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E-grāmata: Posthumous Art, Law and the Art Market: The Afterlife of Art

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This book takes an interdisciplinary, transnational and cross-cultural approach to reflect on, critically examine and challenge the surprisingly robust practice of making art after death in an artist's name, through the lenses of scholars from the fields of art history, economics and law, as well as practicing artists.

Works of art conceived as multiples, such as sculptures, etchings, prints, photographs and conceptual art, can be—and often are—remade from original models and plans long after the artist has passed. Recent sales have suggested a growing market embrace of posthumous works, contemporaneous with questioning on the part of art history. Legal norms seem unready for this surge in posthumous production and are beset by conflict across jurisdictions. Non-Western approaches to posthumous art, from Chinese emulations of non-living artists to Native American performances, take into account rituals of generational passage at odds with contemporary, market-driven approaches.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, the art market, art law, art management, museum studies and economics.



This book takes an interdisciplinary, transnational and cross-cultural approach to reflect on, critically examine, and challenge the surprisingly robust practice of making art after death in an artist's name, through the lenses of scholars from the fields of art history, economics and law, as well as practicing artists.

Introduction Part One: Stage Setting
1. Posthumous Casts in the
Twentieth Century: An Overview of the Wide Range of Situations
2. The
Challenges of Posthumous Moral Rights
3. Posthumous Editions: Does the Market
Value the Presence of the Artist? Part Two: Intentions and
(Mis)understandings
4. Behind the Scenes: Legitimation and Marketing
Strategies of Brancusis Posthumous Bronze Casts
5. Dead-Hand Guidance: A
Preferable Testamentary Approach for Artists
6. Collaborations in Absentia:
An Artists/Founders View of the Posthumous Cast Part Three: Museum
Stewardship
7. Condition Issues
8. The Cost of Decommissioning
9. Patterns on
Mayas Veil: The Distinction Between Lifetime and Posthumous Casts as
Fetish Part Four: Unruly Afterlives
10. Forged of Paper: The Busy Afterlives
of Xuande Incense Burners
11. Unique Forms & Different Versions: Cataloging
Boccionis Sculptures
12. Medardo Rossos The Emperor Vitellius: An Artists
Posthumous Copy (of a Copy) of an (Unknown) Original
13. AI, IP, and Artistic
Legacies
14. An Economic Strategy to Exploit the Rent of Notoriety in an
Emblematic Case Study: Franēois Pompon Part Five: Continuity and Community
15. Reproductions of Michelangelo Buonarrotis Vatican Pietą as Experiential
Mediators
16. Lineages and the Posthumous Lives of Chinese Paintings
17.
Indigeneity and the Posthumous Condition Epilogue. Personal Reflections on
NFTs & the Death of Art
Sharon Hecker is an independent art historian and curator specializing in modern and contemporary Italian sculpture.

Peter J. Karol is Professor of Law at New England Law | Boston, where he is also Director of the schools Intellectual Property Law Certificate Program.