File:Tom Lee Memorial.jpg
Tom_Lee_Memorial.jpg (300 × 226 pixels, file size: 15 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary
[edit]Description |
Tom Lee Memorial in the Tom Lee Park in Memphis, Tennessee. Sculptor: www.davidalanclark.com (Jan. 2008). Photo made by: Thomas R Machnitzki — http://nutbush.machnitzki.com |
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Source |
Self-made photo |
Article | |
Portion used |
Incomplete view of the sculpture from the south. |
Low resolution? |
Image is 300 x 226 pixel @ 100 DPI. At this quality it is not possible to use the image for any commercial purpose. |
Purpose of use |
Purpose of the image is to depict Tom Lee and his effort to rescue 32 from the sinking steamship M.E. Norman, which sank in 1925. The sculpture illustrates Tom Lee saving a survivor from the Mississippi River. Tom Lee Park in Memphis, Tennessee, not far from the site of the sinking, is named for the hero. |
Replaceable? |
The sculpture depicts the most dramatic moment in the history of both Tom Lee and the M.E. Norman, the ship sank and Tom Lee became a hero. Tom Lee died in 1952. It is not possible to make a new, free picture of the subject nor the incident. |
Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of Tom Lee Park//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tom_Lee_Memorial.jpgtrue |
Description |
Tom Lee Memorial in the Tom Lee Park in Memphis, Tennessee. Sculptor: www.davidalanclark.com (Jan. 2008). Photo made by: Thomas R Machnitzki — http://nutbush.machnitzki.com |
---|---|
Source |
Self-made photo |
Article | |
Portion used |
Incomplete view of the sculpture from the south. |
Low resolution? |
Image is 300 x 226 pixel @ 100 DPI. At this quality it is not possible to use the image for any commercial purpose. |
Purpose of use |
Purpose of the image is to depict the most dramatic event of the steamship M.E. Norman. It sank in 1925 and 32 were rescued by Tom Lee. The sculpture illustrates Tom Lee saving a survivor from the Mississippi River. Tom Lee Park in Memphis, Tennessee, not far from the site of the sinking, is named for the hero. |
Replaceable? |
The sculpture depicts the most dramatic moment in the history of both Tom Lee and the M.E. Norman, the ship sank and Tom Lee became a hero. Tom Lee died in 1952. It is not possible to make a new, free picture of the subject nor the incident. |
Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of M.E. Norman//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tom_Lee_Memorial.jpgtrue |
Licensing
[edit]Although this image is freely-licensed (Creative Commons), this can only be used under the fair-use provisions on Wikipedia, because it is a photograph of a copyrighted artistic work (a sculpture) situated in the United States which does not have freedom of panorama exceptions for copyrighted public art. The photographer authorizes use of the photo under version 1.2 or any later version of the GFDL, but the sculpture is copyrighted by its author, sculptor David Alan Clark (it was created in 2006).
This image is a derivative work of separately copyrighted work. It is, therefore, treated on Wikipedia as non-free and each use within an article must satisfy the non-free content criteria. Re-users of this content, in addition to needing a fair use or similar legal claim to use the depiction of the copyrighted work, must also respect the rights of the derivative author by complying with the following terms:
If this image is of an artwork on display in a public location in a jurisdiction that permits freedom of panorama (such as the UK), then please remove {{Photo of art}} tag, placing the photographer's 'free' license in this section of the media description page The original work shown is under the following license:
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Do not copy this file to Wikimedia Commons. The subject of this image is still protected by copyright. Commons does not accept 'fair-use' images. |
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 07:02, 27 April 2008 | 300 × 226 (15 KB) | Melesse (talk | contribs) | fair use reduce |
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File usage
The following 2 pages use this file: