Lead Opinion
We consider here whether the application of the licensing requirement of the City of New York (the “City”) to unlicensed street vendors of clothing painted with grafitti violates either these vendors’ rights under the First Amendment or a 1997 permanent injunction entered on consent of the City of New York (the “Bery injunction”) by a district court in Bery v. City of New York, No. 94 Civ. 4253(MGC) (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 30, 1997). Because we hold that New York City’s licensing requirement is a valid, content-neutral restriction on speech and because we do not classify plaintiffs’ merchandise as “paintings” within the meaning of the Bery injunction, we conclude that plaintiffs have not demonstrated a “likelihood of success” on either claim. Accordingly, we vacate the order entered by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Victor Marrero, Judge) granting a preliminary injunction against defendants and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
New York City’s General Vendors Law (“GVL”) regulates the sale of goods and services in public spaces for the purpose of preserving public health, safety, and welfare. New York City Administrative Code § 20-453 — a provision of the GVL — aims to reduce congestion of city streets and sidewalks by requiring any person who “hawks, peddles, sells, leases or offers ... at retail” non-food goods or services to obtain a renewable general vendor’s license from the Department of Consumer Affairs (“DCA”). N.Y.C. Admin. Code §§ 20-452(b); 20-453. Subject to a small number of exceptions, unlicensed vendors may be fined, imprisoned for up to three months, and/or forced to relinquish their merchandise. Id. § 20-472.
This administrative scheme was successfully challenged in the 1990s by vendors of paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures, who asserted, inter alia, that New York City’s licensing requirement unconstitutionally interfered with their First Amendment right to freedom of speech. Considering the matter at the preliminary injunction stage, we held in Bery v. City of New York,
We now consider whether either this Court’s holding in Bery or the Bery injunction itself prevents the City of New York from enforcing its licensing requirements against plaintiffs, who are sidewalk purveyors of clothing painted with graffiti. In the course of resolving these legal questions, we decline the invitation of plaintiffs (and the District Court) to participate in colloquia on such interesting and lofty matters as the definition of “art,” the Platonic form of a “painting,” and whether a urinal can be a sculpture, see Decl. of Lydia Yee ¶ 17. Rather, we focus narrowly on the ruling of the District Court which preliminarily enjoined the City of New York from enforcing its licensing requirements against plaintiffs on the basis that such requirements violate both the First Amendment and the Bery injunction.
We hold, principally, that (1) the sale of clothing painted with graffiti is not necessarily expressive and therefore is not automatically entitled to First Amendment protection; (2) the sale of plaintiffs clothing nonetheless has a predominantly expressive purpose and therefore merits First Amendment protection; (3) New York City’s licensing requirement is a content-neutral restriction on speech that is narrowly tailored to achieve the objective of reducing urban congestion; and (4) the Bery injunction’s reference to “paintings” does not encompass clothing painted with graffiti.
Accordingly, we vacate the District Court’s order granting a preliminary injunction against defendants and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Background
I. New York City’s General Vendors Law
New York City’s General Vendors Law regulates the sale or offering for sale of non-food goods and services in the public spaces
Due to a handful of statutory exemptions, the actual number of vendors legally selling non-food items at any given time exceeds 853. For instance, honorably discharged members of the United States armed forces who are veterans of any war or who served in the armed forces overseas are awarded licenses to vend publicly without being constrained by the license limit. See N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 32 (“Every honorably discharged member of the armed forces of the United States, who is a resident of this state and a veteran of any war, or who shall have served in the armed forces of the United States overseas ... shall [acquire] the right to hawk, peddle, vend and sell goods, wares or merchandise or solicit trade upon the streets [by obtaining a special veteran’s license at no cost] ----”); Bery,
All general vendors, including those who are exempt from New York City’s licensing requirement, must comply with the GVL’s other restrictions concerning the size, location, and placement of vendors’ displays. See N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-452(b). These regulations specify, inter alia, that vendors may not (1) operate on sidewalks less than twelve feet wide, (2) occupy more than eight linear feet parallel to a curb, (3) display their wares within twenty feet of an entrance to any “place of public assembly,” (4) occupy a bus or taxi
A non-exempt vendor — i.e., a non-veteran who sells any non-food goods other than written materials or artwork of the kind specified in the Bery injunction — who attempts to sell his wares in public spaces without a license is subject to civil and criminal penalties. He may be charged with a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of between $250 and $1,000, and/or imprisonment for up to three months, and his wares may be seized and forfeited. See N.Y.C. Admin. Code §§ 20-468, 469, 472.
It is not disputed that the New York City Council (“City Council”) — -which is broadly authorized to enact regulations designed to promote and protect the welfare of New York City residents, see Charter of New York City § 21 (outlining the broad legislative authority of the City Council); see also Fisher Scientific Co. v. City of New York,
the public health, safety and welfare are threatened by the unfettered use of city streets for commercial activity by unlicensed, and therefore illegal, general vendors. Such illicit operations have a pernicious effect on both the tax base and economic viability of the City. Unlicensed general vendors do not pay taxes, often sell stolen, defective or counterfeit merchandise .... The practice of selling their wares ... impedes the flow of pedestrian traffic, caus[es] the overflow of traffic, and, at worst, it creates the potential for tragedy.
Mastrovincenzo,
II. The Bery Case and the Bery Injunction
On June 9, 1994, a group of artists (the “Bery plaintiffs”) brought suit against the City of New York for its refusal to exempt them from the licensing requirement of the GVL. The Bery plaintiffs were characterized first by the district court as “artists who sell their original paintings on public sidewalks and an artists’ advocacy organization,” Bery v. City of New York,
The Bery plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction “prohibiting the enforcement against them of the ... General Vendors Law ... on the grounds that the application of the ordinance to their activities violate[d] their rights to freedom of expression and equal protection of the laws under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution.” Bery,
The Bery Court noted that “[vjisual art is as wide ranging in its depiction of ideas, concepts and emotions as any book, treatise, pamphlet or other writing,” and concluded that the Bery plaintiffs’ artwork
[w]hile [the crafts of the jeweler, the potter and the silversmith] may at times have expressive content, paintings, photographs, prints and sculptures, such as those [the Bery plaintiffs] seek to display and sell in public areas of the City, ahoays communicate some idea or concept to those who view it, and as such are entitled to full First Amendment protection.
Id. at 696 (emphasis added).
