Freedom of panorama
Freedom of panorama is a copyright exception permitting the creation, dissemination, and commercial use of photographs, videos, or other reproductions of artistic works—such as sculptures and architectural structures—that are permanently situated in public spaces, without requiring authorization from the copyright holders.[1] This provision, often termed Panoramafreiheit in its German origin, balances creators' rights against the public interest in documenting and sharing visible elements of the built environment.[2] The scope of freedom of panorama varies significantly across jurisdictions, with some countries granting broad allowances for both buildings and artworks including commercial exploitation, while others limit it to non-commercial purposes or exclude indoor public displays altogether.[3] In the United States, federal law under Section 120(a) of the Architectural Works Copyright Protection Act explicitly protects pictorial, graphic, or sculptural representations of published architectural works, though protections for non-architectural public art remain more contested.[4] European Union member states implement it optionally under the InfoSoc Directive, leading to patchwork coverage where nations like Germany and the Netherlands permit extensive use, contrasted with restrictions in France and Italy that historically curtailed commercial applications until partial reforms.[5][6] Its implementation has proven vital for cultural documentation, tourism promotion, and open-access repositories like Wikimedia Commons, enabling millions of public-domain images of landmarks to foster education and heritage preservation without licensing barriers.[7] Controversies arise from tensions between rightholders—such as architects and artists seeking royalties for reproductions—and advocates emphasizing the causal disconnect between public visibility and private control, with lobbying efforts in the EU's 2019 Copyright Directive attempting (but failing) to impose EU-wide limitations, highlighting biases in creator associations toward monetization over empirical public benefits.[7][8] These debates underscore ongoing causal realities: restrictive regimes demonstrably hinder digital commons growth, as evidenced by blacked-out images from low-FoP jurisdictions, while permissive ones align with first principles of non-rivalrous public goods.[9]Definition and Origins
Core Definition and Purpose
Freedom of panorama is a copyright exception that permits individuals to photograph, film, or otherwise reproduce artistic works—such as sculptures, monuments, and architectural structures—that are permanently located in public places, without requiring permission from or compensation to the copyright holder.[1][10] This provision, derived from the German term Panoramafreiheit, applies to visual reproductions of works visible from public vantage points, encompassing both two-dimensional and three-dimensional creations integrated into the public environment.[3] It functions as a limitation on the exclusive reproduction rights typically granted to authors under copyright law, ensuring that such rights do not unduly restrict everyday documentation of shared urban and cultural landscapes.[10] The primary purpose of freedom of panorama is to reconcile the protection of creative works with the public interest in accessing, documenting, and disseminating representations of cultural heritage and public spaces.[3] By exempting incidental or deliberate reproductions in non-commercial or commercial contexts—such as postcards, websites, or social media shares—it promotes the free flow of information about landmarks and artworks that form part of the communal visual experience, without imposing barriers that could stifle tourism, education, or personal expression.[1] This exception recognizes that works placed in public view by their creators or owners are inherently exposed to unrestricted observation and reproduction by passersby, thereby prioritizing societal benefits like enhanced cultural awareness over absolute control by rightholders.[10] In practice, the exception's scope is delimited to works in open-air public areas accessible without payment, excluding interior views or temporary installations to prevent abuse.[3] Its implementation varies by jurisdiction, often as an optional clause under frameworks like the EU's InfoSoc Directive (2001/29/EC), reflecting a deliberate policy choice to favor empirical public utility over expansive copyright enforcement in visible, non-private settings.[1]Historical Development
The concept of freedom of panorama originated in mid-19th-century Europe, amid the rapid development of photography and the need to balance creators' rights with public interest in documenting urban and artistic landscapes. In 1840, the Kingdom of Bavaria promulgated the first known statutory exception permitting pictorial reproductions of public buildings, sculptures, and artworks situated in public spaces, responding to debates among German Confederation states over restricting such depictions.[11][12] This Bavarian proclamation, ratified by the Confederation, laid the groundwork for Panoramafreiheit—the German term for the exception, possibly coined in Switzerland but widely adopted in German-speaking regions to denote the liberty to capture and disseminate views of permanently installed works without infringement.[7][13] By the late 19th century, Panoramafreiheit influenced unified Germany's 1870 copyright law, which explicitly allowed reproductions of architectural works and sculptures in public view, extending to non-commercial and certain commercial uses like postcards and engravings. Similar provisions proliferated across Europe, reflecting technological advances in visual media; for example, the United Kingdom's Copyright Act 1911 implicitly supported such freedoms through fair dealing doctrines, while France maintained stricter limits, prioritizing privacy and moral rights over broad reproduction rights until partial reforms in the 20th century.