LEIBOVITZ
v. PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION, 137
F.3d 109 (2nd Cir. 1998)
ANNIE
LEIBOVITZ, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT, v. PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION,
DEFENDANT-APPELLEE.
No.
97-7063.
United
States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued:
October 20, 1997.
Decided:
February 19, 1998.
Tennyson
Schad, Norwick & Schad, New York, N.Y.,
for plaintiff-appellant.
Jonathan
Zavin, New York, N.Y. (Jacques M. Rimokh, Richards
& O'Neil,
New York, N.Y., on the brief), for defendant-appellee.
Appeal from
the December 20, 1996, judgement of the United
States District
Court for the Southern District of New York
(Loretta A.
Preska, Judge) dismissing, on motion for summary
judgment,
plaintiff-appellant's suit for copyright infringement.
Affirmed.
Before: NEWMAN,
CALABRESI, and CUDAHY,
Circuit Judges.
[fn*] The
Honorable Richard D. Cudahy of the United States
Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by
designation.
JON O. NEWMAN,
Circuit Judge:
[1] This appeal
concerns the fair use defense to copyright
infringement
in the context of an advertisement claimed to
be a parody
of a copyrighted photograph. Annie Leibovitz
appeals from the
December 20, 1996, judgement of the District
Court for the Southern
District of New York (Loretta A. Preska, Judge),
granting summary
judgement for defendant-appellee Paramount
Pictures Corp.
("Paramount"). Leibovitz v. Paramount Pictures
Corp., 948
F. Supp. 1214
(S.D.N.Y. 1996). Leibovitz argues that
she, not the
defendant, was entitled to summary judgment,
principally
on the ground that the defendant's use was commercial
and therefore
should receive little protection under the fair
use defense.
While we agree that the commercial nature of
Paramount's advertisement
weighs against it in the fair use balance, we
nonetheless
conclude that this advertisement qualifies as
a parody
entitled to the fair use defense under the analysis
set forth
by the Supreme Court in Campbell v. Acuff-Rose
Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569
(1994). Accordingly, we affirm.
[2] Background
[3] Leibovitz
is a well known and widely published photographer.
Among her
most recognizable works is the photograph alleged
to be infringed
in this case, the photograph of the actress
Demi Moore that
appeared on the cover of the August 1991 issue
of Vanity Fair
magazine. Moore, who was pregnant at the time,
was depicted nude,
in profile, with her right hand and arm covering
her breasts
and her left hand supporting her distended stomach
— a well
known pose evocative of Botticelli's Birth of
Venus.
A ring
adorns the middle finger of Moore's right hand.
Moore's facial
expression is serious, without a trace of a
smile. The appearance
of the photograph attracted widespread attention,
and that
issue became one of Vanity Fair's best selling
issues of all time.
[4] In August
1993, Paramount solicited advertising ideas
from an outside
advertising agency, Dazu, Inc. ("Dazu"), in
connection with
its forthcoming release of the motion picture
Naked Gun 33 1/3:
The Final Insult. This film was the third in
a series of slapstick
comedies starring the actor Leslie Nielsen as
the maladroit
detective Frank Drebin. One minor theme of the
film was a
controversy between Drebin and his wife as to
whether to conceive
a child and Drebin's subsequent treatment at
a fertility clinic.
There is no evidence, however, that Paramount
informed
Dazu of this
theme, or that Paramount planned the advertising
campaign to
relate to any aspect of the movie's plot.
[5] Paramount
asked Dazu to come up with ideas for a "teaser"
advertising
campaign, to be launched in advance of the March
1994 release
date of the film. In response, Dazu suggested
that the teasers
superimpose Nielsen's face on readily recognizable
photographs
of famous women. Dazu forwarded to Paramount
copies
of four composite
photographs, each superimposing Nielsen's face
in place of
what had been the faces of the actresses Sharon
Stone, Madonna,
Jane Fonda, and Demi Moore. Each proposed teaser
included a
slogan referring to the March release date of
the film.