Recognizing the inherent line-drawing problems associated with distinguishing among artwork with presumptively expressive content (such as that sold by the Bery plaintiffs), merchandise with potentially expressive content (such as “the crafts of the jeweler, the potter and the silversmith,” id.), and merchandise with no expressive content, the Bery Court offered the following faint consolation to other judges who would be confronted with such matters in the future:
Courts must determine what constitutes expression within the ambit of the First Amendment and what does not. This surely will prove difficult at times, but that difficulty does not warrant placing all visual expression in limbo outside the reach of the First Amendment’s protective arm. Courts have struggled with such issues in the past; that is not to say that decisions are impossible.
Id. While the Bery Court foreclosed the categorical placement of “all visual expression” outside the reach of the First Amendment, it left open the “difficult” question of when the sale of assertedly artistic items constitutes protected speech under the First Amendment.
At a second stage of analysis, the Bery Court applied the First Amendment doctrine that governs content-neutral “time, place, and manner” restrictions on protected speech and held that the Bery plaintiffs could likely demonstrate that New York City’s licensing requirement was not “‘narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest’ ” and did not “ ‘leave[ ] open ample alternative channels for communication.’ ” Id. at 697 (quoting Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
III. Plaintiffs and Their Merchandise
Plaintiffs Christopher Mastrovincenzo and Kevin Santos are “trained freelance artists,” Mastrovincenzo,
Plaintiffs describe their “graffiti style”— alternatively dubbed the “hip-hop” style— as “highly stylized typography, iconography, and pictorial representation ... [using] varying combinations of oil paints, spray paints, markers, and permanent paint pens” that they apply “primarily on hats and other items of clothing.” Appel-lees’ Br. at 3. Plaintiffs do not characterize their merchandise primarily as “clothing,” but rather, as “artwork” on nontraditional canvases. Id. at 4. According to plaintiffs, “[e]ach piece is an individual work of art customized on the spot according to the client’s request, and includes such things as names, characters, and pictures on the hats.” Compl. ¶ 27. Plaintiffs further assert that they “charge different fees for their artwork based solely on the complexity and difficulty of the art they produce [and] do not charge anything for [the] items of clothing [themselves].” Id. ¶ 38.
In 2002, plaintiffs each applied for a vendor’s license from the DCA, but their applications were denied. Plaintiffs nevertheless deliberately proceeded to establish sidewalk displays of their items, offering them for sale in public. On July 20, 2003, Mastrovincenzo was arrested for selling merchandise without a license and his goods were seized and later sold at auction. While the charges stemming from Mastrovincenzo’s first arrest were ultimately dropped, he was arrested for the same offense on September 24, 2003 and allegedly incarcerated for eight hours. Santos was not arrested, but he was repeatedly instructed by New York City police officers to shut down his display. Thereafter, Santos arranged for his merchandise to be sold on commission through licensed vendors “rather than risk arrest.” Mastrovincenzo,
During the summer and fall of 2003, through correspondence and discussion initiated by their respective attorneys, plaintiffs sought the permission of the DCA to sell their merchandise on New York City sidewalks without a license. Those negotiations were unsuccessful, and plaintiffs thereafter filed this suit, seeking to enjoin the City from enforcing § 20-453 against them.
Plaintiffs filed suit on January 20, 2004, alleging that defendants’ refusal to permit them to sell their merchandise on public sidewalks violates (1) their rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, see id. ¶¶ 51-54; (2) the Bery Injunction, see Compl. ¶¶ 48-50; and (3) sections 8 and 11 of Article 1 of the New York State Constitution, see id. ¶¶ 55-56. Concurrent with the filing of their complaint, plaintiffs filed a motion for preliminary injunction.
The District Court granted plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction — barring defendants from enforcing § 20-453 against plaintiffs — in a Decision and Order dated April 7, 2004. The District Court began by observing that “the First Amendment protects the sale of expressive merchandise,” Mastrovincenzo,
[t]he items in the present case are individually produced and hand-painted. They are not merely aesthetically pleasing designs used as a means of selling hats and jackets but rather they are expressive works of art .... Most of the items shown to the Court contain text that, on its own or through its style, is as expressive as any sidewalk calligrapher or Chinese-character painter, apparently neither of whom needs a license from the DCA to produce and sell their wares in the City’s streets.
Id. at 291.
Having found that plaintiffs’ items qualify as “expressive works of art,” the District Court nevertheless conceded that “almost every object can conceivably be interpreted as having some expressiveness,” id. at 292, and that “not everything labeled or hawked as art [should be considered expressive art],” id. at 287. The District Court explained that, in the course of deciding whether the sale of plaintiffs’ merchandise falls “within of the realm of the First Amendment,” it took into account “myriad factors,” id. at 292.
Among other criteria, the Court considers: [1] the individualized creation of the item by the particular artist, [2] the artist’s primary motivation for producing and selling the item, [3] the vendor’s bona tides as an artist, [4] whether the vendor is personally attempting to convey his or her own message, and [5] more generally whether the item appears to contain any elements of expression or communication that objectivelycould be so understood. No one factor can control the outcome — as is the case in connection with many other judicial decisions concerning borderline issues, the criteria fit together to form a matrix. Certainly an item may be sufficiently expressive to fall within the realm of the First Amendment regardless of, for example, the educational background of its creator. At bottom, the purpose of the inquiry is to determine the degree of the item’s expressiveness, which may best be accomplished by examining it in the light of objective considerations.
Id.
Fearful of imposing “a chilling effect on genuine artists whose true calling is art and not commerce,” the District Court held that New York City’s application of its licensing regime to plaintiffs violated their First Amendment rights to free speech. Id.
The District Court added that even if plaintiffs had not successfully challenged New York City’s licensing requirement on First Amendment grounds, they could alternatively have prevailed on their Bery injunction claim. Citing what it described as the “broadly-written” language of the Bery injunction — that defendants City of New York and the DCA may not enforce § 20-453 against “any person who ... sells ... any paintings” — and the fact that the Bery injunction does not define the term “paintings,” the District Court reasoned that “[a] painting does not lose its definition as painting, or generally as art, when it appears on something other than a framed canvas.” Id. at 293.
On April 21, 2004, defendants timely appealed from the District Court’s order granting plaintiffs’ motion for prehminary injunction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) (providing appellate jurisdiction to review orders granting preliminary injunctions).
