Wednesday, September 25, 2024

To Steal A Mockingbird


I accidentally wrote my most engaged-with Thread a couple of days ago, when I posted that I’d found another little collection of infringements on Etsy and Redbubble:

(there was a picture of the nasty product with it which I don’t want to post. It was fugly.)
ugh.
more ugh.
In a scene from ‘Beautiful Creatures’, a film adaptation of Kami Garcia’s novel
Best thing to do, I always think, is to keep creating — which *I* can do, whereas they can’t — because presumably, if they could, they would. Even if you can’t or won’t get the pencils out and you’re determined to open an Etsy or Redbubble shop selling stuff with pictures on you can fire up Midjourney/Stable Diff/Firefly and chuck a few words in.


This is by no means a rare occurrence. I find them regularly, when I can be bothered to look, and if someone sees one and alerts me to it. But find them I do, and many of them — in the last handful of years alone, I have found around 70, and those are just the ones I’ve known about. I don’t even know if I have the stomach to look in the cesspits of hyper-shite, Temu and Wish, to see what might be festering away over there. (OK I just went and looked — filed one report, couldn’t see any more).


Etsy has a much-improved system for reporting sellers (Redbubble’s is more hoop-jumpy — I always feel like they’re rolling their eyes while I’m filling the form in) but I prefer in the first instance to contact the seller directly, tell (not ask) them to delete the listing and all listings which use that image, the take them to school on why using other people’s artwork is copyright violation etc. I did once secure the profits from the sales of a product that had sold in great quantities, with those sales numbers shown clearly in her shop; I didn’t enjoy how scared she sounded, but I couldn’t let it go either. I donated the money. I have also been asked to ‘prove’ I’m the creator of certain works —for which I’ll unleash the kraken. But rarely do I have to engage full combat mode; depending on their attitude and promptness of action, I usually leave it there, making sure I follow their shop first to keep an eye on any future ‘borrowings’.


Usually, people are all shades of awkward at being caught out, then apologise. I sometimes get The Bare Minimum, however:
But it was my update a bit later, following up on progress, that really got Threaders furious. People were mad about the original infringement — I get it, there are a lot of us artists on there professional and non-professional alike, and we all hate a picture thief — but this post had people roaring:


You see, aside from the puzzle that they’d used a sketchbook version of my cover which had never been made public — not beyond a lo-res jpeg in a classic old blog posted 15 years ago — my infringer had told me they’d asked the author for permission to use the artwork. And that author? Harper Lee.


Obviously, we could discuss all day why that’s funny/sad/infuriating/embarrassing for her — and some people were RAGING, and also baffled when I told them I felt a bit of sympathy for the infringer, the nuanced reasons for that proving harder to articulate than I’d imagined. And we can also unpack quickly that obviously, it’s the artist’s permission she should be asking, not the author’s, and that that artist is me. I get it.


But the huge engagement got me thinking. I created the cover for that book for Grand Central Publishing in 2009, in a quiet, nervous, ecstatic period of focussed excitement. That’s 15 years ago. The book was the 50th Anniversary mass-market edition — which is a big deal, because not only does it mean it gets gold foil on the front, it means it goes into every school, college, library, university and book shop. It couldn’t be a bigger print run.
And as such, it appeared in films, documentaries, essays, theses, dissertations, fan art, you name it. The novel itself is universally known, land loved, and part of the very texture of human culture and writing. As such, so is the artwork on the front. Although it’s mine, it stopped being ‘mine’ when the book first went out into the world, and became part of the canon of the handful of iconic covers that were created for this book in Harper’s lifetime.


So I began to seriously think for the first time that I really should let this go. I should stop wasting my precious time (feeling even more precious as I head into my 54th birthday in a few months) preventing people from using the image to generate a few quid and focussing on making new art. It makes me cross — it’s lazy and grotesquely entitled to use artwork someone else has made to make money for yourself, and there is a whole, loooooong piece I could write there — but it takes time and a certain kind type of diligent energy to hunt them down and report them; engaging with the sellers I find particuarly draining.
But as I said in my original Thread:


Best thing to do, I always think, is to keep creating — which *I* can do, whereas they can’t — because presumably, if they could, they would. Even if you can’t or won’t get the pencils out and you’re determined to open an Etsy or Redbubble shop selling stuff with pictures on you can fire up Midjourney/Stable Diff/Firefly and chuck a few words in.


For any other works that get infringed, it’s business as usual — if I spot you using my art, you better get ready because I Am Coming For You. But this one? It’s in the collective literary consciousness, and it’s inextricably and permanently connected to the book, in much the same way that people have ‘my Heathcliff’ or a favourite ‘version’ of a film or a character they love — they’re given over to the public when they’re created. most people I speak to have no notion whatsoever that this is someone’s ‘property’ — “it was just on the book/internet!”