The composite photograph depicting Nielsen as
the pregnant Moore
slyly proclaimed, "DUE THIS MARCH."
[6] Paramount
approved the concept, and selected the composite
of Moore's
body and Nielsen's face. However, rather than
mechanically
copying the portion of the original Leibovitz
photograph
depicting Moore's body, Paramount commissioned
another photograph
to be taken of a nude, pregnant woman, similarly
posed. Great
effort was made to ensure that the photograph
resembled
in meticulous detail the one taken by Leibovitz.
The model
was carefully posed so that her posture and
hands precisely matched
those of Moore in the Leibovitz photograph.
A large ring
was placed
on the same finger as the one appearing on Moore's
hand.The
photograph was digitally enhanced by a computer
to make
the skin tone and shape of the body more closely
match those of
Moore in the Leibovitz photograph. The final
step was to superimpose
on the model's body a photograph of Nielsen's
face, with
his jaw and eyes positioned roughly at the same
angle as Moore's,
but with her serious look replaced by Nielsen's
mischievous
smirk.
[7] Paramount
ran its teaser in a magazine ad campaign in
early 1994.
Leibovitz protested the use, and ultimately
brought this action
in District Court. On cross-motions for summary
judgment, the
District Court granted Paramount's motion, ruling
that the undisputed
facts demonstrated that Paramount was entitled
to the defense
of fair use.
[8] Discussion
[9] Leibovitz
contends that the District Court erred in granting
Paramount's
motion for summary judgement and should have
granted partial
summary judgment, as to liability, in her favor.
Both parties
agree that no factual issues remain in dispute;
they disagree
only on the availability of the fair use defense
to what appears
to be an acknowledged prima facie case of copyright
infringement.
Paramount argues that its work is a parody,
and should
be evaluated under the standards set forth in
Campbell for determining
whether parodic uses are "fair." Leibovitz responds
that even
if the advertisement is appropriately considered
a parody
of her photograph, it should fail the fair use
test because
it was employed for commercial purposes and
because it replicated
more of her original than was necessary.
[10] I. Fair
Use and Parody
[11] The fair
use doctrine "permits other people to use copyrighted
material without
the owner's consent in a reasonable manner for
certain purposes."
Rogers v. Koons, 960 F.2d 301,
308 (2d Cir. 1992).
Recognized at common law, see e.g., Folsom v.
Marsh, 9 F. Cas.
342 (C.C.D. Mass. 1841) (Story, J.), the doctrine
is now codified
in section 107 of the 1976 Copyright Act, 17
U.S.C. § 107 (1994).
Section 107 provides an illustrative list of
the purposes
for which the doctrine may be invoked, including
"comment"
and "criticism," id., as well as a now familiar
list of factors
that courts should consider in determining whether
a use is
"fair." These factors are (1) the purpose and
character of the use,
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work, (3)
the amount and substantiality
of the work used, and (4) the effect of the
use on the
market for the original. See id.
[12] Although
the statute does not specifically list "parodies"
among the
categories of potentially "fair" uses, we have
long afforded
such works some measure of protection under
this doctrine,
see, e.g., MCA, Inc. v. Wilson, 677 F.2d
180 (2d Cir.
1981); Elsmere
Music, Inc. v. National Broadcasting Co., 623
F.2d 252 (2d
Cir. 1980); Berlin v. E.C. Publications, Inc.,
329 F.2d 541 (2d
Cir. 1964), and the Supreme Court authoritatively
confirmed
the applicability of the fair use doctrine to
parodies in
Campbell, 510 U.S. at 579.
[13] II. Campbell's
Clarification of the Fair Use Defense
[14] Campbell
clarified the fair use defense in general and
its particular
application to parodies. As a general matter,
the Court
emphasized that the fair use determination "calls
for case-by-case
analysis," id. at 577, and "is not to be simplified
with bright-line
rules," id. The Court made clear that all four
of the statutory
factors "are to be explored, and the results
weighed together."