Discussion
On appeal, defendants argue that the District Court erred by (1) ordering what was a “mandatory” (rather than “prohibitory”) injunction without having conducted the proper “clear or substantial” likelihood-of-success analysis that is required for mandatory injunctions; (2) concluding that plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their First Amendment claim; and (3) determining that plaintiffs’ wares are “paintings” within the meaning of the Bery injunction, which separately limits New York City’s enforcement of § 20-453.
We review a district court’s decision to grant a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion. The District Court abuses its discretion “when (1) its decision rests on an error of law (such as application of the wrong legal principle) or a clearly erroneous factual finding, or (2) its decision — though not necessarily the product of a legal error or a clearly erroneous factual finding — cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.” Zervos
I. Whether the Injunction Is “Mandatory” or “Prohibitory”
Defendants argue that the preliminary injunction requested in this case was mandatory, rather than prohibitory, and insist that the District Court should therefore have applied a more stringent test when evaluating whether to enter a preliminary injunction. See Appellants’ Br. at 11-15.
A district court may enter a prohibitory preliminary injunction staying “government action taken in the public interest pursuant to a statutory or regulatory scheme” only when the moving party has demonstrated that (1) absent injunc-tive relief, he will suffer “irreparable injury,” and (2) there is “a likelihood that he will succeed on the merits of his claim.” Plaza Health Labs., Inc. v. Perales,
The District Court correctly treated plaintiffs’ requested preliminary injunction as prohibitory and stated the proper test for determining whether such an injunction was warranted.
The Court may grant a preliminary injunction to stay government action taken in the public interest pursuant to a statutory scheme when the moving party establishes [1] that it will suffer irreparable harm absent the injunction and [2] that it is likely to succeed on the merits of its claim. [Because] [i]t is well settled that the loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury ... [the relevant issue in this case is] [plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on the merits of their claims.
Mastrovincenzo,
Defendants do not challenge the District Court’s statement of the legal standard for granting prohibitory injunctions; rather, they insist that the requested preliminary injunction in this case was mandatory, rather than prohibitory. See Appellants’ Br. at 13. In particular, defendants draw our attention to language in the Complaint (“[u]nless restrained by [the District] Court, [defendants will continue to enforce the Ordinance against [p]laintiffs,” Appellant’s Br. at 13 (quoting Compl. ¶ 47)) to argue that the licensing requirement is so regularly and consistently enforced that enjoining them from continuing to enforce it would, in effect, affirmatively force the City to change its conduct, thereby warranting the heightened mandatory injunction analysis.
In distinguishing between prohibitory and mandatory injunctions, we have noted that “[t]he typical preliminary injunction is prohibitory and generally seeks only to maintain the status quo pending a trial on the merits. A mandatory injunction, in contrast, is said to alter the status quo by commanding some positive act ... [and] thus alters the traditional formula by requiring that the movant demonstrate a greater likelihood of success.” Tom Do-herty Assocs. v. Soban Entm’t, Inc.,
ORDERED that defendants ... are enjoined from enforcing New York City Administrative Code § 20-453 against Plaintiffs pending the final resolution of this litigation in this Court[.]
Mastrovincenzo,
We are aware that “the distinction between mandatory and prohibitory injunctions is not without ambiguities or critics” and often leads to “distinctions that are moi*e semantie[] than substantive.” Tom Doherty Assocs.,
If, as defendants suggest, the action prohibited in the instant case is so regular and consistent that the injunction must be designated as de facto mandatory, then the same would surely have been true in Bery. Notably, however, the Bery Court did not apply the heightened standard for mandatory injunctions to the injunction sought there. See Bery,
A heightened “substantial likelihood” standard may also be required when the requested injunction (1) would provide the plaintiff with “all the relief that is sought” and (2) could not be undone by a judgment favorable to defendants on the merits at trial. Tom Doherty Assocs.,
In sum, we find no support in our case law for the proposition that an injunction that is prohibitory in form and that promises no severe or irreversible changes to the status quo may be recast as, or transformed into, a mandatory injunction simply by a reference to the predictability and certainty of the action enjoined. We therefore hold that the District Court did not err in evaluating plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction under the test for prohibitory injunctions, and we review the District Court’s order granting that motion accordingly.
II. The First Amendment Basis for the Injunction
At the outset, we underscore that we do not purport to resolve whether plaintiffs’ wares fit within, or can be reconciled with, broader societal definitions of “art,” a famously malleable concept the contours of which are best defined not by courts, but in the proverbial “eye of the beholder.” Rather, in reviewing the District Court’s
We are aware, of course, that objects themselves do not actually communicate— people do. That is, people may, by creating or selling artistic objects, engage in protected speech. See, e.g., Bery,
(A) Whether the sale of plaintiffs’ graffiti-painted clothing is protected speech
For purposes of First Amendment coverage, “the Constitution looks beyond
As noted, we held in Bery that “paintings, photographs, prints and sculptures ... always communicate some idea or concept to those who view it, and as such are entitled to full First Amendment protection.” Bery,
Whatever may be said of Bery’s analytic framework, see, e.g., White v. City of Sparks,
At the outset, we must determine whether the sale of plaintiffs’ goods is presumptively entitled to First Amendment protection, or more precisely, whether the expressive capacity of plaintiffs’ goods is such that we automatically apply First Amendment scrutiny to regulations that restrict their sale or dissemination. In Bery, we made clear that only certain items — “paintings, photographs, prints and sculptures” — automatically trigger First Amendment review because the sale or dissemination of these items “always corn-municate[s] some idea or concept” to viewers. Bery,
The District Court’s examination of plaintiffs’ wares more or less followed this analytical framework. Taken out of context, certain statements by the District Court could be read to suggest that the category of presumptively expressive items extends beyond paintings, photographs, prints and sculptures, see, e.g., id. at 286 (“The Bery court spoke in terms of paintings, photographs, prints and sculp
In reaching its conclusion that plaintiffs’ graffiti clothing is “at least as likely to be understood by some viewers as a Jackson Pollack painting” and just “as expressive as [the works of] any sidewalk calligrapher,” id. at 291, the District Court explicitly took into consideration five factors: (1) whether the items were “individually] creat[ed] ... by the particular artist”; (2) “the artist’s primary motivation for producing ... the item”; (3) “the vendor’s bona fides as an artist;” (4) “whether the vendor is personally attempting to convey his or her own message”; and (5) “whether the item appears to contain any elements of expression or communication that objectively could be so understood,” id. at 292. The District Court explained that “[n]o one factor ... controlled] the outcome,” stressing instead that “the criteria fit together to form a matrix.” Id.
