• About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
Center for Art Law
  • About
    About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        Annual Conferences
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
Home image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet Art law image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet Case Review: Farmer-Paellmann v Smithsonian Inst.
Back

Case Review: Farmer-Paellmann v Smithsonian Inst.

July 11, 2024

Fragment: Benin Plaque (16-17th Century), National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution.

Fragment of Benin Plaque (16-17th Century), National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution

By Beverly Osazuwa

The ongoing campaign for the return of the Benin Bronzes has been one of the most recognized cases for the restitution of looted cultural heritage from the colonial era. In the 1897 British invasion of the Benin Kingdom (modern-day Benin City in Edo State, Nigeria),[1] soldiers slaughtered civilians, burned their homes, stole thousands of cultural objects,[2] and left the Palace scorched to the ground.[3] As a result of the looting, Benin’s heritage, including valuable sculptures, casts, swords, and ivories, were auctioned and sold to museums across Europe and North America.[4]

Now commonly known as the Benin Bronzes, these objects are heralded as a symbol of African ingenuity and Black art. The violent seizure and the fight for their return have been at the center of restitution debates for decades – the earliest recorded calls for return dating to the 1930s.[5] In 2022, the Board of Regents to the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C. voted to de-accession 29 of their 39 Benin Bronzes and officially remove the Benin Bronzes from its holdings and transfer them to Nigeria.[6] The decision came after the formalization of a new institution-wide restitution policy in consideration of contemporary moral norms.[7]

However, the art world was shocked by a class action lawsuit filed against the Smithsonian by Deadria Farmer-Paellmann and the Restitution Study Group, a New York-based organisation that advocates for reparations and restitutions for African-American descendants of enslaved persons. The plaintiffs sought to prevent and terminate the Institute’s plans to return the objects. Among the claims was a pending breach of fiduciary duty owed to African-American descendants of enslaved persons. The complaint alleged that as persons descending from those trafficked under the Kingdom, the return of objects to Nigeria and the Oba (King) of Benin would deny African Americans the right to their heritage, and unjustly enrich the ancestors of purported capturers. The case of Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian is novel as it exists at the intersection of reparations, trusts, and the restitution of one of the most prominent and recognizable works of African art.

Facts of the Case

On October 7th, 2022, Deadria Farmer-Paellmann and Restitution Study Group, the Plaintiffs, filed a class action suit against the Smithsonian Institution, seeking a preliminary and permanent injunction to prevent the transfer of 29 Benin Bronzes to Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM).[8] The Plaintiffs claimed that while the Smithsonian serves as a trust to all Americans, they should also be regarded as holding a trust for descendants of enslaved Africans—in this case, specifically, those with descendants from Nigeria who were subject to slave trafficking by the Benin Royal Court.[9]

Beyond the artistic value, the Benin Bronzes are widely recognized for their cultural and historical value for the Edo, or Bini, people. The claimants added that the Bronzes reflect a distinct relationship between the empire, enslaved descendants, and European slave traders.[10] It was recently discovered that the metal used in plaques and castings from the 16th to 18th century came from manilla, which was among the goods (textiles, tools, weapons, etc.) the Portuguese traded with the Edo.[11] In the complaint, the Plaintiffs write, “[the Benin Bronzes] offer a rare opportunity for all Americans to engage with the actual currency that caused people to be kidnapped and separated them from their homelands, families, languages, and religions.”[12]

The action thus draws us to An Act to Establish the ‘Smithsonian Institution’ for the Increase and Diffusion of Knowledge Among Men (1846) (“Act of Establishment”). The Act of Establishment created the Smithsonian upon the bequeathment of the assets by James Smithson to the United States, “for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men.”[13] As a trust instrumentality, it is to carry out the responsibilities of increasing and diffusing knowledge which Congress undertook upon accepting the asset, and the Board of Regents and the Secretary maintain its administration and operation of the as a trust.[14]