Id. at 578.
[15] Campbell
also significantly illuminated the proper application
of the first
fair use factor, the purpose and character of
the use.
The focus of this inquiry, the Court explained,
should be on whether
the copying work "merely `supersede[s] the objects'
of the
original . . ., or instead adds something new,
with a further purpose
or different character, altering the first with
new expression,
meaning, or message," id. at 579 (quoting Folsom,
9 F.
Cas. at 348) (citations omitted; brackets in
original). The Court
considered this standard appropriately captured
by Judge Leval's
helpful adjective "transformative." Id. (quoting
Pierre N.
Leval, Toward a Fair Use Standard, 103 Harv.
L. Rev. 1105, 1111
(1990)).
[16] In focusing
the first factor inquiry upon the "transformative"
nature of
the use, the Court explicitly abandoned the
statement in
Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios,
Inc., 464 U.S. 417
(1984), that "every commercial use of copyrighted
material is
presumptively . . . unfair," id. at 451. See
Campbell,
510 U.S. at 583-85. Instead, the Court recalled
its statement
in Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation
Enterprises,
471 U.S. 539
(1985), that commercial use is only "`a
separate factor
that tends to weigh against a finding of fair
use.'" Campbell,
510 U.S. at 585 (quoting Harper & Row, 471
U.S. at
562). The Court noted, however, that "the force
of that tendency
will vary with the context," id., and that the
use of a copyrighted
work to advertise a product is a context entitling
the copying
work to "less indulgence" than if it is marketed
for its
own worth, see id.
[17] The Court's
emphasis on an aggregate weighing of all four
fair use
factors represented a modification of the Court's
earlier view
that the fourth factor, effect on the potential
market for, or
value of, the original, was "the single most
important element of
fair use." Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 566,
a characterization conspicuously
absent from the Campbell opinion. See American
Geophysical
Union v. Texaco Inc., 60 F.3d 913,
926 (2d Cir. 1995).
Rather than accord the fourth factor primacy,
the Court explicitly
noted that "the importance of this factor will
vary, not
only with the amount of harm, but also with
the relative strength
of the showing on the other factors." Campbell,
510 U.S. at
590 n. 21.
[18] III.
Campbell's Clarification of the Fair Use Defense
for [19]
Parodies
[20] Focusing
particularly on the fair use protection to which
parodies are
entitled, the Court initially noted that "parody
may or
may not be fair use," id. at 581, and "like
any other use, has to
work its way through the relevant factors, and
be judged case by
case, in light of the ends of the copyright
law," id. Specifically
relating its first-factor analysis to parodies,
the Court
stated, "[T]he heart of any parodist's claim
to quote from existing
material[] is the use of some elements of a
prior author's
composition to create a new one that, at least
in part, comments
on that author's works." Id. at 580 (emphasis
added). The
comment must have some "critical bearing on
the substance or style
of the original composition." Id. The Court
cautioned that the
quality of the parody is not to be evaluated.
See id. at 582. The
relevant inquiry is "whether a parodic character
may reasonably
be perceived." Id. A permissible aspect of the
inquiry, the
Court noted, is "whether the parodic element
is slight
or great, and the copying small or extensive
in relation to
the parodic element, for a work with slight
parodic element and
extensive copying will be more likely to merely
`supersede the
objects' of the original." Id. at 582 n. 16.
Campbell deemed an
adequately parodic element present in 2 Live
Crew's parody of the
song "Oh, Pretty Woman" because the contrast
between the copying
work and the original "can be taken as a comment
on the naivete
of the original of an earlier day, as a rejection
of its sentiment
that ignores the ugliness of street life and
the debasement
that it signifies." Id. at 583.
[21] With
respect to the second factor, the nature of
the copyrighted
work, the Court observed that the fact that
the original
is a creative work "within the core of the copyright's
protective
purposes . . . is not much help in this case,
or ever likely
to help much in separating the fair use sheep
from the infringing
goats in a parody case, since parodies almost
invariably
copy publicly known, expressive works." Id.
at 586 (citations
omitted).
