Yoghurt store mural of Brisbane skyline at centre of AI art legal dispute
An illustrator claims one of her original works was used as a mural in the frozen yoghurt shop without her permission, before being replaced with an AI version.
An Australian artist has accused a frozen yoghurt store on Brisbane’s north side of using artificial intelligence to rip off one of her works depicting the city’s skyline, months after demanding the removal of an original piece, displayed without her permission or payment.
Author and illustrator Megan McKean said she discovered the mural featuring an original artwork from her 2018 Bristopia exhibition inside the newly opened Yogii & Yoii store on Racecourse Road in Ascot in January.
She said the business used the design without her permission or payment, and as a result, she requested the mural be removed and the business owners pay a retroactive licensing fee for the unauthorised use of her art.
“The business stated that: ‘the mural artwork was supplied and installed by an independent contractor, and we were not aware at the time that the illustration was subject to copyright restrictions or required separate licensing’,” McKean told this masthead.
Yogii & Yoii continued that they had not intended to reproduce or use her artwork without permission, and told McKean that immediate steps to remove the mural were taken.
But in a post to social media on Thursday, McKean said the business had replaced her Bristopia work, which ran for six months at the Museum of Brisbane, with a generative AI reproduction, and were continuing to use her art without permission or payment.
“I had been viewing their Instagram periodically, to check for the removal of the first mural, and saw the replacement artwork in the background of videos — which still looked alarmingly similar,” she said.
“I had friends in Brisbane visit the premises to take photographs of the mural, which showed a direct correlation to my work, along with errors that can only be attributed to AI.”
McKean engaged a legal firm specialising in intellectual property for the creative arts after discovering the first mural on display.
While awaiting Yogii & Yoii’s response to her formal letter of demand, she discovered the second mural, and sent another notice of copyright infringement.
“We again demanded the removal and destruction of the mural, the contact information of the supplier, and increased the damages owing,” she said.
McKean said she has not received a response from the business, and can no longer afford to pursue them legally.
“This is sadly all too common situation for many artists – and it feels like it will only get worse as AI art becomes more prevalent and accessible,” she said.
“My intention by posting on Instagram this week was to raise awareness of how common it can be; I hoped
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