NEGATIVLAND'S TENETS OF FREE APPROPRIATION:
FREE APPROPRIATION IS INEVITABLE when a population bombarded with electronic
media meets the hardware that encourages them to capture it.
AS ARTISTS, our work involves displacing and displaying bites of publicly
available, publicly influential material because it peppers our personal
environment and affects our consciousness. In our society, the media which
surrounds us is as available, and as valid a subject for art, as nature
itself.
AS ARTISTS, the economic prohibition of clearance fees and the operational
prohibition of not being able to obtain permission when our new context is
unflattering to our samples should not diminish our ability to reference and
reflect the media world around us.
OUR APPROPRIATIONS are multiple, transformative, and fragmentary in nature;
they do not include whole works.
OUR WORK is an authentic and original "whole" being as much more than the
sum
of it's samples. This is not a form of "bootlegging", "piracy" or
"counterfeiting" intending to profit from the commercial potential of the
subjects appropriated. The law must come to terms with distinguishing the
difference between economic intent and artistic intent.
THERE IS NO DEMONSTRABLE NEGATIVE effect on the market value of the original
works from which we appropriate. or the cultural status or incomes of the
artists who made the original works. Referencing a work in a fragmentary way
is at least as likely to have a positive effect on these areas of concern.
(RAP/HIP HOP sampling played a big part in the renewal of James Brown's
career,
and he has sued them for it!)
THE URGE TO MAKE one thing out of other things is an entirely traditional,
socially healthy, and artistically valid impulse which has only recently
been
criminalized in order to force private tolls on the practice (or prohibit it
to escape embarrassment). These now all-encompassing private locks on mass
media have led to a mass culture that is almost completely "professional",
formalized and practically immune to any form of bottom-up, direct-reference
criticism it doesn't approve of.
THE COURTS' often-espoused principle that "if it's done for profit, it can't
be fair use", represents a thoughtless and carelessly misguided prejudice
against the struggle of new art to survive. Making media - any media - is
expensive. It requires substantial up front investments in time and
manufactured goods to create, duplicate, and distribute anything. The
courts'
easy reliance on a not-for-profit standard for fair use ignores the reality
that
artists, no matter what they choose to do, need to support themselves and
their work with a return on their investment just like everyone else. The
currently applied 'nonprofit' standard simple assures that only the
independently wealthy may dabble in fair use. If society values the
challenging and reforming aspects of critical, fair use works that bubble up
from independent grassroots thinking, the law should not condone the
smothering of such works by disallowing their economic survival in our free
marketplace.
WE BELIEVE that artistic freedom for all is more important to the health of
society than the supplemental and extraneous incomes derived from private
copyright tariffs which create a cultural climate of art control and Art
Police. No matter how valid the original intent of our copyright laws may
have been, they are now clearly being subverted when they are used to censor
resented works, to suppress the public need to reuse and reshape
information.
and to garner purely opportunistic incomes from any public use of previously
released cultural material which is, in fact, already publicly available to
everyone. the U.S. Constitution clearly shows that the original intent of
copyright law was to promote a public good, not a private one. No one should
be allowed to claim private control over the creative process itself. This
struggle is essentially one of art against business, and ultimately about
which one must make way for the other.