[5] In contrast to earlier 18th-century prohibitions in regions like the Papal States, where engraving public monuments required authorization, these exceptions prioritized public access to cultural heritage.[14] The 20th century saw further codification and variation: post-World War II laws in many nations refined scopes to include temporary exhibitions or exclude interior views, while decolonization spread adapted versions to former territories. In the European Union, Article 5(3)(h) of the 2001 Information Society Directive formalized freedom of panorama as an optional exception, enabling member states to authorize non-commercial reproductions of public works or limited commercial uses, though implementation diverged—broad in Germany and Sweden, narrower in France and Italy due to heritage protection statutes.[1] This harmonization effort underscored ongoing tensions between digital dissemination and rightholders' controls, with empirical data from permissive jurisdictions showing increased cultural documentation without widespread abuse.[15]First-Principles Justification
Freedom of panorama derives from the foundational principle that individuals possess an inherent liberty to observe, navigate, and document their surroundings in open public spaces, where no private exclusionary rights apply to mere visibility. By affixing a work permanently to such a space, the creator voluntarily exposes it to unrestricted public gaze, rendering attempts to monopolize incidental reproductions—such as photographs capturing broader vistas—practically unenforceable and incompatible with basic freedoms of movement and expression. This exception prevents the absurd outcome where everyday acts like sightseeing or recording reality require permission, prioritizing causal reality over expansive statutory claims that could transform public domains into zones of controlled perception.[16][17] At its core, the justification rests on balancing limited creator incentives against the public's pre-existing rights: copyright, as a government-granted monopoly, does not extend naturally to control third-party memories or sensory inputs, but only to direct competitive copies that undermine market value. Public placement causally signals acceptance of promotional visibility, where photographs amplify rather than substitute the original, fostering appreciation without empirical harm to economic returns—evident in commissioned public art funded via prestige or tourism, not reproduction sales. Restricting panorama would invert this logic, imposing enforcement costs that chill public engagement and contradict the purpose of situating works amid communal life.[18][1] Public interest further undergirds the exception, as it enables unfettered dissemination of cultural heritage, criticism, and education—essential for societal progress—without diluting core protections for non-public works. Jurisdictions upholding broad panorama demonstrate no causal decline in artistic output, affirming that the rule harmonizes property-like claims with expressive liberties, avoiding overreach where visibility itself constitutes implicit dedication to public scrutiny.[3][19]Legal Scope and Exclusions
Covered Works and Formats
Freedom of panorama exceptions primarily cover works of architecture and sculpture permanently situated in public places accessible to the public.[20] These include buildings, monuments, statues, and other three-dimensional artistic installations visible from streets, parks, or other open areas without restricted access.[1] Some jurisdictions extend coverage to two-dimensional public art such as murals or street art affixed to public structures, provided they meet permanence criteria.[21] Permitted formats focus on two-dimensional reproductions captured from public vantage points, encompassing photographs, videos, films, drawings, and television broadcasts of the covered works.[20] [1] In the European Union, Article 5(3)(h) of Directive 2001/29/EC explicitly authorizes reproduction via photography, film, or television broadcasting for such works.[20] Three-dimensional reproductions, such as models or scans enabling physical copies, are generally excluded, as are substantial modifications or uses beyond incidental depiction.[22] In the United States, 17 U.S.C. § 120(a) safeguards pictures, paintings, photographs, or other pictorial representations of architectural works ordinarily visible from public places, applying without commercial restrictions. This provision emphasizes exterior views and does not extend to sculptures unless incorporated into architectural elements.[4] Temporary displays, interior spaces, or non-visual elements like literary inscriptions on works remain outside typical coverage across jurisdictions.[5]Definition of Public Spaces
Public spaces, in the context of freedom of panorama provisions, are defined as locations permanently accessible to the general public where copyrighted works such as sculptures, monuments, or architectural structures are situated and visible without restriction. These typically encompass outdoor areas like streets, parks, plazas, and squares that allow unrestricted public vantage points for viewing or photographing the works.[5][3] The requirement emphasizes public accessibility rather than private or restricted domains, ensuring that reproductions capture elements integrated into communal environments rather than isolated or indoor settings unless explicitly permitted by national law.[5] The permanence of the work's placement in such spaces is a critical criterion; temporary installations or exhibitions do not qualify, as freedom of panorama aims to balance public interest in documenting enduring urban or natural landscapes with creators' rights over transient displays.[5] Jurisdictional variations exist—for instance, some frameworks extend to "places open for attendance" including certain public interiors visible from outdoor public areas, but the core application remains tied to outdoor public domains to align with the panoramic view's essence of broad, unobstructed public exposure.[23] This excludes private property, even if partially visible, and spaces requiring payment or permission for access, such as museums or gated estates.[5] Visibility from public spaces without aids like drones or ladders further delineates the scope, preventing circumvention of restrictions on non-public viewpoints.[24] Empirical legal interpretations, such as those in EU member states, reinforce that public spaces must facilitate incidental inclusion of works in broader scenes, not targeted isolations that could undermine economic rights.[5][25]Limitations on Use and Reproduction
