$6.75 Million Judgment in Favor of Aerosol Artists Now Final After the United States Supreme Court Refuses to Review the Case

[This Blog was originally posted on February 20, 2020 and updated on October 8, 2020,]

In a major development in the law of moral rights in the United States, the $6,750,000 judgement entered by the United States Federal District Court in Brooklyn for destruction of the aerosol art complex at 5Pointz became final on October 5, 2020 when the United States Supreme Court declined to review the case. That result left intact the decision of the United States Court of Appeals rendered seven months earlier. Without reviewing in detail the conclusions I reached in a lengthy article on the dispute published just after the trial was completed,[1] it is worth commenting on a few of the conclusions reached in the lengthy opinion written by the esteemed Judge Barrington D. Parker for the Court of Appeals and affirmed by the Supreme Court.[2]

Much of Judge Parker’s opinion reminded readers that reversing findings of fact made by a trial court is extremely difficult. In the absence of a conclusion that the facts found lacked a solid foundation, they are typically affirmed. Similarly, discretionary decisions, such as the size of a statutory damage award in copyright cases, will be left intact in the absence of an abuse of discretion by the trial court. These standard rules made it very difficult for Gerald Wolkoff, the primary developer, to gain traction on appeal. As a result, the trial court holdings were left intact. Therefore the conclusions that the aerosol art works at issue were of recognized stature under the moral right provisions of the Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. §106A), that Wolkoff acted inappropriately when he white washed the art works long before he intended to demolish the buildings for replacement with condominiums, that he acted with malice when the pieces were seriously damaged or destroyed with white wash, and that imposing the maximum award of $150,000 per work was therefore based on ample evidence of significant misbehavior were all affirmed on appeal.

Nonetheless, there are certain other fascinating conclusions reached by the court that are worth a bit of attention. First, the Circuit Court’s conclusion that the works in issue were of recognized statute under 17 U.S.C. §106A(a)(3)(B) has now become part of a growing trend to construe liberally the code’s moral right provisions protecting against destruction of works of fine art.[3] Such a conclusion is required before destruction of a work of art will be deemed a violation of the Copyright Act. Rather than requiring special evidence of widespread acceptance of the work by the cognoscenti, the court held “that a work is of recognized stature when it is one of high quality, status, or caliber that has been acknowledged as such by a relevant community.” (Emphasis added) In this case that meant that the testimony of other aerosol artists had to be taken seriously. Therefore, Jonathan Cohen, who served as the curator of the site at the request of the property owner for over twenty years, gave very important evidence about how he organized the site, ran a well-structured program to select artists allowed to paint there, and created systems for deciding when works would be covered over and replaced. As a very well-known member of the aerosol art community his testimony had substantial influence on the result. And to cap off this outcome, Judge Parker reminded us of Justice Holmes’ famous admonition that it is “a dangerous undertaking for persons trained only to the law to constitute themselves final judges of the worth of” a work of art.[4]

Second, Wolkoff vigorously argued that most of the art works at 5Pointz would exist for only a short time and that such works could not attain recognized stature. Judge Parker dismissed such a contention, noting among other things that Gates, the famous Christo installation of 7,503 metal gates with hanging orange drapes in Central Park that lasted only two weeks in February 2005, certainly was a work of recognized stature.[5]  It is not temporality, but stature in a relevant community that controls. This is a critically important recognition given the contemporary prominence of, not only street art, but a wide array of other types of work installed for short periods of time.

Third, Wolkoff also claimed that the location of the art at 5Pointz should not have been taken into account in making a determination of recognized stature. Judge Parker carefully responded by noting that location of a work may be part of its stature in an artistic community. And that location need not be a famous museum. It also might be a site widely recognized in a “relevant community” as important, or a well curated location, or simply a placement amid other important works by the same artist or others. This is an important aspect of moral right that has not previously been widely recognized. Placement among other works of the same artist or other artists is often an important element of how viewers perceive and understand the art in issue. Good artists not only care deeply about how the composition of a single painting works, but many also pay great attention to how and where the work will be displayed. Environment is often as important as the contours of work hung all by itself. Site specific works involve consideration not only the work of art but the nature of the setting in which it is placed.

In short, the 5Pointz opinion is a sophisticated essay on both the dispute itself and on the nature of much of the contemporary art scene. It is welcome evidence that some courts have found ways to open their minds to the dynamic possibilities inherent in an ever changing, intellectually challenging, and open-minded visual arts world.

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[1] Richard Chused, Moral Right: The Anti-Rebellion Graffiti Heritage of 5Pointz, 41 Colum. J. L. & Arts 583 (2018).

[2] Castillo v. G&M Realty L.P., 950 F.3d 155 (2nd Cir. Feb. 20, 2020). A report on the Supreme Court’s refusal to review the case may be found in Maria Cramer, Artists Have Final Victory in a Case of Destroyed Graffiti, The New York Times (Oct. 6. 2020), https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/06/nyregion/graffiti-artists-5pointz.html .

[3] See, e.g., Martin v. City of Indianapolis, 193 F.3d 608 (7th Cir. 1999); Carter v. Helmsley-Spear, Inc., 861 F. Supp. 303 (S.D.N.Y.1994).

[4] Bleistein v Donaldson Lithographing Co., 188 U.S. 239, 251 (1903).

[5] I made the same argument in Chused, note 1 supra, at 597.