[22] Turning
to the third factor, the amount and substantiality
of the
portion used in relation to the copyrighted
work as a whole, the
Court acknowledged that "[p]arody presents a
difficult case," id.
at 588, because "[p]arody's humor, or in any
event its comment,
necessarily springs from recognizable allusion
to its object
through distorted imitation," id. That observation
led the Court
to make three significant points concerning
third-factor analysis.
First, consideration must be given not only
to the quantity
of the materials taken but also to "their quality
and importance"
to the original work. Id. at 587. Second, "the
parody must
be able to `conjure up' at least enough of the
original to make
the object of its critical wit recognizable."
Id. at 588 (emphasis
added). In thus departing from prior decisions
indicating
that a parody entitled to the fair use defense
could take
no more than an amount sufficient to "conjure
up" the original,
see Walt Disney Productions v. Air Pirates,
581 F.2d 751,
757-58 (9th
Cir. 1978); Columbia Pictures Corp. v. National
Broadcasting
Co., 137 F. Supp. 348,
350 (S.D. Cal. 1955); see also
Berlin v. E.C. Productions, Inc., 329
F.2d 541,
545 (2d Cir. 1964)
(no infringement where parodist copied no more
than necessary
to "conjure up" original), Campbell explicitly
cited our
use of the "at least" formulation in Elsmere
Music, 623 F.2d at
253 n. 1. See Campbell, 510 U.S. at 588. Third,
the Court explained
that "[o]nce enough has been taken to assure
identification,
how much more is reasonable will depend, say,
on the
extent to which the [copying work's] overriding
purpose and character
is to parody the original or, in contrast, the
likelihood
that the parody may serve as a market substitute
for the
original." Id.
[23] With
respect to the fourth factor, effect upon the
potential market
for or value of the original, the Court explicitly
rejected any
presumption of market harm to the original from
copying "involving
something beyond mere duplication for
commercial
purposes." Id. at 591. On the contrary, the
Court observed,
"as to parody pure and simple, it is more likely
that the
new work will not affect the market for the
original in a way cognizable
under this factor . . . because the parody and
the original
usually serve different market functions." Id.
(citations
omitted). The Court also noted that harm to
the original
resulting from the "lethal" nature of the parody
is not "a
harm cognizable under the Copyright Act." Id.
at 591-92. Finally,
the Court recognized that even though a parody
might not inflict
cognizable market harm by its adverse comment
on the original,
such harm might arise if the parody serves as
a market substitute
for a derivative work based on the original.
See id. 592-94.
[24] IV. Application
of Campbell to Paramount's Advertisement
[25] A. First
factor. Applying Campbell to the first-factor
analysis,
we inquire whether Paramount's advertisement
"may reasonably
be perceived," id. at 582, as a new work that
"at least
in part, comments on" Leibovitz's photograph,
id. at 580. Plainly,
the ad adds something new and qualifies as a
"transformative"
work. Whether it "comments" on the original
is a somewhat
closer question. Because the smirking face of
Nielsen contrasts
so strikingly with the serious expression on
the face of
Moore, the ad may reasonably be perceived as
commenting on the seriousness,
even the pretentiousness, of the original. The
contrast achieves
the effect of ridicule that the Court
recognized
in Campbell would serve as a sufficient "comment"
to tip
the first factor in a parodist's favor. See
id. at 583 ("It is
this joinder of reference and ridicule that
marks off the author's
choice of parody from the other types of comment
and criticism
that traditionally have had a claim to fair
use protection
as transformative works.") (footnote omitted).
[26] In saying
this, however, we have some concern about the
ease with
which every purported parodist could win on
the first factor simply
by pointing out some feature that contrasts
with the original.