We commend the District Court for seeking, in the difficult circumstances created by our open-ended ruling in Bery, to formulate organizing principles for determining when the sale of goods that are not presumptively expressive-i.e., items other than paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures — should nonetheless be protected under the First Amendment, but we take this opportunity to modify its proposed multi-pronged test to render it consistent with accepted First Amendment principles.
The District Court correctly surmised that while “myriad factors will guide any inquiry into whether a vendor’s wares are sufficiently expressive to merit First Amendment protection,” this inquiry is “best ... accomplished by examining [the items] in the light of objective considerations.” Id. at 292. The District Court incorporated these “objective considerations” into its final and most important factor — namely, whether an item “appears to contain any elements of expression or communication that objectively could be so understood.” Id. While, for the reasons stated below, we cannot embrace the precise wording of the District Court’s final factor — which inquires whether “any elements of expression or communication” are present — we nonetheless agree with the District Court that the most reliable means of determining whether a vendor is primarily engaged in an act of self-expression is not to consult the vendor himself (who will, in most instances, have a strong incentive to emphasize his artistic motivations), but rather to examine the expressive content of the materials being sold.
Were courts to consider (as the District Court suggests) only whether an item could be objectively understood to have any expressive or communicative elements, the protections of the First Amendment might then be expanded to encompass the sale of a broad array of merchandise with only incidental artistic elements, including, for example, playing cards with artistic designs on the back, see People v. Saul,
Fortunately, we need not engage in such interesting and creative, but ultimately absurd, intellectual exercises. We live in the real world, with law enforcement decisions being made by policemen on the beat as well as others who must be able to understand the law to be applied without recourse to principles of aesthetics. We therefore apply a test that is as straightforward as we can devise under the circumstances presented.
Once a court has determined that an item possesses expressive elements, it should then consider whether that item also has a common non-expressive purpose or utility. Because merchandise that clearly has a alternative, non-expressive purpose — such as the recreational, apparel, and transportation goods mentioned above — is more likely to possess only marginally expressive content or to have been minimally embellished for the purpose of avoiding regulation, courts should exercise greater skepticism in designating such items as “expressive merchandise.” The fact that an object serves some utilitarian purpose does not, however, automatically render it non-expressive; rather, upon a finding that the item in question possesses some common non-expressive purpose, a court should then determine whether that non-expressive purpose is dominant or not. Where an object’s dominant purpose is expressive, the vendor of such an object has a stronger claim to protection under the First Amendment; conversely, where an object has a dominant non-expressive purpose, it will be classified as a “mere commercial good[ ],” the sale of which likely falls outside the scope of the First Amendment. Id. at 285.
Although we have not, until now, tried to articulate the importance of identifying a dominant expressive purpose for First Amendment inquiries of this kind, this principle is strongly implied by our decision in Bery. There, we distinguished a small set of presumptively expressive items — such as paintings, photographs, prints and sculpture — from other, potentially expressive items that we characterized as “crafts” — such as those of the jeweler, the potter, and the silversmith. Bery,
Regarding the question of when an item’s expressive purpose should be considered “dominant,” we have confidence that district courts will prove capable of making such determinations in much the same way that we distinguished between categories of goods in Bery, and in the way that courts have dealt on a case-by-case basis with difficult line-drawing problems
Applying the above framework to plaintiffs’ merchandise, we find that plaintiffs’ items (1) could be objectively understood to have expressive or communicative elements but (2) also have several clear non-expressive purposes — namely, shielding the eyes and head from the sun, calming and controlling unruly hair. Accordingly, we proceed to consider whether the expressive elements of plaintiffs’ items may fairly be characterized as dominant.
Based upon our review of the record, we hold that the plaintiffs’ items have a predominantly expressive purpose. Plaintiffs’ works “contain text ... depict public figures such as the President or contain logos or designs.” Id. at 284. Mastrovincenzo’s work includes “decorated baseball caps with such words as ‘Boston,’ ‘Unique,’ or ‘Uptown’ (in a stars and stripes motif) painted across the front.” Id. at 290. Santos’s work includes caps “with words and designs such as ‘Bronx’ painted in army camouflage colors and accompanied by a partial subway map of the Bronx; ... ’1984’ in green and purple on a background of vertical black rectangles and black cloud-shaped splotches; and several representational scenes.” Id. Moreover, we note that “[njeither [plaintiff] sells blank, unadorned hats. Each charges between $10 and $100 per hat ... based on the complexity of the design and effort involved in completing it.” Id. at 284. While plaintiffs’ items clearly have non-expressive uses, we conclude that these non-expressive uses are secondary to the items’ expressive or communicative characteristics.
Our conclusion that plaintiffs’ wares appear, on their face, to serve a predominantly expressive purpose provides a strong indication that plaintiffs are engaged in protected speech, yet it does not end our inquiry. Rather, we also take into account other factors that shed light on how and why an object is being sold or disseminated. While we decline here to set forth an exhaustive list of all possible factors that courts may wish to consider in future circumstances, which may differ in unpredictable ways from the case at bar, we consider: (1) whether an artist’s stated “motivation for producing and selling [an] item” is his desire to communicate ideas,
We note that plaintiffs’ own testimony concerning their motivation for producing and selling their graffiti items confirms our prior conclusion that they are primarily engaged in acts of self-expression. For example, Santos stated that his “work is an expression of the particular idea represented on the work, as well as [his] own upbringing and style as an artist, identifiable as [his] own by the style and techniques used as well as by his signature.” Decl. of Kevin Santos ¶ 14 (emphasis added). Santos added that his “artwork is both an important means of personal expression and [his] primary source of income.” Id. ¶ 21. Along similar lines, Mas-trovincenzo stated that his “overarching ambition is to convey a message in a language that people can understand and relate to, but that has aesthetic qualities that seem to ‘flow.’” Decl. of Christopher Mastrovincenzo ¶ 8 (emphasis added). He added that “he began to display and sell [his] hand-painted hats ... as a means of artistic expression” even though they also represent his “primary form of income.” Id. ¶ 11.
Accordingly, we hold that plaintiffs’ graffiti goods serve a predominantly expressive purpose, and their sale is consequently protected under the First Amendment. Yet the conclusion that plaintiffs’ items are protected is not tantamount to a finding that New York City’s licensing requirement, N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-453, violates plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights. Rather, to reach the latter question, we must consider (1) whether § 20-453 is a content-based or content-neutral regulation, and (2) whether § 20^453, as applied to plaintiffs, can withstand the corresponding First Amendment scrutiny.