Even where freedom of panorama exceptions exist, they impose strict boundaries on reproduction and use to balance public access with copyright holders' rights. These typically restrict allowances to faithful two-dimensional depictions—such as photographs or drawings—captured from publicly accessible vantage points without aids like drones or ladders that enable non-natural views, excluding any form of three-dimensional replication, digital manipulation, or derivative works that alter the original's integrity.[26][24] Moral rights under the Berne Convention further prohibit reproductions that distort, mutilate, or otherwise harm the author's honor or reputation, even if economic rights permit capture.[5] A primary limitation concerns commercial exploitation: numerous jurisdictions, particularly in the European Union, confine freedom of panorama to non-commercial or private uses, barring reproduction in advertising, merchandise, merchandise licensing, or any profit-generating context that might compete with the original work's market. For example, France's Intellectual Property Code (Article L.122-5) permits reproduction solely for private purposes or as illustration in non-commercial publications, explicitly excluding advertising or industrial applications.[3][5] Similar restrictions apply in Italy and Belgium, where allowances are limited to educational or informational dissemination without remuneration.[3] Scope is further narrowed to permanently installed works in outdoor public spaces, omitting temporary exhibitions, indoor artworks not visible from public areas, or structures protected under separate regimes like trademarks or design rights. In Germany, while commercial reproduction of buildings is broadly permitted under Section 59 of the Copyright Act, sculptures and artworks face heightened scrutiny, with the Federal Court of Justice (BGH) ruling in 2024 that freedom of panorama requires direct visibility from public ground without technical enhancements, and forbids modifications except those unavoidable for reproduction fidelity.[24][5] Jurisdictions without explicit commercial FoP provisions, such as those relying on fair use doctrines like the United States, evaluate each case under factors including market harm, often disallowing uses that substitute for licensed imagery.[27] These constraints reflect implementation of optional exceptions under Article 5(3)(h) of the EU Copyright Directive (2001/29/EC), which mandates a three-step test ensuring exceptions do not conflict with normal exploitation or unreasonably prejudice rightholders, leading to varied national interpretations that prioritize creator protections over unrestricted dissemination.[3][5]Arguments Supporting Freedom of Panorama
Enhancement of Public Access and Cultural Dissemination
Freedom of panorama exceptions enable individuals to photograph and freely disseminate images of copyrighted artistic and architectural works permanently located in public spaces, thereby broadening public access to representations of cultural heritage without the need for permissions or licensing fees. This legal provision recognizes that such works, once placed in accessible public view, inherently invite observation and reproduction, fostering greater societal engagement with art and architecture. In practice, it reduces barriers for tourists, educators, and citizens to capture and share visual records, which serve as primary means of cultural transmission in an image-driven digital era.[7] Digital repositories like Wikimedia Commons benefit significantly, hosting vast collections of user-contributed photographs under permissive licenses that allow reuse for educational, informational, and even commercial purposes, thus amplifying cultural dissemination globally. Countries with robust freedom of panorama provisions exhibit more comprehensively illustrated online resources for public monuments and sculptures compared to those with restrictive rules, where images are often omitted or censored to avoid infringement. For example, Portugal's broad exception has supported initiatives such as the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation's release of approximately 18,000 high-resolution images of public artworks to platforms like Flickr, enhancing accessibility for research and public appreciation.[28][7] Such provisions also stimulate tourism and innovation by permitting the incorporation of public art images into promotional materials, social media campaigns, and derivative works like augmented reality applications, without legal impediments. In jurisdictions lacking full freedom of panorama, such as those limiting reproductions to non-commercial uses, the resultant legal uncertainties deter widespread sharing, confining cultural visibility to elite or licensed channels and diminishing the democratizing potential of public placements. Empirical observations from collaborative platforms indicate that permissive regimes correlate with higher volumes of freely available visual documentation, underscoring the exception's role in preserving and propagating collective cultural memory.[29][28]Economic and Innovation Benefits
