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Unfinished Work

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Unfinished work



 
 
An unfinished work is a creative work
Creative work

A creative work is a tangible manifestation of creative effort such as literature, music, paintings, and software. Creative works have in common a degree of arbitrariness, such that it is improbable that two people would independently create the same work....
 that has not been finished. Its creator might have chosen never to finish it, or have been prevented by circumstances outside of his or her control (including death). Such pieces are often the subject of speculation as to what the finished piece would have been like; sometimes they are finished by others and released posthumously
List of works published posthumously

The following is a list of works that were published, performed or distributed posthumously ....
.






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Cooper, Oliver Cromwell
An unfinished work is a creative work
Creative work

A creative work is a tangible manifestation of creative effort such as literature, music, paintings, and software. Creative works have in common a degree of arbitrariness, such that it is improbable that two people would independently create the same work....
 that has not been finished. Its creator might have chosen never to finish it, or have been prevented by circumstances outside of his or her control (including death). Such pieces are often the subject of speculation as to what the finished piece would have been like; sometimes they are finished by others and released posthumously
List of works published posthumously

The following is a list of works that were published, performed or distributed posthumously ....
. Unfinished works have had profound influences on their genres and have inspired others in their own projects. The term can also refer to ongoing work which could eventually be finished, and is distinguishable from "incomplete work", which can be a work that was finished but is no longer in its complete form.

There are many reasons for work not being completed. Works are usually stopped when their creator dies, although some, aware of their failing health, make sure that they set up the project for completion. If the work involves other people, such as a cast of actors or the subject of a portrait, it may be halted because of their unavailability. Projects that are too grandiose might never have been finished, while others should be feasible but their creator's continual unhappiness with them leads to abandonment.

Unfinished works by popular authors and artists may still be made public, sometimes in the state they were in when work was halted. Alternatively, another artist may finish the piece. In some fields work may appear unfinished but are actually finished, such as Donatello
Donatello

Donatello was a famous early Renaissance Italy artist and sculpture from Florence. He is, in part, known for his work in bas-relief, a form of shallow relief sculpture that, in Donatello's case, incorporated significant 15th-century developments in perspectival illusionism....
's "non finito
Non finito

Non finito is a sculpture technique literally meaning that the work is unfinished work. Non finito sculptures appear unfinished because the artist only sculpts part of the block, leaving the figure appearing to be stuck within the block of material....
" technique in sculpture
Sculpture

Sculpture is Three-dimensional space artwork created by shaping or combining hard and or plastic material, sound, and or text and or light, commonly Stone sculpture , metal, glass, or wood....
.

Media


Literature

Kafka1906
Many acclaimed author
Author

An author is defined both as "the person who originates or gives existence to anything" and that authorship determines responsibility for what is created....
s have left work incomplete. Some such pieces have been published posthumously, either in their incomplete state or after being finished by somebody else.

It is the job of literary executor
Literary executor

A literary executor is a person with decision-making power in respect of a literary estate.The literary estate of an author who has died will often consist mainly of the copyright and other intellectual property rights of published works, including for example film rights and translation rights....
s to take charge of the work of a writer after their death. They must often decide what to do with incomplete work, using their own judgement if not given explicit instructions. In some cases this can lead to something happening to the work that was not originally intended, such as the release of Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka

Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German language-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Austria-Hungary, presently the Czech Republic....
's unfinished writings by Max Brod
Max Brod

Max Brod was an Austria-Hungary-Jewish author, composer, and journalist, known for his close friendship with Franz Kafka....
 when Kafka had wished for it to be destroyed. These works have become icon
Icon

An 'icon' is a religious work of art, most commonly a painting, from Eastern Christianity. More broadly the term is used in a wide number of contexts for an image, picture, or representation; it is a sign or likeness that stands for an object by signifying or representing it either concretely or by analogy, as in semiotics; by extension, ...
ic in Western literature
Western literature

Western literature refers to the literature written in the languages of Europe, including the ones belonging to the Indo-European languages as well as several geographically or historically related languages such as Basque language, Hungarian language, and so forth....
. The posthumous publication of some of Ernest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Miller Hemingway was an American novelist, short story author, and journalist. He was part of the 1920s expatriate community in Paris, France, and one of the veterans of World War I later known as "the Lost Generation"....
's unfinished novels was met with controversy. Several books were published, but it has been suggested that it is not within the jurisdiction of Hemingway's relatives or publishers to determine whether these works should be made available to the public. For example, scholars often disapprovingly note that the version of The Garden of Eden published by Charles Scribner's Sons
Charles Scribner's Sons

Charles Scribner's Sons is a New York City publisher that is best known for publishing a number of luminaries of American literature including Ernest Hemingway, F....
 in 1986, though not a revision of Hemingway's original words, nonetheless omits two-thirds of the original manuscript.

