 
Williams and some famous productions to illustrate info on a production of 
"Night of the Iguana". All images were identified and URLs provided. It sounds 
like your faculty member is doing a sort of mash up. I would think that if the 
original sources of the images are credited with a disclaimer about the 
contemporary changes, she would be covered.
 
Am I wrong? Anyone?
 
Christine Crowley
Dean of Learning Resources
Adjunct Faculty--Theatre
Northwest Vista College
3535 N. Ellison Dr.
San Antonio, TX 78251
210.486.4572 office
210.486.4504 fax
[email protected]
Northwest Vista College is one of the Alamo Colleges
www.alamo.edu/nvc/lrc
 
 
 

________________________________

From: [email protected] on behalf of Moshiri, Farhad
Sent: Thu 1/20/2011 4:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Videolib] Still images copyright question



Dear all,

 

One of our faculty members asked me a question that I don't know the answer. 
She is trying to put up an exhibition of montage still images. She is using 
famous photographs. But she and her students are changing the images making 
montages, etc. Her question is how much of a still image can you change before 
you need copyright holder of the image's permission to do so? Can you help me 
with this? The exhibition would be displayed to the public in an academic 
setting with no charges. Thanks.

 

Farhad Moshiri

Audiovisual Librarian

University of the Incarnate Word

San Antonio, TX

 


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