(B) Whether New York City’s Licensing Requirement Violates Plaintiffs’ First Amendment Rights
At the heart of our First Amendment jurisprudence lies the concern “that if the government were able ‘to impose content-based burdens on speech,’ it could ‘effectively drive certain ideas or view
regulations of expressive activity that are not based on content. Content-neutral regulations may limit the time, place, or manner of expression — whether oral, written, or symbolized by conduct — even in a public forum, so long as the restrictions are reasonable, are narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.
Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
In this “intermediate scrutiny” context, by “narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest,” id., we do not mean to imply that a regulation must be “ ‘the least restrictive or least intrusive means of [achieving the stated governmental interest],’ ” id. (quoting Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
“Government regulation of expressive activity is content neutral so long as it is justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech.” Hobbs,
The District Court, in reviewing plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims, improperly truncated its analysis, resting its holding almost exclusively on its finding that plaintiffs’ sale of artistic items qualifies as protected speech and paying less attention to the equally important question of whether § 20-453 is a valid “time, place or manner” restriction. Tellingly, the District Court inquired whether plaintiffs’ items “possess sufficiently expressive qualities to qualify for First Amendment protection and thereby become exempt from the Ordinance’s licensing requirement.” Mastro-vincenzo,
The City’s licensing requirement was intended to catch within its net merchants engaged solely in commerce of ready-made goods that clog the sidewalks and compete unfairly with legitimate stores. Applied overbroadly, as Defendants would do, the Ordinance essentially would impose a chilling effect on genuine artists whose true calling is art and not commerce, and whose manifest purpose may be to create expression rather than markets, even if at times some of their work may skirt the line between expressiveness and merchandise. Such an extension of the licensing regime would force artists to confront an undue dilemma: either to quell their creativity or to risk arrest if they believe their work is sufficiently expressive to fall within the protection of the First Amendment. Freedom of expression is designed precisely to bar the government from compelling individuals into that speech-inhibiting choice.
Icl. at 292-93.
Whatever rationale the District Court may have used in reaching its conclusion that § 20-453 is “[a]pplied over-broadly,” we disagree with its conclusion. We begin with the observation that New York City’s licensing requirement is clearly a content-neutral speech restriction because it “serves purposes unrelated to the content of [the regulated] expression,” Hobbs,
The mere fact that New York City differentiates between categories of vendors — that is, vendors of written materials, paintings, photographs, prints and sculptures are exempt from its licensing requirement while other vendors are not— does not suggest that the City’s regulation targets particular messages and favors others. Nor does § 20-453 “confer unbridled discretion on the licensing authority” enabling that authority “to favor some speakers while suppressing others.” White v. City of Sparks,
There can be no doubt that New York City’s avowed objectives in enforcing its licensing requirement, such as reducing sidewalk and street congestion in a city with eight million inhabitants, constitute “significant governmental interests.” Nor have plaintiffs or the District Court denied that a fixed-ceiling licensing requirement represents a “reasonable” means of controlling that congestion. The dispositive issue, therefore, is whether the significant governmental interests that § 20-453 promotes “ ‘would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation/ ” Ward,
We hold that § 20-453, as applied, survives intermediate scrutiny because it a valid “time, place, or manner” restriction that, while perhaps not the least speech-restrictive means available, is narrowly tailored and leaves regulated parties with “ample alternative channels” of communication.
Although, at this time, § 20-453 would prevent plaintiffs from selling their items, they are able to add their names to the license “waiting list” or petition the City Council to raise the number of permits, as the City has seriously considered doing on at least one occasion. See Tr. of Hearing on Alternatives to the Licensing of Artists Before the City Council Comm, on Consumer Affairs, Nov. 23, 1993, at 16-24 (discussing, but declining to adopt alternatives to New York City’s licensing scheme, such as San Francisco’s repeat-lottery system). Section 20-453 does not operate as
Finally, § 20-453 leaves open “ample alternative channels” of communication. The requirement that “ample alternative channels” exist does not imply that alternative channels must be perfect substitutes for those channels denied to plaintiffs by the regulation at hand; indeed, were we to interpret the requirement in this way, no alternative channels could ever be deemed “ample.” See Connection Distrib. Co. v. Reno,
Although we suggested in Bery that “[t]he sidewalks of the City must be available for [artists] to reach their public audience,” Bery,
In addition to these options, the record reveals that plaintiffs have numerous alternative channels through which to share their art with the public. While Mastro-vincenzo stated that his inability to obtain a license for street-side sale of his graffiti clothing prevents him from “selling [his] artwork as often as [he] would like to and in the more desirable locations,” id. ¶ 25, he nonetheless acknowledged that he possesses opportunities to “display and sell [his] work at galleries, clubs and trade shows,” in “freelance jobs for both individual and corporate clients,” as well as on “themed murals.” Decl. of Christopher Mastrovincenzo ¶ 17. In the past, Mastro-vincenzo has also been commissioned to paint business cards, storefronts, and commercial signs. Id. ¶ 5.
Likewise, Kevin Santos has already taken advantage of opportunities to display his work in “a number of different venues.” Decl of Kevin Santos ¶¶8. These include (1) art “show[s] and exhibition[s]” some of which allow his work to remain on “permanent display,” (2) “a number of galleries in New York City,” (3) documentary films, and (4) displays at the New York Historical Society. Decl. of Kevin Santos
Because the First Amendment does not require that New York City permit plaintiffs to sell their work directly to the public in an ideal venue, and because we conclude that the alternative avenues of communication available to plaintiffs, taken together, are more than “ample,” we hold that § 20-453 satisfies intermediate scrutiny and does not violate plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights.
We are not bound here by our conclusion in Bery that “[t]he license requirement as it relates to [the Bery plaintiffs], which effectively bars them from displaying or selling their art on the streets, is too sweeping to pass constitutional muster.” Bery,
The types of wares at issue here, whose dominant purpose is not clearly expressive, present line-drawing questions markedly distinct from the more-easily-classified “paintings, photographs, prints and/or sculpture” at issue in Bery, and we are therefore persuaded that the “least restrictive or least intrusive means of [achieving the stated governmental interest],” id. (internal quotation marks omitted), in this context is likely to be more burdensome than it would be with respect to the traditional art forms at issue in Bery. For this reason, and in light of information in the record concerning alternative avenues of communication available to these specific plaintiffs, we believe that notwithstanding Bery, § 20-453 is sufficiently narrowly tailored to satisfy intermediate scrutiny here.
