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Tyrrell Winston v. NBA: When Artistic Style Becomes Copyright
Season 1 · Episode 247

Tyrrell Winston v. NBA: When Artistic Style Becomes Copyright

The Briefing by Weintraub Tobin

November 7, 202515m 23s

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Show Notes

When artistic identity meets corporate branding, where does copyright law draw the line?
 
In a new episode of The Briefing, Scott Hervey and Richard Buckley discuss the lawsuit filed by artist Tyrrell Winston against the New Orleans Pelicans.
Winston—whose distinctive sculptures of deflated basketballs arranged in grids have been exhibited worldwide and licensed by brands like Nike, Adidas, and even NBA teams—claims the Pelicans copied his signature style in a social media campaign.

His lawsuit raises a major question for artists, brands, and IP lawyers alike: Can a distinctive artistic style be protected under copyright law?
The conversation compares Winston’s claim to the “vibe copyright” case (Sydney Nicole v. Alyssa Sheil) and examines whether courts are expanding protection from expression into concepts and aesthetics.
Watch this episode on YouTube.