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Florida Artist Claims Apple Stole His Style

Romero Britto says some art in an Apple marketing campaign looks too much like his.

A Miami artist whose work has been used in Coca-Cola, Disney and Mattel advertisements is suing Apple, claiming the California-based technology giant copied his signature bold bright colors and cartoony figures in a recent marketing campaign.

The lawsuit, filed on April 6 in the Southern District of Florida, claims Apple and its design firm mirrored Brazilian-born Romero Britto’s style in artwork used in Apple’s “Start Something New” campaign.

Apple’s work features a rainbow-colored hand emitting multicolor wisps of smoke on its website and at retail locations across the world, according to the lawsuit.

“I came across them in Las Vegas in late January, and then in China three weeks later,” said Britto’s lawyer, Robert Zarco.

The suit demands Apple and the design firm Craig & Karl immediately cease using the images.

Britto’s “distinctive style of artwork has become so famous and pervasive as to constitute a distinctive trade dress that identifies the highly-coveted lifestyle brand,” the complaint said.

A monetary demand has yet to be filed, but “the amount is going to be in the millions of dollars,” Zarco added.

A spokesman for Apple and Craig & Karl — designers Craig Redman of New York and Karl Maier of London — couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

Britto’s vivid work is featured across Miami, where it has made its way onto tourist and lifestyle goods that have been disbursed across the world. His art has been printed on the Florida lottery tickets, Barbie dolls, and baby strollers.

Britto was born in 1963 in the Pernambuco region of Brazil and later immigrated to Miami with his family. He opened his main gallery on Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road in 1993 as the outdoor mall was on the verge of becoming a worldwide tourist attraction.

The case in the Southern District of Florida is Britto Central, Inc. v. Redman et al, case number 1:15-cv-21320

(Reporting by Zachary Fagenson; Editing by David Adams)

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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