Posted: 21 February 2008 at 1:19pm | IP Logged | 3
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I'm glad I plowed through all five pages before throwing in my two-bits. A few of my points have been made already (which means I don't have to type as much!)
I'm squarely from the intent camp. A homage wants to be recognized. It draws attention to itself, shouts "Look, I'm having fun with this idea!" and those of us who remember the original source material appreciate the reference and the joke. For the most part, we are dealing with recognizable, iconic images, and often the original source image / artist are given credit.
Conversely, a swipe is a shortcut, a solution to a problem using another person's ingenuity to resolve a panel design, difficult layout, storytelling problem, etc. Unlike the homage, the swipe does not want to be recognized; it wants to be accepted as the artist's own work.
The former still engenders a degree of creativity to put a new spin on an old idea and make it more that just a copy of the original. The latter indicates a lack of creatively.
I thought the cover song analogy was particularly apt -- taking the familiar, but making it your own. More importantly, paying royalties and giving credit to those whose creative work you are building upon.
But the allusion is relevant for another reason not yet discussed: What constitutes plagiarism (to which any discussion of swipes must turn, ultimately)? As George Harrison found out, three notes, if they are the right three notes (as learned in the "He's So Fine / My Sweet Lord" lawsuit). I think swipes have an equally low threshold when they are so obvious.
Finally, I was reading one of the TwoMorrows publications that featured a two-page spread with nearly 100 comics that have the “Crisis 7” pose, dating back to the 1940s and carrying through to today. It’s a heavily used image through the history of the medium. But it would be nice of someone looked back a little further and recognized that Michelangelo’s “Pieta” outdates them all…
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