Freedom of panorama exceptions lower barriers to commercial photography and videography by obviating licensing fees for reproducing images of artistic works in public view, thereby reducing production costs for media, advertising, and tourism sectors. In jurisdictions lacking broad provisions, such as Belgium's Atomium, which mandates permissions and fees for commercial use, creators face administrative hurdles and expenses that can exceed thousands of euros per image depending on usage scope.[30] These savings enable broader dissemination of promotional materials, fostering economic activity; for example, unrestricted sharing of landmark images on platforms like social media amplifies visibility, drawing tourists whose expenditures support local economies.[31] Proponents argue that FoP enhances innovation by providing legal certainty for integrating public-domain-like visuals into digital products, such as augmented reality applications, interactive maps, and user-generated content services. This facilitates entrepreneurship among small developers who might otherwise avoid projects involving copyrighted public art due to infringement risks.[32] A 2015 analysis highlights how FoP reduces uncertainties, spurring development in app-based tourism tools and virtual guides that leverage freely available imagery.[7] Data from architectural sectors suggest FoP correlates with professional viability; revenues per architect in the UK, with permissive rules, averaged €102,000 annually in 2012, compared to €35,000 in Greece with narrower exceptions, though macroeconomic factors like GDP confound direct causation.[7] Similarly, Wikimedia Commons hosts disproportionately more images from FoP-friendly nations, enabling collaborative innovation in open knowledge projects that indirectly promote design inspiration and global cultural exchange.[33]Empirical Evidence from Jurisdictions with Broad FoP
Jurisdictions with broad freedom of panorama (FoP) provisions, such as Germany, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland, permit the reproduction of permanently installed artistic works and architecture in public spaces for commercial and non-commercial purposes alike, often extending to interior public areas. In Germany, § 59 of the Copyright Act (Urheberrechtsgesetz) explicitly allows such reproductions without the rightholder's consent, provided the work is visible from a public place. Similar scopes exist in the UK under section 62 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, covering buildings and sculptures in public view, and in Switzerland via Article 19 of the Federal Act on Copyright and Related Rights. These regimes contrast with narrower ones by lacking restrictions on purpose or scale of use.[33] Empirical indicators suggest these broad provisions facilitate greater visual documentation and dissemination of public cultural assets. Platforms like Wikimedia Commons host extensive collections of freely licensed images of landmarks from such jurisdictions, enabling widespread reuse in education, media, and tourism promotion; for instance, contributors from Germany and the UK routinely upload high-resolution photos of public monuments without legal barriers, unlike in restricted regimes where images are often deleted or redacted. This correlates with higher participation in open knowledge projects, as FoP eliminates licensing hurdles that deter uploads in non-FoP countries.[34] Economic data further indicate no adverse effects on creators' revenues. Architects in full FoP countries earn comparable or higher incomes than in jurisdictions without such exceptions, with EU-wide observations showing no income dilution despite prolific reproduction of designs; for example, German architects benefit from the visibility FoP provides, potentially enhancing commissions through global exposure of their works. Broader market effects include an open field for commercial photography and filmmaking, supporting industries reliant on public space imagery without observed revenue losses to original authors.[34][35] While rigorous longitudinal studies remain limited, these patterns align with causal links between permissive FoP and increased cultural output, as evidenced by the proliferation of user-generated content depicting public heritage sites. No peer-reviewed analyses document negative economic spillovers, reinforcing that broad FoP sustains innovation in digital media without undermining incentives for creation.[9]Criticisms and Challenges
Potential Dilution of Creators' Economic Rights
Opponents of broad freedom of panorama provisions contend that such exceptions erode creators' ability to derive economic value from reproductions of their works, particularly in commercial contexts like advertising, publishing, and online media. Collecting societies representing visual artists and architects argue that licensing fees for images of public sculptures, monuments, and buildings constitute a meaningful revenue stream, which FoP would bypass by permitting unrestricted dissemination without compensation. For instance, the French Société des Auteurs dans les Arts Graphiques et Plastiques (ADAGP) has asserted that royalties from public artworks accounted for 58.2% of its advertising-related revenues between 2000 and 2015, emphasizing that exceptions threaten artists' financial interests while enabling commercial entities to exploit freely available images from platforms like Wikimedia Commons.[7] In practice, enforcement actions underscore these concerns. In Sweden, the Bildkonst Upphovsrätt i Sverige (BUS), a collective management organization for visual artists, successfully sued Wikimedia Sweden in 2016, with the Supreme Court ruling that uploading photographs of public sculptures to Commons infringed copyrights, ordering damages equivalent to approximately US$89,000. BUS argued that such uses deprived represented artists of licensing income, rejecting Wikimedia's proposed non-commercial licenses as insufficient to protect economic rights. Similarly, the European Grouping of Societies of Authors and Composers (GESAC) has lobbied against EU-wide harmonization of expansive FoP, warning that it would undermine remuneration for creators whose works are integral to public spaces, potentially shifting value from originators to secondary users.[36][37] However, empirical substantiation for widespread revenue dilution remains limited. Independent analyses have found no verifiable data isolating panorama-related licensing as a dominant income source for most creators, with ADAGP's figures blending public and non-public works, complicating causal attribution. Moreover, sector studies indicate that architects' overall revenues tend to be higher in jurisdictions with FoP exceptions, suggesting that broad visibility may enhance rather than diminish professional opportunities through promotion and commissions, rather than isolated image fees. Critics from creators' groups maintain that without restrictions—such as limiting FoP to non-commercial uses—these exceptions prioritize public dissemination over incentivizing original creation, potentially discouraging investment in durable public art.[7][38]Moral Rights and Artistic Integrity Concerns