The Plaintiffs claimed that the Smithsonian holds and manages the Benin Bronzes in its collection as a trust for the People of the United States—not solely the State. Additionally, they added that therein lies, or should lie, a special common law trust for United States descendants of enslaved persons specifically from Nigeria who were subject to trafficking under the Kingdom of Benin.[15] In its intention to transfer the Bronzes, the Plaintiffs alleged that the Smithsonian was acting without statutory authority and was in anticipatory breach of trust to the People of the United States and those descended from West Africans trafficked by the Benin Royal Court. The Plaintiffs additionally claimed unjust enrichment in returning the objects valued at over $200 million back to Nigeria, arguing that it would be enriching those who benefited from the trafficking.[16] The Plaintiffs conclude that releasing such holdings would inflict a moral and economic injury to the class parties.[17]

Historical Background to Benin

The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade is one of the biggest atrocities to occur in human history, with millions lost, kidnapped, and trafficked from Africa to the Americas. Farmer-Paellmann has long sought litigation for slavery reparations, notably in Farmer-Paellmann v. FleetBoston Financial Corp. (2002); In Re African-american Slave Descendants Litigation (2006). In Farmer-Paellmann v Smithsonian Inst., she makes her claim as a party whose enslaved ancestors were of Nigerian descent and traded for the manilla (metal) used for the Bronzes between the mid-16th to 19th century.[18] She locates them in the areas of Lagos and Warri, two prominent ports.[19]

The origin of Benin’s art-making and metal casting style is said by some to be from time immemorial, and by others as commencing in the 11th century.[20] The Benin Kingdom was among the groups in Africa that traded with the Portuguese in the 16th century. This is recorded by historians, as well as the brass plaques that depict European travellers. Ughoton and Gwatto were Benin’s traditional seaports. The Portuguese traded items such as textile materials, tools, weapons, and manillas for pepper, ivory—and enslaved persons.[21]

However, the history and scale of Benin’s trade is still debated. Some historians report a very limited participation in slave trading due to a prohibition of the sale of its citizens from the 16th century and an embargo on the sale of enslaved men which lasted for approximately 100 to 200 years, effectively leaving the Kingdom isolated from major political and economic changes along the coast.[22] Others state that at its height, the kingdom supplied up to 3,000 slaves a year.[23]

Historian James D. Graham notes that this debate arises from the imprecision in reporting by European slavers who, for example, “often defined ‘Benin’ as the entire coastal area between ‘Guinea’ and ‘Angola’ during the seventeenth century” and lacked distinction between independent communities and their operation of slaving, like the Kingdom of Warri/the Itsekiri versus Benin proper.[24] Scholars such as Peter Ekeh also refer to histories of coercion that affected African kingdoms during the time that may inform understandings of trade relations during the period.[25]

Even so, while the historical record is unclear, what is gained is a wider consideration of the layered histories and experiences that inform West African art.

Standing & Dismissal

Concerning the Plaintiffs’ initial filing for an emergency temporary restraining order, on October 14th, 2022, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia denied the motion for lack of standing and no valid action to challenge the transfer.

The Plaintiffs argued their standing by claiming a personal stake in accessing the Bronzes based on Farmer-Paellmann’s descendancy from individuals sold by the Kingdom in exchange for the metal used to create the Bronzes.[26] The court stated, that “even if Plaintiffs could establish that ancestral link to the Bronzes—which they have not done on this record—such an attenuated connection would not give rise to the type of “concrete and particularised” injury necessary for standing.”[27]

Further, the Court determined that even if standing were present, the Smithsonian’s actions are not subject to judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act, and under 20 U.S.C. § 80m(a)(2) (Powers of Board), an Institution’s Board is empowered to make transfers of property in its collection.[28]

Likewise, the Court held that the transfer did not breach the trust relationship because “only the United States holds legal title to the Smithsonian collection as its trustee.”[29] While the Institution may be treated as a federal agency in some respects, it is more so regarded as among the “instrumentalities wholly owned by the United States.”[30] Government instrumentalities are affiliated with the State but have a separate existence.[31] The Smithsonian is treated as neither an agency nor an authority of the Government. However, it does adopt certain immunities, including from lawsuits unless authorized by Congress.[32]

On the cause for unjust enrichment, the Court held that the claim did not fit the nature of unjust enrichment, for the Plaintiffs were not seeking compensation for a benefit received by the Smithsonian.[33] Additionally, as a matter of injury, they have not shown that irreparable harm would occur in transferring the objects to Nigeria.[34]

