Category Archives: Appropriation Art

Is Appropriated Art Fair? — Cecilia Edefalk — A Modern Case History.

Banksy’s sculpture ”Bad Artists Imitate…” An appropriation.

In September 2023 I wrote about the implications of photographer Lynn Goldsmith’s successful legal action against the Andy Warhol Foundation and Condé Nast over Warhol’s appropriation of her portrait of Prince. The Supreme Court ruling established a notably stricter interpretation of “transformative use” than many in the art world had anticipated. You can read that post [here].

A recent Swedish television documentary has prompted me to revisit the subject.

Jag är inte här, jag drömmer (I’m not here, I’m dreaming), broadcast on SVT on 26 April 2026, profiles Cecilia Edefalk (born 1954), one of Sweden’s most celebrated contemporary artists. It is a sympathetic portrait, following her career from when she left art school to the present day. Distinguished critics including Daniel Birnbaum — former director of Moderna Museet and one of the most respected voices in the international art world — speak warmly about the importance of her work, noting that she borrows from mass media and advertising, adding or subtracting to make something new.

Nobody asks the obvious question.

In one remarkable sequence, Edefalk holds up her source material for one of her better known paintings— a double page spread from Clic magazine, issue 3, 1988. Clic was founded by Cay Bond in 1981 as a forum for Swedish fashion design, using Swedish photographers throughout its run. The photograph shows a man applying suntan lotion to a woman’s back. Edefalk explains her modifications: she removed the suntan lotion bottle, painted the woman nude by removing her bathing costume, and changed the background colour from grey-brown to blue. The result, rendered at monumental scale in oil, which she painted in at least seven versions of varying sizes, has been exhibited internationally and commands serious prices.

The final painting with the suntan oil bottle, the woman’s bathing costume removed and the backgrund colour changed.

The photographer — almost certainly a Swedish professional working on commission for a Swedish publication — is not mentioned. Neither is the question of credit, compensation or consent. The model, painted nude without her apparent knowledge or agreement, is similarly absent from the conversation.

Edefalk has produced this and similar works in multiple identical versions of various sizes — a strategy echoing Warhol’s silkscreen series. But where Warhol’s multiples worked through the silkscreen process itself, introducing colour variations and surface irregularities that were intrinsic to the meaning, identical painted versions in different sizes raises a different question: if the work is genuinely transformative, why does it need to be reproduced identically, many times, at different scales? One might argue that the source photograph is doing most of the artistic heavy lifting.

Edefalk has also painted a series of works based on Laurel and Hardy film stills — among them “Family” (1999), now in the collection of the Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt. The source is a bedroom scene from a 1932 film, reproduced in monochrome — which, it should be noted, is also the tonality of the original black and white film still, making the nature of the “transformation” somewhat difficult to identify. In fairness to Edefalk, a 1932 film still was almost certainly in the public domain in 1999, and the legal landscape around appropriation at that time was considerably more permissive than it is today. The post-Goldsmith world asks harder questions than the art world of 1999 was inclined to. Whether MMK Frankfurt — acquiring the work in full knowledge of its source — would approach the matter differently today is an interesting question that nobody appears to be asking.

However, Edefalk’s use of copyrighted material has not been entirely unchallenged. Swedish photographers raised objections and there was press coverage of the copyright implications. She and her supporters have their answer — Birnbaum’s formulation of “borrowing to make something new” is the standard defence of appropriation art, and it is not without merit. The question is whether removing a suntan lotion bottle, undressing a model and changing a background colour constitutes making something sufficiently “new” — particularly in the light of the post-Goldsmith legal landscape.

The precedents are not encouraging for appropriation artists. Patricia Caulfield successfully sued Warhol for using her photograph of hibiscus flowers as the basis for his celebrated Flowers series. Richard Prince has faced multiple legal challenges over his appropriation of other photographers’ work, with largely unfavourable results. And the Supreme Court’s Goldsmith ruling confirmed that even an image unmistakably bearing an artist’s signature style may not clear the transformative use bar if it serves a similar commercial purpose to the original.

Against this backdrop, Elaine Sturtevant’s practice stands out as the most philosophically rigorous position in the appropriation canon. Sturtevant copied works by Warhol, Duchamp, Beuys and others — but from memory rather than directly from the originals. The inevitable drift introduced by memory made her copies meditations on the nature of the original rather than reproductions of it. She was also admirably transparent about her method. That combination of philosophical intent and acknowledged practice is rather different from simply painting from a magazine spread.

I should, in the spirit of full disclosure, acknowledge my own position in this conversation. I have made hand-painted reconstructions of unissued Warhol cover designs for a proposed Billie Holiday album — designs Warhol created in the 1950s, possibly on commission, possibly simply for his own amusement and a 50th anniversary series of his Giant Size $1.57 Each, as well as his Progressive Piano covers (ten-inch and seven-inch versions) . The immediate inspiration for the Billie Holiday cover creations was seeing one of Warhol’s original collages displayed on the wall of a Swedish museum exhibition, apparently sourced from the internet and included among genuine Warhol cover designs. My reconstructions, complete with period Columbia Records labels and liner notes signed with my Internet moniker “Rockdoc,” are explicitly labelled as such. I am also the author of forthcoming books on Banksy’s and Peter Blake’s record cover art — artists whose own relationships with appropriation, quotation and borrowed imagery are central to their practices. Thus I am not a disinterested observer.