Moral rights, as codified in Article 6bis of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, grant authors the inalienable rights to claim authorship of their works and to object to any distortion, mutilation, or other modification that would be prejudicial to their honor or reputation. In the context of freedom of panorama (FoP), these rights persist independently of exceptions to economic copyrights, meaning that while FoP may permit incidental reproduction of permanently sited public artworks in photographs or broadcasts, it does not authorize alterations or uses that undermine artistic integrity.[18] Critics, including artists' rights organizations, argue that FoP provisions can inadvertently facilitate such violations, as photographers or publishers may crop, edit, or juxtapose images in ways that decontextualize the work from its intended public space, potentially altering its perceptual or symbolic impact.[7] A primary concern is the right of integrity, where even faithful reproductions can harm reputation if disseminated in commercial or satirical contexts implying artist endorsement or mockery. For instance, French collecting society ADAGP has advocated for narrower FoP exceptions, contending that unrestricted photographic reproduction of sculptures and architecture in public places risks associating creators with unintended messages, such as in advertising campaigns that exploit the work's image without consent.[39] In jurisdictions with robust moral rights, like those in the European Union, courts have occasionally upheld claims; a 2023 Paris Judicial Tribunal ruling on street art affirmed FoP's applicability but scrutinized moral rights, requiring that reproductions not prejudice the author's vision, though many circulating images fail to meet attribution standards.[40] Similarly, in civil law traditions, the exception's scope is often limited to non-derogatory uses, yet digital manipulation tools exacerbate risks, as post-production edits (e.g., color alterations or composite integrations) could constitute prejudicial modifications without the artist's recourse.[41] Empirical disputes highlight these tensions, though successful moral rights invocations remain infrequent due to judicial deference to public access interests. In a Colombian case documented on Wikimedia Commons guidelines, an architect successfully claimed moral rights infringement when a firm's commercialization of building images omitted attribution, underscoring that FoP does not absolve reputational harms from unattributed or contextually misleading uses.[42] Artists' groups further contend that systemic under-enforcement—stemming from the practical difficulties of monitoring vast online reproductions—dilutes integrity protections, potentially discouraging public commissions of site-specific works if creators anticipate loss of control over representation.[43] Proponents of stronger safeguards argue for mandatory attribution clauses or pre-approval for commercial FoP uses to reconcile public dissemination with causal preservation of the artist's expressive intent.[18]Case Studies of Disputes and Narrow Interpretations
In Sweden, the Supreme Court ruled on April 4, 2016, in a case brought by the Swedish visual arts collecting society BUS against Wikimedia Sverige, determining that photographs of the sculpture Spis by Tore Svensson, taken in a public square and used for commercial postcards, did not qualify under the country's freedom of panorama exception.[36] The court applied a restrictive interpretation of the Berne Convention's three-step test, deeming the reproduction neither "special" nor limited in scope, as it involved systematic commercialization rather than occasional private use, thereby prioritizing the artist's economic rights over broader public dissemination.[44] This decision overturned lower court findings and limited FoP to non-commercial, incidental captures, influencing Wikimedia's subsequent caution in uploading Swedish public art images to Commons.[45] France's 1996 case Buren et Drevet v. City of Lyon and Postcard Producers addressed reproductions of public artworks like Daniel Buren's striped columns and Christian Drevet's sculptures on commercial postcards, with the Cour de Cassation upholding an "accessory representation" right for incidental depictions in urban views but rejecting standalone or prominent reproductions.[21] This narrow ruling, combined with France's 2016 copyright reform under Article L. 122-5, which confines FoP to non-commercial "information" purposes (e.g., journalism or education) and excludes advertising or merchandise, has led to ongoing disputes, including lawsuits against photographers for online sales of public monument images like the Eiffel Tower at night, where lighting is separately copyrighted.[7] French courts have consistently enforced these limits, as seen in enforcement actions by the Société des Auteurs des Arts visuels et de l'Image (SCAM), underscoring a preference for moral and economic protections over unrestricted panorama freedoms.[5] In Italy, where no explicit freedom of panorama provision exists under Law No. 633/1941, courts have progressively narrowed interpretations of related exceptions, as in a 2017 Milan Tribunal decision restricting reproductions of public buildings like the Duomo di Milano to non-profit personal use, denying commercial licensing for calendars or books featuring architectural details.