For the reasons stated above, we reverse the District Court’s holding that plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their First Amendment claim.
III. The Bery Injunction
The District Court concluded, as an adequate and independent basis for its holding, that plaintiffs would also likely succeed on their Bery injunction claim. In short, the District Court held that plaintiffs’ hats, jackets, and other clothing are “paintings” within the meaning of the Bery injunction, which was the product of a settlement in which the City of New York agreed not to enforce its licensing requirement against “any person who hawks, peddles, sells, leases or offers to sell or lease, at retail, any paintings, photographs, prints and/or sculpture ... in a public space,” Permanent Injunction on Consent dated Oct. 21, 1997, Bery v. City of Neio York, No. 94 Civ. 4253(MGC) (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 30, 1997) (emphasis added). According to the District Court, plaintiffs’ items are properly considered “paintings” because “[t]he original application of pigment to an article of clothing done for expressive reasons by an artist is ... a painting,” and “[a] painting does not lose its definition as painting ... when it appears on
Because the Bery injunction was a court-approved agreement, and because we construe such agreements according to the general interpretive principles of contract law, see, e.g. Tourangeau v. Uniroyal, Inc.,
Plaintiffs draw our attention to a dictionary definition of the noun “painting” as “something produced through the process or art of painting.” See Appellees’ Br. at 17 (quoting Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged 1621 (2002)). In turn, plaintiffs define the verb “to paint” as being: “to color all or part of (a surface) by or as if by applying a pigment.” Id. The District Court’s interpretation of the term “painting” was similarly broad, suggesting that any item to which pigment had been applied falls within the meaning of the word “painting.” See Mastrovincenzo,
We hold that the term “paintings” as used in the Bery injunction does not include baseball caps, jackets, and other articles of clothing that have been artistically decorated with paints and markers. While such items may properly be considered “expressive merchandise,” see Discussion, 11(A), ante, and may fit within their sellers’ o%m broad definition of “paintings,” we cannot agree with the District Court that a court-approved settlement affording First Amendment protection to “paintings, photographs, prints and/or sculpture” encompasses clothing — or indeed, any item— that has been embellished by the application of pigment.
At the level of plain meaning and normal usage, we disagree that the term “paintings” — or the phrase “any paintings,” for that matter
Whatever ambiguity may remain after examining the plain meaning, normal usage, and structure of the Bery injunction is definitively resolved by considering the circumstances surrounding its formulation. To adopt plaintiffs’ broad interpretation of the term “painting” (anything to which pigment has been applied) would be to suppose that the City of New York, in signing the Bevy injunction, meant to authorize the unlicensed sidewalk sale of an almost unlimited array of painted goods.
Looking to the facts of the Bery case itself provides further confirmation that the Bevy injunction did not understand or intend “paintings” to encompass the full spectrum of painted goods. The complaint filed by the Bevy plaintiffs refers to “Plaintiff Max Moran” as a “trained fine artist” who has “been harassed and issued a summons for exhibiting his paintings without a license.” Bery Compl. ¶ 8. In describing Mr. Moran’s works in further detail, the Complaint states that “Central Park was ‘the focus’ of Mr. Moran’s painting” and
Finally, we note that in the course of its constitutional discussion, the District Court itself assumed without hesitation that plaintiffs’ items do not qualify as “paintings,” at least as that term was understood by the Bery court. See Mastro-vincenzo,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the District Court erred by finding that plaintiffs’ items are covered by the Bery injunction.
Conclusion
In sum, we hold that:
(1) the sale of clothing painted with graffiti is not necessarily expressive and therefore is not automatically entitled to First Amendment protection;
(2) the sale of plaintiffs clothing nonetheless has a predominantly expressive purpose and therefore merits First Amendment protection;
(3) New York City’s licensing requirement is a content-neutral restriction on speech that is narrowly tailored to achieve the objective of reducing urban congestion; and
(4) the Bery injunction’s reference to “paintings” does not encompass clothing painted with graffiti.
Accordingly, we vacate the order of the District Court preliminarily enjoining de
Notes
. For purposes of the GVL, a “public space” is defined as "[a]ll publicly owned property between the property lines on a street as such property lines are shown on the City Record including but not limited to a park, plaza, roadway, shoulder, tree space, sidewalk or parking space between such property lines. It shall also include, but not be limited to, publicly owned or leased land, buildings, piers, wharfs, stadiums and terminals.” N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-452(d).
. New York City Administrative Code § 20-453 provides, in full, that
[i]t shall be unlawful for any individual to act as a general vendor without having first obtained a license in accordance with the provisions of this subchapter, except that it shall be lawful for a general vendor who hawks, peddles, sells or offers to sell, at retail, only newspapers, periodicals, books, pamphlets or other similar written matter, but no other items required to be licensed by any other provision of this code, to vend such without obtaining a license therefor.
. The District Court noted in April 2004 that “[t]he waiting list for a general vendor's license has approximately 8000 names.'' Mas-trovincenzo,
. The term "expressive merchandise” was used by the Bery Court as a kind of shorthand for the larger First Amendment question presented in that case — namely, whether the sale or dissemination of certain merchandise was predominantly expressive. See Bery v. City of New York, 97 F.3d 689, 695 (2d Cir.1996) (recognizing that "[t]he sale of protected materials is also protected”).
. Both plaintiffs have formal training in the arts: Mastrovincenzo earned a degree in architecture, with a minor in graphic design and presentation, from the Pratt Institute of Technology in 2002; Santos studied communications, film and fine arts at Fordham University. Mastrovincenzo,
. Although the District Court, like the Bery Court, framed its inquiry solely in terms of whether plaintiffs' graffiti clothing constitutes "expressive merchandise,” see Mastrovincen-zo,
. On the contrary, the District Court went so far as to suggest that "[t]he original application of pigment to an article of clothing done for expressive reasons by an artist is no less a painting — in name, at least — than anything now exhibited on the walls of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.” Mastrovincenzo,
. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) provides, in relevant part, that "the court of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from ... interlocutory orders of the district courts of the United States ... granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions .... ”
. In determining whether the sale of plaintiffs' items constitutes protected speech for First Amendment purposes, the District Court briefly considered, but declined to apply, the First Amendment doctrine of expressive conduct. See, e.g., Spence v. Washington,
We need not apply the doctrine of expressive conduct here because plaintiffs' conduct — namely, the sale and dissemination of their artistic objects — does not itself contain any expressive content. That is, plaintiffs' claims to First Amendment protection are not predicated on the theory that the act of distributing their artistic objects itself conveys a separate “particularized message” likely to be understood by an audience. Rather, plaintiffs assert that by disseminating to the public objects that they have invested with meaning through their artistry they are communicating directly through those objects — in short, that they are engaging in protected speech.
