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Winter Gardens, Photos Can you take them?


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I was in the Sheffield Winter Gardens today and i had a camera with me, so i thought i would take some shots. The first ones i took were of a sculpture made entirely of spoons and a lady who worked in the nearby shop was smiling as i took some photos.

I then noticed a side room called Metalwork, it had a good historical display of knives, silverware and other work from local tradesmen past and present.

So i went in and started taking photos, after a couple of shots i noticed a young lady nearby seemed to be paying interest? i took some more shots about ten in all and she then approached me and asked me to stop taking photos!!!

She obviously worked there and she explained the reason was to do with copyright laws,

i said i was 'sorry' and i understood and i asked of any notices explaining this? The lady spoke about a couple on display?

As i left the Metalwork room i looked on its door and saw no obvious 'Don't use camera' displays,

i left the room frightened to take any more shots in the building.

On leaving the building i had a look on and around the external doors for notices relevant to the matter and saw nothing obvious to me.

Am i on my own or have other people had similar experiences when taking photos?

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To an extent it's expected to be understood in museums and galleries that created work is the copyright of the creator. But people are so used to seeing photos of works of whatever sort here there and everywhere that it's often forgotten that artists are trying to earn a living, and legally own the right of how their work is reproduced.

 

There's a difference between taking a photo of the exhibition room in general, or general shots where the paintings etc are incidental, and photos taken of specific works. I've worked at exhibitions for several years. Some people walk round an exhibition taking full size photos of every painting, and can't understand why it's seen as wrong. But if they take that photo and print it big and frame it, it's akin to walking out of Waterstones without paying for a book.

 

It might seem mean, but every time a living artist's work is shown in public media, it is credited to them, used by permission. If postcards, prints or posters of it are sold, they will get a royalty of some sort. That is how artists earn a living (usually a very meagre one), but people sometimes don't realise that. I agree that there should be signs explaining why photography is disapproved of, but as an artist I feel a bit disheartened that anyone needs it explaining.

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Thanks purdyamos, it is the first time i have taken any photos in a public building like this,

ninety nine percent of the pictures i take are out in the open countryside.

And i was taking photos of relics from the past cutlery industry not of any of the great painters,

what i can't understand is why the lady who was obviously part of the security allowed me to take

numerous photos before asking me to stop? :confused:

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the "other room" was the millennium galleries, not the winter garden, as has been said.

 

Part of the reason for not permitting photos of exhibits within the gallery is that some of the exhibits are made from fragile materials or paint pigments that are not light-fast (which is why you see dim levels of lighting in some galleries) and the flash from your photography can damage the materials.

 

Even if you are not photographing something delicate, directly, the light can "seep" and cause damage to items in adjacent cabinets, which can prevent future generations from enjoying the items on display.

 

You may have noticed that there were "blackouts" on the doors of the other rooms that you were wandering round, again, it's preventing light levels from getting too high inside the exhibitions.

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