Being different from an original does not inevitably
"comment"
on the original. Nevertheless, the ad is not
merely different;
it differs in a way that may reasonably be perceived
as commenting,
through ridicule, on what a viewer might
reasonably
think is the undue self-importance conveyed
by the subject
of the Leibovitz photograph. A photographer
posing a well known
actress in a manner that calls to mind a well
known painting
must expect, or at least tolerate, a parodist's
deflating
ridicule.
[27] Apart
from ridiculing pretentiousness, the ad might
also be reasonably
perceived as interpreting the Leibovitz photograph
to extol
the beauty of the pregnant female body,
and, rather unchivalrously,
to express disagreement with this message. The
District Court
thought such a comment was reasonably to be
perceived
from the contrast between "a serious portrayal
of a beautiful
woman taking great pride in the majesty of her
pregnant body
. . . [and] a ridiculous image of a smirking,
foolish-looking
pregnant man." Leibovitz, 948 F. Supp. at 1222.
[28] The fact
that the ad makes a parodic comment on the original
does not end
the first-factor analysis, however, because
the ad was
created and displayed to promote a commercial
product, the film.
This advertising use lessens the "indulgence"
to which the parodic
ad is entitled, see Campbell, 510 U.S. at 585.
Paramount seeks
to mitigate the negative force of the advertising
purpose by
arguing that the advertisement should be viewed
as an extension
of the film, rather than merely an advertisement
for it.
Paramount emphasizes the general jocular nature
of the film, as
well as the film's specific humorous treatment
of pregnancy and
parenthood.
[29] Though
the advertising purpose of a parodic copying
should not be
entirely discounted simply because the ad promotes
a humorous work,
there is some slight force to Paramount's argument.
For those
who see the movie, the parodic comment of the
ad might reasonably
be perceived as reinforced by the kidding comments
of the
movie concerning pregnancy and parenthood.
[30] On balance,
the strong parodic nature of the ad tips the
first factor
significantly toward fair use, even after making
some discount
for the fact that it promotes a commercial product.
"[L]ess indulgence,"
id. at 585, does not mean no indulgence at
all. This
is not a case like Steinberg v. Columbia Pictures
Industries,
Inc., 663 F. Supp. 706
(S.D.N.Y. 1987), where a copyrighted
drawing was appropriated solely to advertise
a movie, without
any pretense of making a comment upon the original,
see id.
at 715.
[31] B. Second
Factor. Though Paramount concedes the obvious
point that
Leibovitz's photograph exhibited significant
creative expression,
Campbell instructs that the creative nature
of an original
will normally not provide much help in determining
whether a
parody of the original is fair use. Campbell,
510 U.S. at
586. The second factor therefore favors Leibovitz,
but the weight
attributed to it in this case is slight.
[32] C. Third
Factor. In assessing the amount and substantiality
of the
portion used, we must focus only on the protected
elements of the
original. Leibovitz is entitled to no protection
for the appearance
in her photograph of the body of a nude, pregnant
female. Only
the photographer's particular expression of
such a body
is entitled to protection. Thus, to whatever
extent Leibovitz
is contending that the ad takes the "heart"
of the original,
see Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 564-66, she
must limit her
contention to the particular way the body of
Moore is portrayed,
rather than the fact that the ad copies the
appearance of
a nude, pregnant body. Moreover, in the context
of parodies, "the
heart is also what most readily conjures up
the [original] for
parody, and it is the heart at which parody
takes aim," Campbell,
510 U.S. at 588. Thus, the third-factor inquiry
in the parody
context concerns "what else the parodist did
besides go to the
heart of the original." Id. at 589 (emphasis
added).
[33] Paramount
went to great lengths to have its ad copy protectable
aspects of
the Leibovitz photograph. Even though the basic
pose of
a nude, pregnant body and the position of the
hands, if ever protectable,
were placed into the public domain by painters
and sculptors
long before Botticelli,
Leibovitz is entitled to protection
for such artistic elements as the particular
lighting, the
resulting skin tone of the subject, and the
camera angle that she
selected. See Rogers, 960 F.2d at 307 ("Elements
of originality
in a photograph may include posing the subjects,
lighting,
angle, selection of film and camera, evoking
the desired
expression, and almost any other variant involved.");
Gentieu v.