The Plaintiffs then sought a permanent injunction to prevent the transferring of Bronzes from the Smithsonian to Nigeria. They appealed but withdrew the appeal to amend the complaint, however did not submit an amended complaint, so the original complaint was used.[35] The Smithsonian filed a motion to dismiss the case and the United States District Court for the District of Columbia granted the motion.[36] In the July 2023 hearing, the Court determined that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to hear the case as the claims had become moot since the Smithsonian already transferred the Bronzes in October 2022.[37]

Even so, the Court found that, even if mootness was avoided, the plaintiff lacked standing:

To have standing, a plaintiff “must have suffered an injury in fact” that is “(a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical[.]”[…] Even assuming the Plaintiffs intended to enjoin the Smithsonian from transferring the remaining ten Bronzes in its collection, there are no allegations to support that another transfer is “actual or imminent.” Such an injury would be “too speculative” to support standing.[38]

Finally, the Court agreed with the rest of the initial judgement, including the institution’s empowerment to transfer and misapplication of the unjust enrichment claim. Following the July 2022 decision, appeals filed by the Plaintiffs at the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit have since been denied.[39]

Standing refers to a litigant’s right “to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or particular issues.”[40] The standing doctrine is a central fixture in legal systems to manage court efficiency in case management and determine the proper jurisdiction and legality of disputes in a society. Although significant, the decision on standing in Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Inst. points to a larger trend in cases of slavery reparations.

Reparations Litigation and Institutional Barriers

In the United States, there is a long history of African Americans pursuing litigation against the State and corporations for the horrors of slavery and, later, the violence inflicted by Jim Crow-era segregation.[41] This, the legal pursuit of redress for the legacy of slavery and the continued racial injustice experienced by descendants, is called reparations litigation.[42] Unfortunately, most reparations litigation in the United States, and specifically slavery-based cases like the case above, have failed for procedural and jurisdictional reasons including sovereign immunity, statutes of limitations, and lack of standing:

Sovereign immunity protects government entities from being sued. Statutes of limitations make it difficult to bring lawsuits for events that occurred centuries ago, making it harder for plaintiffs to prove their claims. Additionally, the issue of standing has proven to be a significant obstacle, with courts dismissing lawsuits from individuals not directly affected by slavery or unable to establish a legal connection to their ancestors’ harm.[43] Despite ongoing advocacy efforts, the complex legal landscape and historical barriers have made it difficult for litigation seeking slavery reparations to succeed in the United States.

Farmer-Paellmann and Restitution Study Group’s complaint, briefly speaks to this history:

The Government of the United States has thwarted efforts to make any reparations to descendants of African enslaved people whose lives, liberty, and labour created immense wealth for certain elites in the United States.[44]

Faced with dismissal for mootness and lack of standing, the central issues of their case remain untouched, like many of the reparations cases that have come before it. The dismissal of the action then further spotlights the institutional challenge faced by African-Americans in advancing reparations litigation.

Similarly, institutional challenges have too hindered the Edo’s capacity to restitute the Bronzes. Laws of limitation periods and the lack of retroactivity in international cultural heritage law have prevented formal litigation for the return of Benin royal art from the 1897 invasion by the British.[45] This is why one is more likely to see the fate of the Bronzes determined by public campaigns and diplomatic relations than in courts. In both instances, the institutional barriers leave the parties legally stifled, hence primarily relying on ethical arguments to pursue their goals.

Conclusion

Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian is a significant case, for it adds another dimension to understanding the Benin Bronzes as cultural and historical works. The case combines cultural heritage law, restitution, and reparation litigation. Even further, it speaks to the African diaspora’s relationship to Africa, histories of enslavement and colonialism, and the role of museums. A question then arises: what does it mean for Western institutions to continue to benefit from and hold collections born from the legacies of enslavement and colonialism? This is layered by the institutional legal challenges and modes of anti-Black racism that affect Black people globally. If Western museums reinscribe the violence and dehumanization of enslavement and colonialism, can the restitution of objects to origin countries on the continent be an opportunity to reimagine heritage and solidarity-building between Africa and its Diaspora? Farmer-Paellmann v Smithsonian allows one to consider these encounters in a way that is mindful of the weight of multiple histories and, upon closer look, the shared struggles between them.

