Works such as sculpture, painting, music, and choreography are protected for the life of the creator plus 50 years, although the US and several other countries have extended this to 70 years.
Art history if you are good at history and Fine art if you can draw. Most people enjoy fine art more.
Egypt, egypt valued art and fine workmanship.
Unless other arrangements have been made (such as a work made for hire agreement), the creator of the work is automatically the copyright holder. Transfer of the physical item does not transfer the rights: if you buy my painting, I am still the copyright holder.
Fine Art Enterprises was created in 1984.
License art? If you mean a copyright, you have that for anything you make. If you mean to sign a contract and sell copyright licenses, you have to be 18, or your parents have to sign the agreement.
It depends on the type of material. Books have notifications on their copyright pages; movies include notifications in the credits; fine art may not be marked at all.
Yes; creation of a derivative work is one of the exclusive rights of the copyright holder.
If the painting is still protected by copyright, you would need a license to create a derivative work.
Works are automatically protected once they are fixed, but you can register your art with the copyright office if you wish.
That would depend on the terms of the commission contract. If the artwork was done as "work-for-hire" the copyright would reside with the customer. If there is no work-for-hire provision the rights would then belong to the artist.
In a galery. Or online at a fine art print retailer like www.meisterdrucke.uk But you can do fine art by yourself to. Just try it!
Art history if you are good at history and Fine art if you can draw. Most people enjoy fine art more.
Egypt, egypt valued art and fine workmanship.
Unless other arrangements have been made (such as a work made for hire agreement), the creator of the work is automatically the copyright holder. Transfer of the physical item does not transfer the rights: if you buy my painting, I am still the copyright holder.
As with most legal questions the answer is both yes and no. Most "clip art" (if you read the fine print) is "free for personal use" but there are restrictions on redistribution. This is because the proper copyright clearances weren't obtained before publication. In all cases "Caveat Emptor" should apply when dealing with "clip art"
Sure, as a work of art.
Insurance on fine art can be acquired as regular home or auto insurance. On the Fine Art Insurance website, there is an abundance of information on insuring fine art. One can get a quote online for their art pieces as well.