. Our decision in Bery apparently remains at the forefront of the law concerning First Amendment protection for the sale of "expressive merchandise.” See, e.g., ETW Corp. v. Jireh Publ’g, Inc.,
. It is said that during the Bauhaus period, painter Josef Albers would leave a pile of newspapers on a table in his classroom and instruct his students to turn the papers into works of art before he returned in one hour. There would always be one student who, ignoring his classmates’ meticulous creations, would simply fold the paper and prop it up like a tent. Albers would then seize upon the tent and exclaim, "[T]his malíes use of the soul of paper. Paper can fold without breaking. Paper has tensile strength, and a vast area can be supported by these two fine
Plaintiffs essentially ask us to import an Albersian definition of "art" into the First Amendment context. For the reasons set forth in text, we decline to do so.
. For instance, in the landmark commercial speech case of Valentine v. Chrestensen,
We expect that courts will likewise be able to identify cases where expressive elements have merely been affixed to items with a dominant non-expressive purpose for the purpose of evading regulation.
. Here, plaintiffs' testimony concerning their motivations accord with our conclusions drawn from the objective characteristics of the merchandise. We do not suggest, however, that if plaintiffs relied solely on their own testimony concerning whether they were engaged in protected speech, such evidence would have been sufficient to trigger First Amendment review where the objective evidence in the record suggested a contrary conclusion. In fact, as we noted earlier, an objective assessment of the characteristics of the merchandise itself will generally be the most reliable evidence of whether an individual merchant is engaged in protected speech.
. The District Court’s third factor could easily be used to deprive First Amendment protection to artwork otherwise considered indisputably expressive. For example, a painting sold on a sidewalk of New York City that was painted by the proverbial "amateur” who lacked any sort of recognizable "bona fides,” would fare less well under the District Court’s "myriad factors” test than would the identical artwork of a more "credentialed” artist.
. Under the strict-scrutiny test (which we do not apply in the instant case) "a content-based restriction may be upheld if the restriction serves a compelling governmental interest, is necessary to serve the asserted [compelling] interest, is precisely tailored to serve that interest, and is the least restrictive means readily available for that purpose.” Hobbs,
. In Bery, we considered § 20-453 a "time, place or manner" restriction, but in dicta expressed some doubt as to whether the licensing requirement, as then formulated, was content-neutral given the City’s application of the requirement to vendors of visual art but not to vendors of written materials. Bery,
. Our narrow-tailoring inquiry requires us "to apply principles of First Amendment jurisprudence to the specific facts of this case,” and therefore we treat this issue as a mixed question of law and fact that we may resolve on appeal. Bay Area Peace Navy v. United States,
. Upon discovering that he could not directly sell items to the public without a license, Santos "arranged for licensed vendors to sell his completed works on commission.” Mas-trovincenzo,
. In addition, we take judicial notice, pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b), of the obvious fact that the Internet may provide an alternative outlet for the sale of plaintiffs’ merchandise.
. Our colleague writing separately sets forth two similarly broad definitions of “painting,” the first of which encompasses any "representation on a surface executed in paint or col-ours” while the second includes any “work produced” through "[t]he process, art, or occupation of coating surfaces with paint.” Post, at [107] (quoting the Oxford English Dictionary and American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language). While our colleague concedes that "the word 'painting' hardly applies to 'any item to which pigment has been applied,' " post at [107] (quoting Majority Op. at [103]), the definitions upon which he relies admit of no clear limiting principle. Consequently, our colleague's interpretation of the Bery injunction appears either to encompass any "surface” to which paint has been applied or to leave unclear the distinction between paintings and non-paintings. Because we cannot agree that the parties intended to adopt such an expansive or imprecise definition in the text of the injunction, we decline to interpret the term in such a broad, open-ended manner.
. We reject the position of plaintiffs, see Ap-pellees’ Br. at 16-17, that we ought to interpret the use of "any” to mean "any items to which paint is applied.” Rather, we interpret the term "any” to mean that there can be no discretionary distinctions among those items that otherwise fall within the Bery injunction’s definition of "painting.” For example, the
. For instance, plaintiffs’ interpretation, taken to its logical extent, would support the unlicensed sale of new BMW "art cars” or "rolling canvases” painted by commissioned artists, see Decl. of Henry Chalfant ¶ 20 [A 178], or even ordinary vehicles with factory paint jobs. We cannot in good faith glean this sort of an outcome from the Bery injunction.
. Assuming arguendo that the Bery plaintiffs actually intended "paintings” to include all objects to which paint has been applied, they did not include any language in the Bery injunction itself specifying that this was their understanding. Because we hold that the plain meaning, normal use, structure, and circumstances surrounding the creation of the Bery injunction suggest that "paintings” was understood to have a narrower meaning, we are persuaded that the Bery plaintiffs bore the burden of providing such a "clarification” if indeed they desired a broader scope to the injunction.
. Robert Beiy is described in the Complaint has having sold "mixed media paintings,” see Beiy Compl. ¶ 39, which are paintings that use "two or more media in a single work of art, for example, the combining of watercolor and gouache.” Harper Collins Dictionary of Art Terms and Techniques (2d ed.1969). While the term "mixed media paintings” does not explicitly specify a traditional canvas, it clearly does not refer to mere painted goods.
. Plaintiffs have also raised claims under Article 1 of the New York State Constitution. Due to the nature of its decision, the District Court did not reach these arguments. Mas-trovincenzo,
Concurrence in Part
SACK, Circuit Judge,
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I.
I agree with the principal conclusions reached by the majority in Judge Ca-branes’s thoughtful and thorough opinion resolving this difficult appeal. In particular:
First, I agree with the opinion’s approach to analyzing whether the sale by the plaintiffs of their works is entitled to First Amendment protection by asking, inter alia, whether such a sale has a “dominant expressive purpose.” Ante,
I thus also agree with the panel’s decision to “decline here to set forth an exhaustive list of all possible factors that courts may wish to consider in future circumstances, which may differ in unpredictable ways from the case at bar.” Ante,
Second, I agree, for reasons adverted to by the majority, that the plaintiffs’ sale of their works has a dominant expressive purpose and is therefore entitled to full First Amendment protection.
