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For Immediate Release
London, UK 11 April 2011; A new campaign launched today setting out a Bill of Rights for all Artists and supported by organisations from around the world. It updates and expands the Bill of Rights campaign initiated in 2008 by the photographer's organisation, Pro-Imaging. The campaign is presented through a website at http://artists-bill-of-rights.org and is now available in over 40 languages.
The campaign promotes the rights of creative people of all disciplines, music, photography, video, film, fine arts, writing, etc. It is independent, and open to all artists' representative associations. Representative associations can contribute to all the campaign activities and will have access to the campaign website to create and publish content credited to their association.
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Lucy Bell is proud to present David King's photographs of Muhammad Ali, taken at his training camp in the Pennsylvania Mountains in 1974 when the "Greatest Of All Time" was preparing for his legendary world heavyweight title fight against George Foreman, held later that year in Kinshasa, Zaire (and which, of course, Ali won).
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In April 2010 a contributers notified us about a contest being run by the Australian Government's Department for Tourism, the competition is entitled 'There's Nothing Like Australia'. The competition was not only claiming the entrants copyright, entrants also had to waive their moral rights in Australia, and in every other country in the world.
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Lucy Bell Gallery is proud to present Dogs/Gods - an exhibition of photographs by Tim Flach, which celebrates the recent launch of his highly acclaimed new book Dogs/Gods. Shot in the aesthetic of fashion shoots, movie posters and celebrity portraits, these striking images are laden with visual drama, as Flach uses a unique photographic approach to create powerful and compelling work.
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In April 2010 we wrote to the Australian Minister for Tourism the Hon Martin Ferguson AM, MP, to complain about appalling terms and conditions in the There's Nothing Like Australia photography competition. The rules claimed the entrants copyright and that they were required to waive their moral rights throughout the world.