Is a Studio Assistant Entitled to Get Some Kind of Credit for Their Boss's Art? + Other Artists' Rights Questions, Answered | Artnet News

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Is a studio assistant entitled to get some kind of credit for their boss’s art? + Other artists’ rights questions, answered:

Artists work in Jeff Koons' private studio, 2010 in New York City. Photo by Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images.

This is a time-honored question that far predates the studio practices of Serra, an ARS member, and his contemporaries. You may have noticed that over the past few years, an increasing number of Renaissance works at the Metropolitan Museum of Artno longer merely list the artist’s name, but instead elaborate “Workshop of Andrea del Verrocchio” or “School of Paolo Veronese.” Such changes are reflective of shifting perspectives on authorship and accreditation.

and their artwork. The viewing public may not realize this, even if Warhol’s studio was literally called the Factory. Consider, at which 60 employees clock in daily with computerized timecards and attend to the whole artistic process, from conceptualization to design and production.

 

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Produce your own work for credit.. otherwise no entitlement.

In re: that passage about Renaissance works at the Met and 'schools' and 'workshops.' To be respectful, you have no idea what you're talking about.

Interesting discussion!

smart and insightful, thank you for sharing

Depends upon the contribution.

Art is about the idea.

no.

Everyone involved should get some kind of credit

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