vangoghgal
New member

Posts: 7
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« Reply #1 on: August 01, 2006, 11:55:09 AM » |
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The biggest problem, in my view, is the cost of illustrations and reproduction fees. I just had my first book published last year (on an unnamed topic--not Van Gogh--and with an unnamed university press) and I spent thousands of dollars on photographs, copyright fees, a subvention to the publisher for additional images beyond the number in my contract, etc. I had small grants to help with some of it, but not all. Where museums/archives got me was although the works I was illustrating are centuries old and far out of the public domain, they'd charge me for the right to reproduce the *photograph* of said object, which was theirs. Many institutions gave discount or waived the fee, but many did not. In a few cases, museums asked for two copies of the book (sometimes on top of the fee)--the publisher provided one to each institution gratis (thank you), so guess who has to buy the other one at 80 bucks a pop? Why would the museum need two copies?
Moreover, anyone wishing to publish images of works in the collections of the Reunion des Musees Nationaux, the Staatliche Museen in Berlin, and many other European museums HAS to go through Art Resource now, which costs a pretty penny. And since you can't have an art history book, or an article, without illustrations...the burden falls on the hapless scholar. For untenured scholars on an assistant professor's salary, this is a real hardship.
At least the things I publish are old enough that I don't have to worry about the same kinds of expenses that would be incurred with modern or contemporary art, which must be a lot more than I have to put up with. I feel for the folks who work in those areas.
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