[46] This aligns with rulings emphasizing Article 87's "private use" clause, excluding any profit motive, which has sparked disputes with photographers and platforms like Wikimedia, who face takedown requests for images of monuments such as the Colosseum, even when captured incidentally in street photography.[47] Italian jurisprudence thus prioritizes creators' rights, leading to self-censorship in digital archives and cross-border conflicts when Italian-sourced images violate stricter uploading policies elsewhere.[48] Germany's Federal Court of Justice (BGH) decision on December 19, 2024, in the Elbphilharmonie case rejected freedom of panorama for drone photographs of the Hamburg concert hall, ruling that §59 UrhG requires the image to be captured from within a public space accessible to the general public, excluding aerial perspectives not reachable by average pedestrians.[24] The court upheld the architect's claims under EU harmonized exceptions, mandating licenses for such uses despite the building's permanent public placement, highlighting how technological methods can trigger narrow statutory readings and potential liability for commercial publications like stock photos.[5] This interpretation has broader implications for modern photography, prompting debates on adapting FoP to drones and virtual reality captures.[49]International Legal Frameworks
Berne Convention and TRIPS Agreement Provisions
The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, first adopted in 1886 and revised multiple times with the Paris Act of 1971 remaining the most widely ratified version, establishes minimum standards of copyright protection for its contracting parties, which numbered 182 as of 2023. Article 2(1) explicitly includes architectural works and works of sculpture among protected "literary and artistic works," regardless of their placement in public spaces, thereby subjecting photographs or reproductions of such works to potential copyright restrictions absent exceptions. However, the Convention does not mandate freedom of panorama as a required exception; instead, Article 9(1) affirms the exclusive reproduction right of authors, while Article 9(2) permits national legislation to allow reproductions "in certain special cases, provided that such reproduction does not conflict with the normal exploitation of the work and does not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the author." This provision, known as the three-step test, provides a framework under which many Berne signatories have implemented freedom of panorama exceptions for incidental or non-commercial captures of permanently sited public works, though such exceptions remain optional and vary in scope. The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), effective since January 1, 1995, under the World Trade Organization (WTO) and binding on 164 members as of 2023, reinforces Berne's standards by requiring compliance with its Articles 1 through 21 (TRIPS Article 9.1), thus extending the Convention's protections to architectural and sculptural works in public domains. TRIPS Article 13 broadens the three-step test beyond reproduction rights to all exclusive rights, stipulating that limitations or exceptions must be "confined to certain special cases which do not conflict with the normal exploitation of the work and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the right holder." This enables WTO members to enact freedom of panorama provisions—such as allowances for photographing public monuments without consent for personal or documentary use—provided they satisfy these criteria, but imposes no obligation to do so, allowing for national discretion informed by domestic policy priorities like cultural access versus creator incentives.[50] In practice, the absence of prescriptive requirements in both instruments has led to divergent implementations: Berne and TRIPS focus on harmonizing minimum protections rather than exceptions, permitting jurisdictions to balance public interest in documenting visible cultural heritage against copyright exclusivity, often resulting in narrower or broader panorama freedoms based on whether the exception aligns with the three-step test's empirical assessment of market harm. For instance, commercial reproductions of public sculptures may still require licensing in some states if deemed to exploit the original work's market, underscoring the treaties' deference to legislative judgment over uniform mandates.[50]European Union Harmonization Efforts
The European Union's primary framework for exceptions to copyright, including freedom of panorama, is established in Article 5(3)(h) of Directive 2001/29/EC on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society, adopted on 22 May 2001. This provision permits member states to adopt an optional exception allowing the reproduction of works of architecture or sculpture permanently located in public places via photography, film, or other visual means, provided the reproduction is not for commercial purposes beyond private or illustrative uses such as in newspapers or broadcasts. As an optional clause, it does not mandate uniform implementation, resulting in significant variation across EU countries: some, like Germany and Sweden, permit broad commercial uses, while others, such as France and Italy, impose stricter limitations on reproduction and distribution.[3] Efforts to achieve greater harmonization have been debated during EU copyright reforms, particularly in the mid-2010s. In 2015, the European Parliament considered proposals within Julia Reda's report on the implementation of Directive 2001/29/EC that could have restricted freedom of panorama by limiting it to non-commercial uses or requiring author consent for certain reproductions; however, on 9 July 2015, the Parliament rejected these restrictions by a vote of 445 to 65, preserving the existing optional framework and opposing mandatory narrowing.