Novels can remain unfinished because the author continually rewrites the story. When enough material exists, someone else can compile and combine the work, creating a finished story out upon several different drafts. Mark Twain
Mark Twain

Samuel Langhorne Clemens , better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an United Statesmerican author and humorist. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer....
's The Mysterious Stranger
The Mysterious Stranger

The Mysterious Stranger is an unfinished work, and the last novel attempted, by the United States of America author Mark Twain. It was worked on periodically from roughly 1890 up until his death in 1910....
 was written in three different versions over a period of 20 years, none of which were complete. Twain biographer and literary executor Albert Bigelow Paine
Albert Bigelow Paine

Albert Bigelow Paine was an United States author and biographer best known for his work with Mark Twain. Paine was a member of the Pulitzer Prize and wrote in several genres, including fiction, humour, and verse....
 combined the stories and published his version six years after Twain's death. Similarly, J. R. R. Tolkien
J. R. R. Tolkien

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Order of the British Empire was an English people English literature, poetry, Philology, and university professor, best known as the author of the classic high fantasy works The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion....
 continuously rewrote The Silmarillion
The Silmarillion

The Silmarillion is a collection of J. R. R. Tolkien's Mythopoeia works, edited and published posthumously by his son Christopher Tolkien in 1977, with assistance from Guy Gavriel Kay, who later became a noted fantasy writer....
 throughout his lifetime; a definitive version was still uncompiled at the time of his death, with some sections very fragmented. His son, Christopher Tolkien
Christopher Tolkien

Christopher Reuel Tolkien is the youngest son of the author J. R. R. Tolkien , and is best known as the editing of much of his father's Posthumous work published work....
, invited fantasy fiction writer Guy Gavriel Kay
Guy Gavriel Kay

Guy Gavriel Kay is a Canada author of fantasy fiction. Many of his novels are set in fictional realms that resemble real places during real historical periods, such as Constantinople during the reign of Justinian I or Spain during the time of El Cid....
 to reconstruct some parts of the book, and they eventually published a final version in 1977. In 1980, Christopher Tolkien published another posthumous collection of his father's unfinished work, appropriately entitled Unfinished Tales
Unfinished Tales

Unfinished Tales is a collection of stories and essays by J. R. R. Tolkien that were unfinished work during his lifetime, but were edited by his son Christopher Tolkien and published in 1980....
. Between 1982 and 1996, he published twelve volumes of The History of Middle-earth
The History of Middle-earth

The History of Middle-earth is a 12-volume series of books published from 1983 through 1996 that collect and analyse material relating to the fiction of J....
, a substantial portion of which is unfinished and incomplete drafts. In 2007, Christopher Tolkien published another novel from his father entitled The Children of Húrin
The Children of Húrin

The Children of H?rin is an Epic fantasy fantasy novel which forms the completion of a tale by J. R. R. Tolkien. He wrote the original version of the story in late 1910s, revised it several times later, but did not complete it before his death in 1973....
. Like The Silmarillion, Christopher assembled the novel from various incomplete drafts.

The size of a project can be such that a piece of literature is never finished. Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer

Geoffrey Chaucer was an English author, poet, philosopher, Bureaucracy, Noble court and diplomat. Although he wrote many works, he is best remembered for his unfinished frame narrative The Canterbury Tales....
 never completed The Canterbury Tales
The Canterbury Tales

The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories written by Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century . The tales, some of which are originals and others not, are contained inside a frame tale and told by a collection of pilgrims on a pilgrimage from London Borough of Southwark to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathed...
 to the extensive length that he originally intended. Chaucer had, however, already written much of the work at the time of his death, and the Canterbury Tales are considered to be a seminal work despite the unfinished status. English poet Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser

Edmund Spenser was an important England poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem celebrating, through fantastical allegory, the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I....
 originally intended The Faerie Queene
The Faerie Queene

The Faerie Queene is an English Epic poetry by Edmund Spenser, published first in three books in 1590, and later in six books in 1596. The Faerie Queene is notable for its form: it was the first work written in Spenserian stanza....
 to consist of 12 books; even at its unfinished state – six books were published before Spenser's death – it is the longest epic poem in the English language. Honoré de Balzac
Honoré de Balzac

Honor? de Balzac was a French novelist and playwright. His magnum opus was a Novel sequence of almost 100 novels and plays collectively entitled La Com?die humaine, which presents a panorama of French life in the years after the fall of Napol?on Bonaparte in 1815....
, the French novelist, completed nearly 100 pieces for his novel sequence
Novel sequence

A novel sequence is a set or series of novels which share common themes, characters, or settings, but where each novel has its own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently or out of sequence....
 La Comédie humaine
La Comédie humaine

La Com?die humaine is the title of Honor? de Balzac's roman-fleuve and stories depicting French society in the period of the Bourbon Dynasty, Restored and the July Monarchy ....
, but a planned 48 more were never finished. Notes and plot outlines left behind by an author may allow a successor to complete a novel or series of novels. Frank Herbert
Frank Herbert

Franklin Patrick Herbert, Jr. was a critically acclaimed and commercially successful American list of science fiction authors. Although also a short story author, he is best known for his novels, most notably Dune and its five sequels....
 left behind extensive notes related to his Dune universe
Dune universe

The Dune universe, or Duniverse, is the politics, science, and society fictional universe of author Frank Herbert's six-book series of science fiction novels which began with 1965's Dune ....
, which led to son Brian Herbert
Brian Herbert

Brian Patrick Herbert is a best selling United States author who lives in Washington state. He is the elder son of famed science fiction author Frank Herbert....
 and science fiction author Kevin J. Anderson
Kevin J. Anderson

Kevin J. Anderson is an American science fiction author. He has written spin-off novels for Star Wars, StarCraft, Titan A.E., and The X-Files #Novels, and is the co-author of the Dune prequels....
 completing several prequel
Prequel

A prequel is a work that portrays events and/or aspects of a previously completed narrative, but is set prior to the existing narrative. The word is a neologism, formed as a portmanteau from pre-, meaning before, and sequel, a work which takes place after a previous one ....
s to the popular series. Mervyn Peake
Mervyn Peake

Mervyn Laurence Peake was an England Modernist literature, artist, poet and illustrator. He is best known for what are usually referred to as the Gormenghast books....
, author of the Gormenghast novels, meant to write a complete biography of the main character, Titus, but died after only completing three books in the series.

Some works are presented as separate sections, each written at different times. This can lead to the situation where a piece can appear complete while the author actually intended for it to continue, or where other authors try to fake their own writing as part of the work. The first four canto
Canto

The 'canto' is a principal form of division in a long poem, especially the epic poetry. The word comes from Italian language, from the Latin cantus, meaning "song," and has a corollary in the Sanskrit , or "chapter." Famous examples of epic poetry which employ the canto division are Valmiki's Ramayana , Dante Alighieri's The Divin...
s of Lord Byron
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron

George Gordon Byron, later Noel, 6th Baron Byron Royal Society was a United Kingdom poet and a leading figure in Romanticism. Amongst Byron's best-known works are the brief poems She Walks in Beauty, When We Two Parted, and So, we'll go no more a roving, in addition to the narrative poems Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and...
's narrative poem
Narrative poetry

Narrative poetry is poetry that tells a story and is a snapshot of a poet's thoughts and feelings. The poems may be short or long, and the story it relates to may be simple or complex....
 Don Juan
Don Juan (Byron)

Don Juan is a long, digressive satiric poem by George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron, based on the Don Juan, which Byron reverses, portraying Juan not as a womaniser but someone easily seduced by women....
 were written in 1818 and 1819, with a further 12 completed and published before his death in 1824. Numerous "continuations" of the story had been published by various publishing houses even between issues of the story, along with several fake conclusions. Byron had intended to continue the story, as evidenced by the find of the 17th canto after his death, but it is not clear how long the poem would continue or how it would conclude. It is still regarded as one of his greatest achievements. Charles Dickens
Charles Dickens