And let’s face it, times are fucking hard. People are trying to generate extra cash wherever they can. I’m not saying life’s a sodding breeze for me either — I still have to earn money and pay bills; one life-changing cover (with a bog standard industry fee attached, I will add — this type of book project does not qualify for royalties) does not ensure financial comfort for life, despite comments I’ve received over time which suggest this is actually what some people believe.


I’d be interested in what others think. After 15 years should I retire the artillery on this one? After TKAM I went on to create several international editions, and the cover of Ms Lee’s ‘next’ novel, Go Set A Watchman. I gave talks about it, was featured in the papers and on the radio. My cover is in the Norman Rockwell Museum, and the original artwork was acquired by Harper Lee’s estate. I also have a precious hand-written note postmarked Monroeville, the content of which I shall never share publicly. And that, quite possibly, is enough.


If you love the cover image, you can for the first time acquire a signed, embossed and authenticated print of this work on 300gsm museum-quality paper, featuring artwork details never seen before.
It’s available from my Book Cover Print collection here.

Sunday, June 09, 2024

Haunting Digbeth, drenched in art

I was in Birmingham yesterday for one of the Design Festival talks I was especially interested in (by Territory Studio) and as it was a soothingly sunny, breezy day I went on a good long haunt of my old stomping ground, Digbeth.




When settlers first came to the area we now know as Brum it was Digbeth they started with, and you can feel that in the solidly industrious maze of chimneyed buildings, bond houses and factories clustered around each other. I was there briefly for one night in late April, but since I was there on a regular basis many years ago the ghoulish mask of gentrification has been slapped over much of the area, a process that’s really ramped up since work on HS2 began. Graf and street art, professional and non-pro alike, is being feverishly applied to every un-developed surface, as if the artists can feel in their bones that their time here is almost up.

On the way back to the car I visited the Custard Factory, central in our lives for a long time due to our historic involvement in music, pirate radio, DJing and events, and was unmoored by changes there — I initially couldn’t work out what felt wrong but then I saw it all: the lake in the middle was filled in, the gallery where I had one of my first shows (with Solo One) had been turned into a Laser Quest, and the little bar where we went to the infamous Selfish Cunt gig was now a Pieminister. And the Medicine Bar, where we’d danced (maniacally, to DJ Food and myriad others), DJ’d and handed out myriad flyers? Derelict and shuttered, its immense dragon sculpture replaced by a gaping white wall.

Time marches on and, to mutilate a favourite Dolly Parton quote, one day you wake up to realise it’s been marching all over your memories. But I was filled with appreciation at being there for this great, free creative event (I wanted to do a talk there but was too late to apply; that’ll have to wait for the next one) in a city I still get a buzz from, absolutely drenched in street art and organic graffiti on the walls of buildings designed and built for, and still echoing with, the business of graft — my comfort zone.

Even picked up a scuzzy pirate for the drive home. #castlevale #iykyk

Enjoy the pictures.





















Beautiful buildings built for work:


A vintage Will Barras?








Medicine Bar: Before





Medicine Bar: Now

And here's us DJing in that very spot, looking back at the audience!



I was filled with an odd relief that there were still buildings like this to find. With paste-ups!


















Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Bring The Paint

There was so much to see at the weekend that it took me two days; Bank Holiday Monday I was a husk. 

Leicester’s Bring The Paint festival is organised biennially by Izzy Hoskins and Anthony Overend of Graffwerk (2026 for the next one then) and their paint shop GraffHQ. It’s a phenomenal achievement that shows what can be done when a community pulls together; an abandoned mill that’s’s become a hub of artistic energy and collaboration.

Clusters of artworks are to be found throughout the city so you can visit Leicester and gorge on it all year round. But some are not forever, so make it a summer trip if you can, park up and be sure to scoff down something from Bitsy’s Emporium before you start out via the canal towpath, which itself is alive with colour and humour.

The whole thing revitalised my slightly jaded, tired artist’s mind and reminded me how fortunate I am to live in the area, and to have so many generous and creative people that I call friends — it reminded where I’ve always felt the most comfortable, my whole professional life having never felt like I properly fitted into any one of of the creative cliques or circles — always loitering a bit on the edges of several, where they overlap. Social media’s exhausting, the commercial landscape is exhausting, and Bring The Paint was like a large cup of strong tea with a fat nutritious meal, followed by a hearty nap. 

Artists include: 
Inkie / Kid Acne / Philth / Voyder / N4T4 / Soles / Aches / Ertjwe
Mono / Idle / Smug / Triple / Vamp / Zomby / Epic / Drax / Aper
but for a full list you need to pick up one of the chartreuse-coloured maps they made for the event.

(My own contribution to the first ever Bring The Paint, in 2017, is at the bottom - I managed to get a little space right by the canal and HQ and I had about a day to plan what I was going to be doing!)

Large and fulsome photo dump to follow, because enough words.








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