About the Author:

Beverly Osazuwa is a rising third-year law student at the McGill University Faculty of Law. Her passion for art and cultural heritage law is born out of her Nigerian (Edo) heritage. Prior to her legal studies, she completed a Master of Arts in Political and Legal Thought at Queen’s University and obtained a Bachelor of Humanities from Carleton University.

Select Sources and References:

  1. Note, this is difference from the Republic of Benin, which was historically of the Dahomey Kingdom. ↑
  2. It is estimated that the British stole between 4,000-10,000 royal objects and cultural materials including brass works, carved ivory tusks, coral beads, relief carvings, drums, ceremonial swords, flasks, and crowns. See Barnaby Phillips, Loot 90 (2022); Dan Hicks, The Brutish Museums: The Benin bronzes, colonial violence and cultural restitution 137 (2020). ↑
  3. There is debate on whether the burning of the Oba’s Palace was accidental or on purpose, see Phillips supra note 1 at 92-93. ↑
  4. Institutions, Digital Benin,(accessed June 26 2024), https://digitalbenin.org/institutions. ↑
  5. Emma Gregg, The story of Nigeria’s stolen Benin Bronzes, and the London museum returning them, National Geographic, (September 17 2022), https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/nigeria-stolen-benin-bronzes-london-museum. ↑
  6. Plaintiff Complaint, 65, Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Inst., No. 1:22-cv-3048 (D.D.C.), October 7 2022. ↑
  7. See generally, Taylor Dafoe, In a Landmark Vote, the Smithsonian Institution Officially Approves the Return of 29 Benin Bronzes to Nigeria, ArtNet, (June 15 2022), https://news.artnet.com/art-world/smithsonians-board-votes-to-return-benin-bronzes-2131098. ↑
  8. Plaintiff Complaint, supra note 5. ↑
  9. Id. ↑
  10. Id. ↑
  11. Daniel Weiss, The Benin Bronzes’ Secret Ingredient, Archeology Magazine, (November/December 2023), https://archaeology.org/issues/november-december-2023/digs-discoveries/the-benin-bronzes-secret-ingredient/. ↑
  12. Plaintiff Complaint, supra note 5 at 4. ↑
  13. A Bill To establish the ”Smithsonian Institution,” for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men. H.R.5, 29th Cong. Sec 1.1845-1847). ↑
  14. Office of the General Counsel, Legal History, Smithsonian Institution, (accessed June 25 2024), https://www.si.edu/ogc/legalhistory#:~:text=The%20Smithsonian%20Institution%20is%20a,under%20the%20name%20of%20the. ↑
  15. Plaintiff Complaint, supra note 5 at 25. ↑
  16. Id. at 90-96. ↑
  17. Id. at 31. ↑
  18. Id. at 50-56. ↑
  19. Id. at 16. ↑
  20. Ese Vivian Odiahi, The Origin and Development of the Guild of Bronze Casters of Benin Kingdom up to 1914, 6:1 AFRREV IJAH: An Int J of Arts and Humanities 176 (2017). ↑
  21. Michael Ediagbonya, A study of the Portuguese-Benin Trade Relations: Ughoton as a Benin Port (1485 -1506), 2:2 Intl J of Humanities and Cultural Studies 206, 207 (2015). ↑
  22. Helen Chapin Metz, ed. Nigeria: A Country Study, GPO for the Library of Congress (1991); Patricia M. Muhammad, The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade’s African Elephant in the International Courtroom: West Africa’s Debt of Reparations to the Descendants of the Black Diaspora, 27:1 UC Davis J Int’l L & Pol’y 81,101 (2020); James D. Graham, The Slave Trade, Depopulation and Human Sacrifice in Benin History: The General Approach, 5:18 Cahiers d’études africaines, 321, 323 (1965), (“An overall view of the period, between 1486–1897, yields the conclusion that the European slave trade was seldom, if ever, of considerable importance to Benin”). ↑
  23. Dimitri Bondarendko, Benin and the Slave Trade in Encyclopedia of the Middle Passage, (Toyin Falola and Amanda Wanocks eds., 2007). ↑