Charles John Huffam Dickens, Royal Society of Arts , pen-name "Boz", was the most popular English people novelist of the Victorian era, as well as a vigorous Reform movement....
 was writing The Mystery of Edwin Drood
The Mystery of Edwin Drood

The Mystery of Edwin Drood is the final novel by Charles Dickens. The novel was left unfinished work at the time of Dickens' death and thus what happened to the titular character remains a real mystery....
 in monthly installments when he died, completing just six of the twelve intended. The story surrounded the murder of the titular Edwin Drood; because the story was never finished the murderer was never revealed. The book was still made into a film and a musical
The Mystery of Edwin Drood (musical)

Drood is a musical theatre based on the unfinished Charles Dickens novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood. It is one of the few modern examples of a Broadway theatre musical with book, lyrics, music, and orchestrations all by the same creator , and the first Broadway musical with multiple endings ....
, with the latter having the unusual concept of the audience voting for who they think is the murderer.

Other famous unfinished works of literature include: Hero and Leander
Hero and Leander

Hero and Leander is a Greek mythology, relating the story of Hero , a priestess of Aphrodite who dwelt in a tower in Sestos, at the edge of the Hellespont, and Leander , a young man from Abydos, Hellespont on the other side of the strait....
 by Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
 (a completion was provided by George Chapman
George Chapman

George Chapman was an England dramatist, translator, and poet. He was a classical scholar, and his work shows the influence of Stoicism. Chapman has been identified as the Rival Poet of Shakespeare's Sonnets by William Minto, and as an anticipator of the Metaphysical Poets....
); the second part of Dead Souls
Dead Souls

Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol was first published in 1842, and is one of the most prominent works of 19th century Russian literature. Gogol himself saw it as an "epic poem in prose", and within the book as a "novel in verse"....
 by Gogol; Bouvard et Pécuchet
Bouvard et Pécuchet

Bouvard et P?cuchet is an unfinished satirical work by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1881 after his death in 1880.Although conceived in 1863 as Les Deux Cloportes , and partially inspired by a short story of Barth?lemy Maurice , Flaubert did not begin the work in earnest until 1872, at a time when financial ruin threatened....
 by Flaubert; Weir of Hermiston
Weir of Hermiston

Weir of Hermiston is an unfinished novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. Many have considered it his masterpiece. It was cut short by Stevenson's sudden death from a cerebral hemorrhage....
 by Robert Louis Stevenson
Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Louis Balfour Stevenson , was a Scottish novelist, poet, essayist and Travel writing. Stevenson was greatly admired by many authors, including Jorge Luis Borges, Ernest Hemingway, Rudyard Kipling, Vladimir Nabokov, J....
; The Good Soldier Svejk by Jaroslav Hasek; Suite française
Suite française (Irčne Némirovsky)

Suite fran?aise is the title of a planned sequence of five novels by Ir?ne N?mirovsky, a French language writer of Ukrainian Jewish origin. In July 1942, having just completed the first two of the series, N?mirovsky was arrested as a Jew and detained at Pithiviers and then Auschwitz, where she allegedly died of typhus, but was actually se...
 by Irčne Némirovsky
Irčne Némirovsky

Ir?ne Lvovna N?mirovsky was a novelist who died at the age of 39 in Auschwitz, Poland. She was killed by the Nazis for being a Jew, despite her conversion to Roman Catholicism....
, Answered Prayers by Truman Capote
Truman Capote

Truman Capote was an United States writer whose short stories, novels, plays, and non-fiction are recognized literary classics, including the novella Breakfast at Tiffany's and In Cold Blood , which he labeled a "non-fiction novel"....
, The Love of the Last Tycoon
The Love of the Last Tycoon

The Love of The Last Tycoon: A Western is an unfinished novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, compiled and published posthumously....
 by F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald

Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was an United States writer of novels and short stories, whose works are evocative of the Jazz Age, a term he coined himself....
, and "Uncertain Times" by Richard Yates
Richard Yates

Richard Yates may refer to:People* Richard Yates , English comic actor* Richard Yates * Richard Yates * Richard Yates , Illinois politician and governor ...
.