Third, I agree with the panel majority that although the sale of the plaintiffs’ works is thus protected by the First Amendment, it is, like the protected dissemination of other speech, subject to non-content based, reasonable “time, place and manner” restrictions. See ante,
II.
I disagree not with the majority’s First Amendment analysis, then, but only with (1) its conclusions regarding the impact of the Bery Injunction, see Bery v. City of New York,
A.
Under the Bery Injunction, the Bery defendants, including the City, the Department of Consumer Affairs, and the Police Department, are “permanently enjoined from enforcing Administrative Code § 20-453 [the general vendor licensing requirement] against any person who hawks, peddles, sells, leases or offers to sell or lease, at retail, any paintings, photographs, prints and/or sculpture, either exclusively or in conjunction with newspapers, periodicals, books, pamphlets, or other similar written matter, in a public space.” Bery Injunction, at 2. The preliminary question for us is whether, under those terms, the plaintiffs must be allowed to sell their works on city sidewalks and streets without a license. Unlike the majority, I think the answer is in the affirmative.
I agree with the majority that the word “painting” hardly applies to “any item to which pigment had been applied,” ante,
I am generally reticent to invoke dictionary definitions, at least in contexts perhaps unforeseen by their writers, but I note that the definition of the verb “to paint” in the Oxford English Dictionary is “[t]o represent (an object, scene, etc.) or portray (a person or thing) on a surface, using paint or other colouring matter.” Oxford English Dictionary (Draft Revision, Mar. 2005), available at http://dictio-nary.oed.com (last visited Dec. 13, 2005).
Indeed, there are of course famous paintings on ceilings and walls of buildings that are indisputably great works of “art” I do not think, and I doubt the majority’s “dominant expressive purpose” test (with which I am in agreement) requires, that the fact that these works were painted on parts of buildings that also serve the utilitarian purposes of holding up a roof or keeping out the elements would disqualify them as “paintings” under the Bery Injunction (assuming for these purposes that
Moreover, I see no persuasive reason for the word “painting,” as used in the Bery Injunction, to be interpreted narrowly. The parties did not indicate any such limiting definition in the Injunction. Although the Bery opinion does not precisely define such terms as “paintings,” “photographs,” “prints,” or “sculptures,” see
B.
I also disagree with the majority’s decision, given the current posture of the case, that the ordinance is a reasonable time, place or manner restriction as a matter of law. Instead, I think the question of its reasonableness should be presented to the district court on remand. As Judge Ca-branes’s opinion makes clear, reasonable “time, place and manner” restrictions are constitutionally permissible with respect to expression generally, no matter how clearly protected, profound, or unpopular. A painstaking analysis of such restrictions is therefore necessary to guarantee that they do not impinge unacceptably on free expression.
The majority criticizes the district court for having “truncated its analysis, resting its holding almost exclusively on its finding that plaintiffs’ items qualify as protected speech and paying less attention to the equally important question of whether § 20-453 is a valid ‘time, place or manner’ restriction.” Ante,
We decided in Bery,
I would thus conclude that the constitutional consequences of the “reasonableness” determination require that the remand include an instruction to the district court to conduct the fact-intensive inquiry necessary to determine the reasonableness of the ordinance’s restrictions under these circumstances. Cf. Johnson v. California,
III.
Finally, I note that I do not necessarily disagree with the ultimate conclusion of the majority’s decision — that the First Amendment does not entitle the plaintiffs to sell their works without a license on New York City sidewalks and streets. I
I would remand the case to the district court to permit the City to seek relief there from, or clarification of, the scope of the sweeping consent injunction, which may have been entered into improvidently. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b). In the course of that proceeding, it would be the City’s burden to demonstrate that the ordinance was a valid time, place or manner restriction, which it might be able to carry. But for now, I see no reason why “painting” does not include the plaintiffs’ paintings, nor can I comfortably conclude, on the present record, that the ordinance is constitutional as applied to the dissemination of the plaintiffs’ works.
For those reasons and to that extent, I respectfully dissent.
. Although our opinion in Bery v. City of New York,
. One of the definitions given by Webster’s Third New International Dictionary for the verb "paint” is "to make or produce (as a picture, sketch, design) in lines and colors on a surface (as a canvas or wall) by brushing on or similarly applying pigments,” thus referring to "canvas” as an example of a surface on which a painting may be executed. Id., available at http://mwu.eb.com (last visited Dec. 13, 2005).
. To be sure, experts might, in some circumstances, refer to such a painting as a ''fresco.” But the Oxford English Dictionary tells us that a fresco is ''[a] kind of painting executed in water-colour on a wall, ceiling, etc. of which the mortar or plaster is not quite dry, so that the colours sink in and become more durable. Orig. in phrase (to paint) in fresco.” Oxford English Dictionary (2d ed.1989), available at http:Hdictionary.oed.com (last visited Dec. 13, 2005) (first emphasis added; other emphasis in original).
. Interestingly, perhaps, it would appear that Robert Bery, the lead plaintiff in the case, creates multimedia works that combine painting, photography, video, and computer graphics — including early works involving oil and silver emulsion on wood and more recent works using chromium with acrylic on transparencies, see http:llwww.beryarts.com (last visited Dec. 13, 2005). I would think it likely that such works would qualify as "paintings” under the Bery Injunction even though they are not representations on canvas or paper. Maybe the City defendants hoped that the terms of the Injunction would be understood narrowly, but there is no reason to think that the artists who effectively won the case would have had in mind a narrow conception of "painting” when they entered into it.
. According to the Bery court:
[T]o tell [the artists] that they are free to sell their work in galleries is no remedy for them. They might not be at a point in their careers in which they are interested in reaching the public that attends exhibits at art galleries — if, indeed, they could get their works accepted for showing. Appellants are interested in attracting and communicating with the man or woman on the street who may never have been to a gallery and indeed who might never have thought before of possessing a piece of art until induced to do so on seeing appellants’ works. The sidewalks of the City must be available for appellants to reach their public audience.
Bery,
. I understand that were the case to be returned to the district court for it to address these issues, we would likely be required to review the district court’s decision de novo. See Bery v. City of New York,
.If the case were being remanded to the district court on the "reasonableness” issue, perhaps it would be the better course also to ask the district court to determine in the first instance whether the dissemination of the plaintiffs works is for a dominant expressive purpose. Under the circumstances, though, the issue is academic.