John Muller & Co., 712 F. Supp. 740,
742 (W.D. Mo. 1989)
(protectable elements include "photographer's
selection of background,
lights, shading, positioning and timing").
[34] The copying
of these elements, carried out to an extreme
degree by
the technique of digital computer enhancement,
took more of the
Leibovitz photograph than was minimally necessary
to conjure it
up, but Campbell instructs that a parodist's
copying of more of
an original than is necessary to conjure it
up will not necessarily
tip the third factor against fair use. Campbell,
510 U.S.
at 588. On the contrary, "[o]nce enough has
been taken to assure
identification," id., as plainly occurred here,
the reasonableness
of taking additional aspects of the original
depends on
the extent to which the "overriding purpose
and character"
of the copy "is to parody the original," id.,
and "the likelihood
that the parody may serve as a market substitute
for the
original," id. That approach leaves the third
factor with little,
if any, weight against fair use so long as the
first and fourth
factors favor the parodist. Since those factors
favor fair use
in this case, the third factor does not help
Leibovitz, even though
the degree of copying of protectable elements
was extensive.
[35] D. Market
effects.
[36] Leibovitz
all but concedes that the Paramount photograph
did not
interfere with any potential market for her
photograph or for derivative
works based upon it.
She appears to have conceded as
much in her deposition testimony, as well. See
Joint Appendix at
35.
Her only argument for actual market harm is
that the defendant
has deprived her of a licensing fee by using
the work as
an advertisement. See Brief for Plaintiff-Appellant
at 44. But she
is not entitled to a licensing fee for a work
that otherwise qualifies
for the fair use defense as a parody. See Campbell,
510 U.S.
at 592. The fourth factor favors the defendant.
[37] E. Aggregate
assessment. The aggregate assessment necessary
for an
ultimate decision might be difficult in some
cases if the relevant
factors weighed heavily on opposite sides of
the balance.
However, in light of Campbell, with its significant
depreciation
of the second factor where parodies commenting
on an original
are concerned, we are satisfied that the balance
here markedly
favors the defendant. Moreover, we are aware
of no "generalized
equitable considerations" beyond the four statutory
factors, see
American Geophysical Union, 60 F.3d at 931,
that are relevant
to this dispute.
[38] Conclusion
[39] For these
reasons, we affirm the judgement of the District
Court.
[fn1] The
pose of a nude female with one arm sometimes
fully or partially
covering the breasts and the other arm covering
the pubic
area is known in classical art as "Venus Pudica."
See James Hall,
Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art 318-19
(1974). "The
first and greatest artistic embodiment of the
Venus Pudica was
the Aphrodite of Knidos (Cnidus) by Praxiteles.
After nearly a
thousand years in disuse, the pose reappeared
in the late Middle
Ages, in classicizing imitation — first
in the figure of Eve
after the Fall, and later in female allegorical
figures and depictions
of Venus. Since from the 12th through the 15th
century the
pose was understood merely as a gesture of modesty,
it was used
also for the figure of Adam after the Fall."
Eugenio Battisti,
Visualization and Representation of the Figure,
in VII Encyclopedia
of World Art 665, 669 (1963). An example of
the Venus
Pudica pose assumed by both a male and a female
figure is Van
Eyck's diptych of Adam and Eve in the Ghent
Cathedral. See Edwin
Mullins, The Painted Witch — Female Body:
Male Art 29 (1985).
Hall translates
"Venus Pudica" as "Venus of Modesty," Hall,
supra, at
319, although the more literal translation of
the noun and
adjective would be "modest Venus." Mullins contends
that Van Eyck's
figure of Eve feels guilty about being pregnant,
see Mullins,
supra, at 29, justifying an alternate meaning
of "pudica"
as "ashamed." The phrase is sometimes rendered
"Venus Pudens"
using the present participle to mean either
"being modest"
or "being ashamed."