  24. Benin `proper’ is used because the state consisted of several independent communities, often at war, who had full independent power and may have engaged in independent slaving operations with Europeans. For example, communities in the Lagos region were largely independent. See generally, James D. Graham, The Slave Trade, Depopulation and Human Sacrifice in Benin History: The General Approach, 5:18 Cahiers d’études Africaines, 321 (1965). ↑
  25. See generally, Peter Ekeh, Benin, the Western Niger Delta, and the Development of the Atlantic World, 1 Umẹwaẹn: Journal of Benin and Ẹdo Studies 4 (2016). ↑
  26. Plaintiff Complaint, supra note 5. ↑
  27. Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Inst., LEXIS 233487, WL 17976505, (D.D.C. October 14, 2022). [Farmer-Paellmann, 2022] ↑
  28. Id. ↑
  29. Farmer-Paellmann, 2022, supra note 28. ↑
  30. Dong v. Smithsonian Inst., 125 F.3d 877, 326 U.S. App. D.C. 350 (D.C. Cir. 1997) ↑
  31. What is a ‘government instrumentality’?, Larned A. Waterman Iowa Nonprofit Resource Center (accessed June 17 2024), https://inrc.law.uiowa.edu/faqs/what-government-instrumentality. ↑
  32. Office of the General Counsel, supra note 15. ↑
  33. Farmer-Paellmann, 2022, supra note 28. ↑
  34. Id. ↑
  35. Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Inst., LEXIS 115133, 2023 WL 4350787 (D.D.C. July 5, 2023). [Farmer-Paellmann, 2023] ↑
  36. Id. ↑
  37. Id. ↑
  38. Id. ↑
  39. Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Inst., LEXIS 34478, 2023 WL 9009058 (U.S. App, D.C. Cir. December 28 2023); Farmer-Paellmann v Smithsonian Inst., LEXIS 4886 (U.S. App., DC Cir. February 29 2024). ↑
  40. Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498 (1975). ↑
  41. The earliest known case for slavery reparations in the United States dates back to 1783, when Belinda Royall, a former enslaved woman, petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for compensation for her years of unpaid labor. The court ultimately granted her a pension to support her in her old age, making her one of the earliest known recipients of reparations for slavery in the country. See generally, Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations. In The Best American Magazine Writing, Columbia University Press, (2015). ↑
  42. Angus Nurse, “Seeking Reparations for Anti-Black Harms” (2022) 165:4 Solic J 34. ↑
  43. Id. See Johnson v. McAdoo, 45, 440 (App. D.C.1916). (the first documented attempt to litigate slavery redress and have a judicial opinion. Suit was dismissed on grounds of sovereign immunity); Berry v. United States, LEXIS 9665, WL 374537 (N.D. Cal. 1994) (Plaintiff sought quiet title to forty acres of land under the Freedmen’s Bureau Act of 1865 or $3 million in damages but was dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, failure to state a claim, and statute of limitations); Cato v. United States, 70 (F.3d) 1103 (9th Cir. 1995) (Case dismissed because of sovereign immunity, not raising statutory or constitutional violations, and not providing a basis for subject matter jurisdiction). ↑
  44. Plaintiff Complaint, supra note 5 at 12. ↑
  45. Hague Convention on Laws and Customs of War on Land was first to formally establish the idea that cultural property should be protected during armed conflict. It was signed in 1899, two years after the invasion and looting of Benin City, but lacked any retroactive application. the 1970 United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Convention applies only to objects acquired three months after a state becomes a party to the treaty, and therefore only to objects acquired after 1970. ↑

