http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2022/03/louis-wain-cat-painter-life-of.html
Having been an avid reader of this blog since his legal traineeship days (and albeit originally a convinced dog lover) this GuestKat has always been amused and entertained by its peculiar editorial line. So he is honoured to review a movie which, under the suggestion of PermaKat Neil Wilkof, he watched during a particular beginning to 2022, where as much as 50% of his acquaintances were quarantined because of Covid, including the undersigned (this Kat has since recovered, thanks, and he is rather confident as to the efficacy of the vaccines…).
Louis Wain (1860-1939) was a British painter who became famous in Victorian and Edwardian England. This great movie recounts his work and reconstructs his biography.
And here comes the interesting part for IP fans who do not necessarily love cats (how can there be any out there though?). The movie also provides a couple of interesting pointers relating to IP, as the depicts Wain as being somehow naïve and above all completely unprepared for negotiating his IP rights [very little spoilers follow].
In all this, I must admit that what really saddened this Kat is that, at a certain point in the movie, a sister of Wain’s criticizes him for not having adequately protected his works of art through registration. As we all know, in fact, nowadays artists do not have to bother with any registration in order to enjoy their copyright, thanks to the provisions of the Berne Convention. However the rule according to which copyright protection is formality-free in all the Union countries was only introduced in 1908 (with the Berlin revision) and therefore, before that date, Louis Wain did not enjoy the protection of his works as UK provided for a registration-based system, as many other countries also did at Mr. Wain’s time.
So it appears that Mr. Wain basically sold all the rights to his works without retaining any reproduction rights. Needless to say that he was easily tricked and occasionally deceived by his publishers, as many of his biographers recall. That’s probably why in a scene Wain’s also says (with typically British humour and while explaining to his sisters that he would have to move to USA in order to earn some money from his publications) that: “for a variety of reasons that we are all very well acquainted with, my work is currently of very little financial value on these shores”. Leaving aside the fact that another important reason for such a move was that “people of America [we]re light years behind in their attitude towards cats” and so they needed to be taught by Mr. Wain about their superior powers!
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