[3] [51] This decision reflected concerns over stifling public documentation of cultural heritage and tourism promotion, prioritizing broader access over uniform creator protections.[52] Subsequent reforms under the Directive (EU) 2019/790 on copyright in the Digital Single Market, adopted on 17 April 2019, did not address freedom of panorama directly, focusing instead on digital licensing, text mining exceptions, and platform liabilities, thereby leaving the disharmonized status intact. Academic analyses highlight that this patchwork implementation creates cross-border uncertainties, such as varying enforceability for Wikimedia Commons uploads from different member states, underscoring the absence of binding EU-wide standards despite calls for a mandatory full panorama exception to facilitate a digital single market.[53] As of 2025, no further legislative pushes for harmonization have succeeded, with member states retaining discretion under the original directive.[5]Recent Global Developments
In December 2024, Germany's Federal Court of Justice (BGH) issued a significant ruling clarifying the scope of freedom of panorama under Section 59 of the German Copyright Act, determining that it applies only to works visible from publicly accessible ground-level locations and excludes images captured via drones or other technical aids that enable views not perceivable by the naked eye from such places.[24] The decision upheld lower court findings in a case involving commercial drone photography of sculptures, emphasizing that panorama freedom is tied to the natural visibility from public vantage points to balance public access with creators' rights, thereby limiting aerial reproductions of protected artworks like those in parks or facades not ground-visible.[54] In Nigeria, the 2022 Copyright Act's narrow exception—confined to audiovisual recordings of public buildings and excluding sculptures or monuments—has prompted ongoing advocacy since 2023 for legislative restoration of broader freedom of panorama provisions, arguing that the restriction hinders cultural documentation and tourism while favoring limited economic interests over public domain access.[31] Proponents cite examples from jurisdictions like the United States and Germany, where expansive FoP supports free expression without undermining incentives for public art creation, and urge amendments to align with Berne Convention flexibilities for developing economies.[31] Italy's legal framework for public domain cultural heritage faced scrutiny in a October 2024 analysis, revealing persistent incompatibilities with EU and international standards that effectively "re-fence" ancient and publicly funded works through stringent reproduction controls, despite nominal panorama allowances under Article 108 of the 1941 Copyright Law.[55] The study documents how municipal fees and licensing requirements for images of sites like Roman monuments deter non-commercial uses, contrasting with broader EU member states' implementations and highlighting risks of overprotection that stifle digital heritage dissemination amid 2023-2024 EU copyright reform debates.[55]Comparative National Laws
European Union Member States
Freedom of panorama in European Union member states is governed by national copyright laws transposing the optional exception under Article 5(3)(h) of Directive 2001/29/EC, which permits limited uses of works for purposes like reporting current events or illustration in teaching but allows broader national implementations for public space reproductions. This results in significant variation, with no mandatory EU-wide harmonization, leading to differences in scope for buildings, sculptures, and other artistic works permanently placed in public view.[3] Northern and central member states tend to provide broader allowances for both non-commercial and commercial reproductions, while southern states impose stricter limits, often excluding commercial uses or requiring the work to be incidental.[5] Germany exemplifies broad freedom of panorama under § 59 of the Copyright Act (Urheberrechtsgesetz), which authorizes the reproduction, distribution, and public communication of images of architectural works and fine arts permanently located in publicly accessible places, applicable even to commercial uses unless the image primarily advertises the work itself.[5] Courts enforce visibility from public vantage points, disallowing aids like ladders or drones that enable non-public views, as affirmed in the Federal Court of Justice's 2024 ruling on street photography.[24] Similar expansive provisions apply in Austria (§ 54 Copyright Act), Finland (Copyright Act § 25a), the Netherlands, and Poland, covering outdoor public sculptures and buildings without rightholder consent.[5] France maintains a narrower exception via Article L122-5(10) of the Intellectual Property Code, permitting reproductions of architectural works and sculptures permanently on public thoroughfares for illustration, but commercial exploitation requires the work not to be the principal subject.[5] This accessory requirement limits standalone commercial images of public art, such as street murals, distinguishing it from broader Nordic implementations.[56] Italy does not recognize a general freedom of panorama in copyright law; Article 108 of the Code of Cultural Heritage and Landscape restricts commercial publication of photographs of protected cultural heritage items, including many public monuments and artworks, to non-profit uses only.[46] This effectively prohibits profit-oriented reproductions without permission, contrasting with pre-2016 restrictions in Belgium, where 2016 amendments under Article XI.190(2/1) of the Economic Law Code expanded coverage to outdoor public sculptures.[5] Spain's Article 35(2) of the Intellectual Property Law allows panorama freedoms for works in public streets, parks, or squares, but judicial interpretations, such as the 2014 Provincial Court of Madrid decision (SAP M 11756/2014), exclude views not accessible from public roads, barring drone or elevated perspectives.[5] Portugal extends limited coverage to public interiors under Article 75(2)(q) of the Copyright Code, while countries like Lithuania lack equivalents for exhibitions or museums.[5] These disparities persist despite calls for EU-level standardization, reflecting national balances between creator rights and public access.[3]North America