 

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not meant to provide legal advice. Readers should not construe or rely on any comment or statement in this article as legal advice. For legal advice, readers should seek a consultation with an attorney.

Post navigation

Previous Ransomware Attack on Christie’s: A Wake-Up Call for Art World Cybersecurity?
Next Dancing with Rights: Analyzing Copyright for Choreographic Works in the United States

Related Posts

Lawsuit By Competition Finalist Over Olympic Opening Ceremony Design

September 27, 2012
star trek fan fiction thumbnails

Realities of Fan Fiction: Paramout To Boldly Drop Lawsuit

June 7, 2016

Art Dealer Convicted of Fraud

April 9, 2011
Center for Art Law
Center for Art Law

Follow us on Instagram for the latest in Art Law!

On May 24, 2024 the UK enacted the Digital Markets On May 24, 2024 the UK enacted the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (DMCC). This law increases transparency requirements and consumer rights, including reforming subscription contracts. It grants consumers cancellation periods during cooling-off times. 

Charitable organizations, including museums and other cultural institutions, have concerns regarding consumer abuse of this option. 

🔗 Read more about this new law and it's implications in Lauren Stein's published article, including a discussion on how other jurisdictions have approached the issue, using the link in our bio!
Don't miss our on our upcoming Bootcamp on Februar Don't miss our on our upcoming Bootcamp on February 4th! Check out the full event description below:

Join the Center for Art Law for an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with art market participants and understanding their unique copyright law needs. The bootcamp will be led by veteran art law attorneys, Louise Carron, Barry Werbin, Carol J. Steinberg, Esq., Scott Sholder, Marc Misthal, specialists in copyright law.

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to copyright law for art market clients. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in copyright law and its specificities as applied to works of visual arts, such as the fair use doctrine and the use of generative artificial intelligence tools.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!
The expansion of the use of collaborations between The expansion of the use of collaborations between artists and major consumer corporations brings along a myriad of IP legal considerations. What was once seen in advertisement initiatives  has developed into the creation of "art objects," something that lives within a consumer object while retaining some portion of an artists work. 

🔗 Read more about this interesting interplay in Natalie Kawam Yang's published article, including a discussion on how the LOEWE x Ghibli Museum fits into this context, using the link in our bio.
We can't wait for you to join us on February 4th! We can't wait for you to join us on February 4th!  Check out the full event description below:

Join the Center for Art Law for an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with art market participants and understanding their unique copyright law needs. The bootcamp will be led by veteran art law attorneys, Louise Carron, Barry Werbin, Carol J. Steinberg, Esq., Scott Sholder, Marc Misthal, specialists in copyright law. 

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to copyright law for art market clients. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in copyright law and its specificities as applied to works of visual arts, such as the fair use doctrine and the use of generative artificial intelligence tools.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!
Don't forget to grab tickets to our upcoming Collo Don't forget to grab tickets to our upcoming Colloquium, discussing the effectiveness of no strike designations in Syria, on February 2nd. Check out the full event description below:

No strike designations for cultural heritage are one mechanism by which countries seek to uphold the requirements of the 1954 Hague Convention. As such, they are designed to be key instruments in protecting the listed sites from war crimes. Yet not all countries maintain such inventories of their own whether due to a lack of resources, political views about what should be represented, or the risk of misuse and abuse. This often places the onus on other governments to create lists about cultures other than their own during conflicts. Thus, there may be different lists compiled by different governments in a conflict, creating an unclear legal landscape for determining potential war crimes and raising significant questions about the effectiveness of no strikes as a protection mechanism. 

Michelle Fabiani will discuss current research seeking to empirically evaluate the effectiveness of no strike designations as a protection mechanism against war crimes in Syria. Using data on cultural heritage attacks from the height of the Syrian Conflict (2014-2017) compiled from open sources, a no strike list completed in approximately 2012, and measures of underlying risk, this research asks whether the designations served as a protective factor or a risk factor for a given site and the surrounding area. Results and implications for holding countries accountable for war crimes against cultural heritage are discussed. 

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #culturalheritage #lawyer #legalreserach #artlawyer
Don't miss our up coming in-person, full-day train Don't miss our up coming in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with art market participants and understanding their unique copyright law needs. The bootcamp will be led by veteran art law attorneys, Louise Carron, Barry Werbin, Carol J. Steinberg, Esq., Scott Sholder, Marc Misthal, specialists in copyright law. 

