I’m curious – what would be a good set fee to offer ‘models’ like, say, Nussenzweig, for the reproduction of his likeness in any form that reproduction could take? Whatever it might be, I doubt it would approach anywhere near the $2,000,000 he was trying to sue diCorcia for. There are actors who don’t get paid that much for a feature length film’s worth of 24 images per second, so how anybody can work out the value of a single one… Or is that a bad analogy?
DiCorcia has actually paid people to model for him - http://artscenecal.com/ArticlesFile/Archive/Articles1997/Articles1097/PdiCorciaA.html
Do an image search on his work, if you don't know it already. I think his images are… well, if he did that kind of thing and I could afford it, I’d be prepared to pay him to take my picture!
Before the verdict on this case, which I presume freed up the press to print both Nussenzweig’s photo and the precise reasoning behind his plaint, I hadn’t realised he was suing on religious grounds. The judge seems to have been fairly sensitive to it as an issue, but she still ruled in diCorcia’s favour. What sort of worries me is that her decision was based in large part on his having “demonstrated his general reputation as a photographic artist in the international artistic community," because this means that his individual reputation swung the thing in his favour rather than the more general arguments forwarded by his lawyer, who said "If the law were to forbid artists to exhibit and sell photographs made in public places without the consent of all who might appear in those photographs, then artistic expression in the field of photography would suffer drastically.” So, is it just diCorcia’s individual right as a now legally recognised artist that has been successfully defended? What about everyone else? How is it that we’ve reached a stage (and it’s not just happening in America) where the value of photographers work is determined by judges in courts of law based on their international reputations?
At the other extreme… If I were to visit New York and by chance photograph aforandrew in a bar, say, sitting behind someone else’s drink, then the image was reproduced on billboards across the city in a public awareness ad campaign condemning alcoholism, would he not be perfectly within his rights to sue me?