Science, theology and philosophy
Summatheologiae
Religious works have also been left incomplete, leading to debates about the possible missing content. The Persian Bayán
Persian Bayán

The Persian Bay?n is one of the principal scriptural writings of the B?b, the founder of B?bism, written in Persian language. The B?b also wrote a shorter book in Arabic, the Arabic Bay?n....
, a scripture
Religious text

Religious texts, also known as scripture, are the texts which various religious traditions consider to be sacred, or of central importance to their religious tradition....
 from Bábism
Bábism

B?bism is a religious movement that flourished in Persian Empire from 1844 to 1852, then lingered on in exile in the Ottoman Empire as well as underground....
, was left unfinished when the Báb
BAB

BAB may refer to:* Barbara Ann Brennan, an American author and spiritual healer* Back-arc basin, a geologic feature which submarine basin associated with island arc and subduction zone...
 died. There have been some claims that the text has been completed by other people, though the Báb stated that it would be finished by he whom God shall make manifest
He whom God shall make manifest

He whom God shall make manifest is a messianic figure in the religion of Babism. The messianic figure was repeatedly mentioned by the B?b, the founder of Babism, in his book, the Bay?n ....
. St. Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas

Saint Thomas Aquinas, Dominican Order was a priest of the Roman Catholic Church in the Dominican Order from Italy, and an immensely influential philosopher and theologian in the tradition of scholasticism, known as Doctor Angelicus and Doctor Communis....
 abandoned his great work, the Summa Theologiae
Summa Theologiae

The title Summa Theologiae refers to several different theological works:#Summa Theologica by Sanctus Antoninus#Summa Theologica by Thomas Aquinas...
 in 1273, citing a mystical experience during mass. Its arguments for the existence of God continue to exert influence in Christian theology
Christian theology

Christian theology is discourse concerning Christianity faith. Christian theologians use biblical exegesis, rationality analysis and argument to understanding, explanation, test, critic#critique, defend or promote Christianity....
 more than 700 years later. In Greek philosophy, Plato
Plato

Plato , was a Classical Greece Greeks philosopher, mathematician, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the Platonic Academy in Ancient Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the western world....
's Critius was unfinished when Plato died at age 80.

The most influential document in computer science
Computer science

Computer science is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation, and of practical techniques for their implementation and application in computer systems....
 was John von Neumann
John von Neumann

John von Neumann was a Hungarian American mathematician who made major contributions to a vast range of fields, including set theory, functional analysis, quantum mechanics, ergodic theory, continuous geometry, economics and game theory, computer science, numerical analysis, hydrodynamics , and statistics, as well as many other mathematical...
's First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC
First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC

The First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC was an unfinished work 101-page document written by John von Neumann and distributed on June 30, 1945 by Herman Goldstine, security officer on the classified ENIAC project....
, a 101-page manuscript dating from 1946. Littered with ellipticals and spaces for the eventual addition of further material, von Neumann never completed it, as by that time its distribution had already influenced an explosion in postwar computer development. Its elaboration of the stored program concept and formalisation of the logical design of computer architecture – ideas not all of which were original to von Neumann, but which he first expressed in the mathematical language he favoured – endure in the architectures of modern computer systems.

The first genuine historigraphical
HIStory

HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I is a double album by Michael Jackson, released on June 20, 1995, and is Jackson's ninth. The first disc, named "HIStory Begins" consists of a selection of Jackson's greatest hits from the singer's past fifteen years, while the second, named "HIStory Continues" features new songs, with the...
 work, the Peloponnesian War
Peloponnesian War

The Peloponnesian War which lasted from 431-404BC was an Ancient Greece military conflict, fought by Athens and its Athenian empire against the Peloponnesian League, led by Sparta....
 by Thucydides
Thucydides

Thucydides was a Greeks history and author of the History of the Peloponnesian War, which recounts the 5th century B.C. war between Sparta and Athens to the year 411 B.C....
 was undergoing a major revision by the author at the time of his death, so different sections of it reflect a starkly contrasting general outlook on Persian influence in the events depicted.