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to copyright law for art market clients. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in copyright law and its specificities as applied to works of visual arts, such as the fair use doctrine and the use of generative artificial intelligence tools.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio! 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #research #lawyer #artlawyer #bootcamp #copyright #CLE #trainingprogram
In order to fund acquisitions of contemporary art, In order to fund acquisitions of contemporary art, The Phillips Collection sold seven works of art from their collection at auction in November. The decision to deaccession three works in particular have led to turmoil within the museum's governing body. The works at the center of the controversy include Georgia O'Keefe's "Large Dark Red Leaves on White" (1972) which sold for $8 million, Arthur Dove's "Rose and Locust Stump" (1943), and "Clowns et pony" an 1883 drawing by Georges Seurat. Together, the three works raised $13 million. Three board members have resigned, while members of the Phillips family have publicly expressed concerns over the auctions. 

Those opposing the sales point out that the works in question were collected by the museum's founders, Duncan and Marjorie Phillips. While museums often deaccession works that are considered reiterative or lesser in comparison to others by the same artist, the works by O'Keefe, Dove, and Seurat are considered highly valuable, original works among the artist's respective oeuvres. 

The museum's director, Jonathan P. Binstock, has defended the sales, arguing that the process was thorough and reflects the majority interests of the collection's stewards. He believes that acquiring contemporary works will help the museum to evolve. Ultimately, the controversy highlights the difficulties of maintaining institutional collections amid conflicting perspectives.

🔗 Click the link in our bio to read more.
Make sure to check out our newest episode if you h Make sure to check out our newest episode if you haven’t yet!

Paris and Andrea get the change to speak with Patty Gerstenblith about how the role international courts, limits of accountability, and if law play to protect history in times of war.

🎙️ Click the link in our bio to listen anywhere you get your podcasts!
Alexander Butyagin, a Russian archaeologist, was a Alexander Butyagin, a Russian archaeologist, was arrested by Polish authorities in Warsaw. on December 4th. Butyagin is wanted by Ukraine for allegedly conducting illegal excavations of Myrmekion, an ancient city in Crimea. Located in present-day Crimea, Myrmekion was an Ancient Greek colony dating to the sixth century, BCE. 

According to Ukrainian officials, between 2014 and 2019 Butyagin destroyed parts of the Myrmekion archaeological site while serving as head of Ancient Archaeology of the Northern Black Sea region at St. Petersburg's Hermitage Museum. The resulting damages are estimated at $4.7 million. Notably, Russia's foreign ministry has denounced the arrest, describing Poland's cooperation with Ukraine's extradition order as "legal tyranny." Russia invaded and annexed Crimea in 2014.

🔗 Read more by clicking the link in our bio

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artcrime #artlooting #ukraine #crimea
Join us on February 18th to learn about the proven Join us on February 18th to learn about the provenance and restitution of the Cranach painting at the North Carolina Museum of Art.

A beloved Cranach painting at the North Carolina Museum of Art was accused of being looted by the Nazis. Professor Deborah Gerhardt will describe the issues at stake and the evidentiary trail that led to an unusual model for resolving the dispute.

Grab your tickets today using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #legalresearch #museumissues #artwork
“In the depth of winter, I finally learned that wi “In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer."
~ Albert Camus, "Return to Tipasa" (1952) 

Camus is on our reading list but for now, stay close to the ground to avoid the deorbit burn from the 2026 news and know that we all contain invincible summer. 

The Center for Art Law's January 2026 Newsletter is here—catch up on the latest in art law and start the year informed.
https://itsartlaw.org/newsletters/january-newsletter-which-way-is-up/ 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #lawyer #artlawyer #legalresearch #legal #art #law #newsletter #january
Major corporations increasingly rely on original c Major corporations increasingly rely on original creative work to train AI models, often claiming a fair use defense. However, many have flagged this interpretation of copyright law as illegitimate and exploitative of artists. In July, the Senate Judiciary Committee on Crime and Counterterrorism addressed these issues in a hearing on copyright law and AI training. 

Read our recent article by Katelyn Wang to learn more about the connection between AI training, copyright protections, and national security. 

🔗 Click the link in our bio to read more!
  • About the Center
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter
  • Upcoming Events
  • Internship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
DISCLAIMER

Center for Art Law is a New York State non-profit fully qualified under provision 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code.

The Center does not provide legal representation. Information available on this website is
purely for educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.

TERMS OF USE AND PRIVACY POLICY

Your use of the Site (as defined below) constitutes your consent to this Agreement. Please
read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy carefully.

© 2026 Center for Art Law