In the United States, copyright law provides a limited exception for freedom of panorama under 17 U.S.C. § 120(a), enacted as part of the Architectural Works Copyright Protection Act of 1990. This section specifies that the copyright in a constructed architectural work does not extend to preventing the making, distribution, or public display of pictures, paintings, photographs, or other pictorial representations of the work that are visible from a public place.[57] The provision applies exclusively to architectural works incorporated into buildings or structures and excludes standalone pictorial, graphic, or sculptural features, such as public monuments or murals, which remain protected under general copyright provisions and may necessitate fair use analysis under 17 U.S.C. § 107 for permissible reproduction.[4] [18] Canada's Copyright Act includes provisions permitting the reproduction of artistic works, including sculptures and buildings, that are permanently situated in public places or premises open to the public, particularly in contexts such as reporting or incidental inclusion.[58] However, these exceptions are narrower than in some jurisdictions, often tied to fair dealing purposes like news reporting, criticism, or review, and do not provide an unqualified right for commercial uses of photographs featuring copyrighted public art. In Mexico, Article 148 of the Federal Copyright Law allows for the reproduction, via photography, drawing, or similar processes, of works of visual arts or architecture permanently located in public streets, squares, or places.[59] This exception applies without compensation unless the reproduction is made for lucrative purposes, in which case the author retains a right to participate in the benefits derived.[59] The provision supports non-commercial documentation of public cultural elements while balancing creator interests in commercial exploitation.Asia-Pacific Region
In Australia, the Copyright Act 1968 provides a broad exception permitting the reproduction of artistic works, including sculptures and buildings, situated in public places, extending to commercial uses without infringement.[21] Sections 65 to 68 specifically address incidental filming or photographing of such works in public spaces, reflecting a policy favoring public access over strict creator control. Japan's Copyright Act allows the free reproduction by photograph, film, or other means of artistic works permanently installed in public places, encompassing both architectural and sculptural elements without commercial restrictions, as interpreted under provisions for public display exploitation.[60] China's Copyright Law, revised in 2020, explicitly permits under Article 24(10) the copying, drawing, photographing, or video recording of artistic works located or displayed in outdoor public places, applying to a wide range of visual reproductions irrespective of purpose.[61] This provision supports documentation of public monuments and architecture, though it excludes indoor or non-permanent installations. India's Copyright Act, 1957, Section 52(1)(s) exempts from infringement the reproduction of any artistic work—such as sculptures or engravings—permanently situated in a public place or premises open to the public, allowing photographs and similar depictions without permission.[62] Courts have upheld this for works like murals on public buildings, provided the placement is fixed and accessible.[63] New Zealand's Copyright Act 1994 offers limited freedom of panorama, primarily under section 43 for buildings and models, permitting their inclusion in artistic works like photographs, but excludes standalone sculptures unless incidental under section 66, restricting broader public art reproduction.[64] South Korea's Copyright Act Article 35 authorizes the reproduction of artistic works displayed in public places but confines it to non-profit-making purposes, prohibiting commercial distribution of such images, as clarified in official interpretations.[65] Singapore's Copyright Act 2021 includes exceptions for artistic works in public places, allowing incidental or fair dealing reproductions, with sufficient scope under sections related to public display to cover photographs of buildings and sculptures for various uses.[66] Indonesia lacks an explicit freedom of panorama provision in its Copyright Law No. 28 of 2014, creating uncertainty; Article 14 addresses limitations for public interest but does not clearly permit unrestricted photographic reproduction of public landmarks, often requiring caution for commercial applications. The Philippines' Intellectual Property Code (Republic Act No. 8293) provides no dedicated freedom of panorama exception, treating photographs of public artistic works as potential infringements unless falling under fair use, leading to blacked-out representations in some documentation.[67]| Country | Scope | Commercial Use Allowed? | Key Provision |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | Buildings, sculptures in public | Yes | Copyright Act 1968, ss 65-68 |
| Japan | Permanent artistic works in public | Yes | Copyright Act, public installation rule |
| China | Outdoor artistic works | Yes | Article 24(10) |
| India | Permanent artistic works in public places | Yes | Section 52(1)(s) |
| New Zealand | Buildings only; sculptures incidental | Yes for buildings | Copyright Act 1994, s 43 |
| South Korea | Artistic works in public | No | Article 35(5) |
| Singapore | Artistic works in public | Generally yes | Copyright Act 2021 exceptions |
| Indonesia | Unclear; no explicit | Limited | Law No. 28/2014, Art. 14 |
| Philippines | None explicit | No, unless fair use | RA 8293, no FoP |