The appropriation debate is genuinely complex and I have no wish to reduce it to simple condemnation. Borrowing, quoting, referencing and transforming are as old as art itself. But the critical establishment’s apparent incuriosity about the specifics — an unnamed Swedish photographer’s uncredited and uncompensated work, a model painted nude without apparent consent, a legal landscape that has shifted considerably since these works were made — is harder to excuse, particularly from critics who know perfectly well where these questions lead.

The suntan lotion bottle and the bathing costume, at least, had been removed. Whether what remains constitutes transformation or merely tidying up — and undressing — is left as an exercise for the reader.

Appropriational Art — To Copy or Not to Copy?

I consider myself to be a graphic designer as opposed to an artist. And as a collector of record cover art I quite often remake a rare cover or create covers for records that never existed, but for which cover art exists. Examples are my creation of covers for a proposed RCA Victor jazz album entitled Progressive Piano that was scheduled for release some time in the 1950s but, despite being allocated a catalogue number, was never actually released. The Warhol Museum has lithographs of Andy Warhol’s proposed designs for the covers of a 10-inch and a 7-inch version of the record. I created full-sized covers from photos of these lithographs and even made record labels to look like fifites RCA Victor labels.

Warhol also made collages for a projected Billie Holiday album to be called Volume 3. He made four versions and pictures have circulated on the Internet , so I decided to make actual covers and include records suggesting that the album would have been released by Columbia Records, though Warhol’s designs do not include a record label or catalogue number.

I consider these to be appropriations of Warhol’s art not dissimilar to those made by Elaine Sturtevant (1924-2014) who painted versions of Warhol’s Flower paintings — and was even given a silkscreen by Warhol to make further prints!

And then there are my paintings of posters and record sleeves.

There is a fine line between appropriation and copyright infringement. Warhol, or the Andy Warhol Foundation, was sued on at least three occasions. The first was in 1966. when Patricia Caulfield (1932-2023) sued Andy Warho for his use of her photograph of hibiscus flowers photographed in a Barbados restaurant as the basis for his series of Flowers paintings and prints. The case was settled out of court with Warhol paying Caulfield $6000 (from the sale of two Flowers paintings plus 25% of the royalties from the sale of the Flowers prints.) Warhol had, apparently, offered to licence the use of the photogeaph from the Modern Photography magazine, but was unwilling to pay the price quoted.

In 2011 the Andy Warhol Foundation intended to licence the use of Warhol’s Banana design for use for ipod and iPad ancillary products. However, the Velvet Underground threatened to sue as the band considered the design “to represent a symbol, truly an icon of the Velvet Undergound”. The matter was settled out of court with the Foundation publishing a letter stating that the matter had been resolved by a confidential settlement.

In 2021 photographer Lynn Goldsmith sued the Andy Warhol Foundation for licencing Warhol’s portrait of Prince to Condé Nast Publishers without credit to Goldsmith. She eventually won in the Supreme Court which decided that the Warhol version of her photograph was not sufficiently “transformative” to justify “fair use”, a legal term used to exempt use of copyright materal without having to pay the creator. Such use could be in reviews, criticisms or similar situations.

Other artists, ranging from the above-mentioned Sturtevant, to Jeff Koons, Richard Prince (who also lost a suit over his appropriation of five of Patrik Cariou’s photos of Rastafarians that Prince used in his 2008 exhibition Canal Zone at the Gagosian Gallery), and most recently, Eric Doeringer who makes “bootlegs” of other artists works, including Richard Prince’s! Apparently Prince has given Doeringer his blessing but Takashi Murakami was not so impressed with Doeringer’s work and issued a “stop and desist” order to prevent him from using Murakami’s work.

I have three examples of Richard Prince’s work in my collection: his 12-inch, limited edition, single sided vinyl Loud Song (with cover art by Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon), a 7-inch flexidisc of Loud Song that is included in his High Times! monograph published by Gagosian, and the limited edition, picture disc It’s a Free Concert Now. I recently saw that Eric Doeringer has made a 7-inch version of Loud Song with two of his own songs (Catherine and My Way) and made a new version of Kim Gordon’s cover art. This EP has been pressed in a limited edition of just twenty-six copies, numbered from A to Z. I got number J.

Doeringer (born 1974) has achieved serious acceptance for his art by being awarded gallery exhibitions and thus a degree of fame. I find his story encouraging and a stimulus for my own continuing appropriation of other artists’/designers’ work. Hopefully my works will be suffiently “transformative” to be considered “fair use”.

There is a lot more to be said about appropriation art. There are several artists reproducing record covers commercially that could possible fall foul of copyright law. So far, though, they do not appear to have been challenged.