In Botticelli's
version, displayed in the Uffizi Gallery,
Venus, having
just been born, is presumably not pregnant,
although her
stomach is slightly distended. In Van Eyck's
diptych of
Adam and Eve, Eve is said to be pregnant. See
id.
[fn2] The
ring in the Leibovitz photograph shows a craftsmanship
and sparkle
that make it appear elegant. The ring in the
Paramount
photograph sports what seems to be a large piece
of glass
in place of a jewel, for an effect that appears
deliberately
to fall short of elegance.
[fn3] Some
have suggested that copyright law should accord
fair use
protection to parodies only when they offer
commentary that is
disparaging of the original. See Richard Posner,
When is Parody
Fair Use?, 21 J. Leg. Stud. 67, 71, 73-75 (1992);
Wendy J. Gordon,
Fair Use as Market Failure: A Structural and
Economic Analysis
of the Betamax Case and its Predecessors, 82
Colum. L. Rev.
1600, 1632-35 (1982). This theory begins with
the proposition
that creators of derivative works generally
must receive
permission — and pay a licensing fee —
in order to use the
original work. According to these theorists,
parody deserves protection
precisely because makers of an original work
will be unwilling
to license derivative uses that damage the public
reputation
of originals through negative criticism. Because
the
social good
is served by increasing the supply of criticism
—and thus,
potentially, of truth — creators of original
works cannot be
given the power to block the dissemination of
critical derivative
works.
While we
agree that the fair use defense can play a valuable
role in allowing
commentary with criticizing messages to see
the light
of day, the fair use doctrine is broad enough
to protect even
those commentaries that are not so damaging
that the original
author would refuse to license them for a fee.
A parodist
need not demonstrate that the copyright owner
would prohibit
the use in order to qualify the copy as fair
use under Campbell.
[fn4] Although
Leibovitz declined at her deposition to identify
a single
message that her photograph conveyed, she acknowledged
that among
them was Moore's "self-confidence or feeling
of pride in
being beautiful and pregnant." Joint Appendix
at 30.
[fn5] See
note 1, supra. A very early example of the sculpted
figure of
a nude, pregnant female is "`Venus' of Willendorf"
in the
Naturhistoriches Museum, Vienna, dated circa
25,000-20,000 B.C.
See Anthony F. Janson, History of Art 52 (5th
ed. 1995). A contemporary
example of the profile of a sculpted nude, pregnant
female with
her hands supporting her distended stomach is
Isabel McIlvain's
1981 "Venus" in the Robert Schoelkopf Gallery,
New York
City. See Barry Nemett, images objects and ideas
— Viewing the
Visual Arts 8 (1992).
[fn6] In Campbell,
the fact that the song parody of "Oh, Pretty
Woman" was
in the genre of rap music precluded a grant
of summary judgement
for the defendant, in the absence of any evidence
of the
likely effect of the parody on the market for
a nonparody rap version
of the song. See Campbell, 510 U.S. at 593-94.
In this case,
Leibovitz has not identified any market for
a derivative work
that might be harmed by the Paramount ad. In
these circumstances,
the defendant had no obligation to present
evidence showing
lack of harm in a market for derivative
works.
[fn7] Unlike
her arguments to this Court, Leibovitz seemed
preoccupied
in her deposition testimony with the effect
that the parody
could have on her "special relationships" with
the celebrities
whom she has made a living photographing. See
Joint Appendix
at 28, 32-33. But like market harm caused by
a negative book
review, see Campbell, 510 U.S. at 591-92; Fisher
v. Dees, 794 F.2d 432,
437-38 (9th Cir. 1986), any lost revenue Leibovitz
might experience
due to celebrities' reluctance to be
photographed
for fear of enduring parodies is not cognizable
harm under
the fourth fair use factor. The possibility
of criticism or comment
— whether or not parodic — is a
risk artists and their subjects
must accept.
|