First we thought that the below item had solved the mystery of the source of Shepard Fairey’s image of President Barack Obama that became an icon and is now in the permanent collection of the National Portrait Gallery.
"Blogger Michael Cramer created the composite photo above after sifting through countless images to find a match. The poster has Obama facing the opposite direction; Cramer flipped it to correspond with the original source photo."Read the Reuter story here.
However Philadelphia Inquirer photographer and blogger Tom Gralish then found another potential source discovered by Steve Simula here!
And in the comments section of Simula's Flickr page, Cramer writes "You definitely found the right one. My match was close, but you got it spot on. Congrats."
Good detective work by Simula.
It gets better; after Simula identified the photograph (it was reproduced in this blog without any references so no one knew who the photographer was), the Inky's Tom Gralish began diggging around and he found that the original photograph was "made by freelance photographer Mannie Garcia who was on assignment for the AP in April of 2006." Details here.
Good detective work by Gralish.
Mannie Garcia is a DC-based photographer!
So Mannie Garcia is the uncredited source for Fairey’s artwork now at the NPG.
I think that Mannie's photograph should accompany the artwork and that the NPG should exhibit them side by side.
And thus I hereby call for the National Portrait Gallery to acquire the original Mannie Garcia photograph.
And kudos to Gralish and Simula.
Update: Brian Sherwin, Senior Editor at MyArtSpace.co Blog has some words on how this whole issue relates to copyright and Orphan Works Legislation.
Update 2: Mannie Garcia writes in his website: "The Danziger Gallery which represents the artistic works of Mr. Fairey contacted me on the 21st of January 2009 to inform me that my photograph was in fact the basis for the artwork that has become better known now as the “HOPE” and “PROGRESS” posters"
awesome! any word from Shepard yet? yes! put up the photo in the portrait gallery... awesome.
ReplyDeleteAnd the wall text should describe the work that Simula and Gralish performed to identify the original photographic source.
ReplyDeleteHey u can read my post on Movie Slumdog Millionaire. As u know this movie has already won 4 Golden Global awards and now yesterday nominated for 10 Oscar. WOW....
ReplyDeleteThe wall text should definately mention that Garcia was the source for the image, and the Portrait Gallery should also have a copy of the photograph in its collection - if anything for historical purposes.
ReplyDeleteWilliam
just for fun and comparison - an article about another artist being sued by a photographer for copyright infringement. i hope more photographers start cracking down on the current wave of "graphic artists" who make a practice of stealing images....
ReplyDeletehttp://www.pdnonline.com/pdn/content_display/photo-news/legal-news/e3i4b1f65d434686899618ddbc98d9fcf83?imw=Y
Here is a great expose' on what and where Sheppard Fairey has copied from (with pics of sources and his copies):
ReplyDeletehttp://www.art-for-a-change.com/Obey/index.htm
I've seen his shirts at Nordstroms, LOMA!!!
This all has an easy solution and it's all up to the Portrait Gallery. If it's history that they are after then Garcia is now part of that history.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.supertouchart.com/2009/02/02/editorial-the-medium-is-the-message-shepard-fairey-and-the-art-of-appropriation/ Just found this link today, a very interesting read.
ReplyDeleteSuperTouch has it wrong. Read the response to it below and see how very little Shepard Fairey and Jaime O'Shea know about copyright and fair use.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/02/jamie-oshea-obeys-shepard-fairey-by.html