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Magritte - The Treachery of Images

Art meets Geoff 4,050 3 years ago
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The Treachery of Images (1929)- René Magritte Is this image the progenitor of modern art? By painting this picture and putting that text underneath, Magritte may have sparked a revolution in art. And is it a pipe? What does that question even mean... PAINTINGS Beggs: Jug, and Apple on a Plate Cezanne: Still Life, Plate and Fruit Magritte: The Treachery of Images Magritte: Golconda Magritte: The Lovers Magritte: The Son of Man Mondrian: Composition II in Red, Blue and Yellow Picasso: Weeping Woman Pollock: "Blue Poles" Sargent: Lady Agnew of Lachnaw Seurat: A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte ATTRIBUTIONS René Magritte with hand over face (1965), photographed by Duane Michals. "Seagull Flying" from Videvo.net, under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC-BY 3.0) license (https://help.videvo.net/article/30-creative-commons-attribution-3-0-cc-by-3-0), from author: Beachfront (https://www.videvo.net/profile/beachfront/) Abstract Pixels from Videvo.net. Author: Videvo. Hacker Glasses from Videvo.net. Author: Videvo. Blue Particle Motion. Author: acinger - https://www.videvo.net/profile/acinger/ from Videvo.net Dog Photo by Marliese Streefland https://unsplash.com/@marliesebrandsma on https://unsplash.com FAIR USE The copyright laws of Australia, the United Kingdom, and the Unites States of America recognises that there exists a 'fair use' of, or 'fair dealing' with, copyrighted content. For example, Secion 107 of the US Copyright Act holds that "purposes such as criticisim, comment, news reporting, teaching, ...scholarship or research is not an infringement of copyright". Should this video contain copyrighted works, I believe in good faith that this use is protected by such laws, and the fair use doctrine for one or more of the reasons noted in the previous sentence.

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