Drawings, paintings and sculptures

Artists leave behind incomplete work for a variety of reasons. A piece may not be completed if the subject becomes unavailable, such as in the changing of a landscape or the death of a person being painted. Elizabeth Shoumatoff
Elizabeth Shoumatoff

Elizabeth Shoumatoff was an United States painter who was most well known for painting the Unfinished portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt of Franklin D....
's Unfinished Portrait
Unfinished portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt

The Unfinished Portrait is an water color of Franklin D. Roosevelt that was in progress at the time of his collapse and subsequent death. Elizabeth Shoumatoff had begun working on the portrait of the president around noon on April 12, 1945....
 of 32nd U.S. president
President of the United States

The President of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States and is the highest political official in the United States by influence and recognition....
 Franklin D. Roosevelt
Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin Delano Roosevelt , often referred to by his initials FDR, was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States....
 was started around noon on 12 April 1945 but left unfinished when Roosevelt died later that day. In other instances, outside circumstances can prevent the execution of an otherwise "finished" artwork: Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci was an Italy polymath, being a scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, Painting, sculptor, architect, botanist, musician and writer....
 developed sketches and models for the 24 foot-tall "Gran Cavallo" horse statue but the bronze to cast the sculpture was diverted to make cannons. Five hundred years later, two full-size sculptures were completed based on Leonardo's work.

Depending on the medium involved, it can be difficult for another artist to complete an unfinished artwork without damaging it. Some artists did complete the paintings of their mentors, such as Giulio Romano
Giulio Romano

Giulio Romano was an Italy Painting and Architecture. A prominent pupil of Raffaello Santi, his stylistic deviations from high Renaissance classicism help define the 16th-century style known as Mannerism....
 is believed to have done on Raphael
Raphael

Raphael Sanzio, usually known by his first name alone was an Italy Painting and architect of the High Renaissance, celebrated for the perfection and grace of his paintings and drawings....
's Transfiguration
Transfiguration (Raphael)

The Transfiguration is considered the last painting by the Italy High Renaissance master Raphael. It was left unfinished by Raphael, and is believed to have been completed by his pupil, Giulio Romano, shortly after Raphael's death in 1520....
, and Titian
Titian

File:Tizian 090.jpg Tiziano Vecelli or Tiziano Vecellio, born 1473/1490 , died 27 August 1576, better known as Titian , was the leading painter of the 16th-century Venice school of the Italian Renaissance....
 on Giorgione
Giorgione

Giorgione is the familiar name of Giorgio Barbarelli da Castelfranco, an Italy painter, a seminal artist of the High Renaissance in Venice....
's Sleeping Venus
Sleeping Venus (Giorgione)

The Sleeping Venus, also known as the Dresden Venus, is an extremely influential painting by the Italy Renaissance master Giorgione, with, it is now generally accepted, the landscape and sky, by Titian, completed after Giorgione's death in 1510, as Vasari first noted....
.
Treaty of Paris By Benjamin West 1783
Leonardo Da Vinci Adoration of the Magi
Instead of completing another artist's masterpiece, particularly when many years have passed, unfinished works frequently inspire others to create their own version. Michelangelo
Michelangelo

Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni , commonly known as Michelangelo, was an Italian Renaissance Painting, sculptor, architect, poet, and engineer....
 left several unfinished sculpture
Sculpture

Sculpture is Three-dimensional space artwork created by shaping or combining hard and or plastic material, sound, and or text and or light, commonly Stone sculpture , metal, glass, or wood....
s and painting
Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a surface . In art, the term describes both the act and the result, which is called a painting....
s, with sketches and partially-completed paintings inspiring others. If the work is to be done on commission but is not finished it is commonly passed on to another artist. Leonardo da Vinci's work on the Adoration of the Magi
Adoration of the Magi (Leonardo)

The Adoration of the Magi is an early painting by Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo was given the commission by the Augustinians monks of San Donato a Scopeto in Florence, but departed for Milan the following year, leaving the painting unfinished....
 for the monastery of San Donato was halted when he left Florence
Florence

Florence is the Capital city of the Italy Regions of Italy of Tuscany and of the provinces of Italy Province of Florence. It is the most populous city in Tuscany and has a population of 364,779 ....
 for Milan
Milan

Milan is the second largest city of Italy, located in the plains of Lombardy. It is the capital in the Province of Milan, as well as the Regions of Italy capital of Lombardy....
. Still requiring an altarpiece
Altarpiece

An altarpiece is a picture or relief representing a religious subject and suspended in a frame behind the altar of a church. The altarpiece is often made up of two or more separate panels created using a technique known as panel painting....
, the monks employed Filippino Lippi
Filippino Lippi

Filippino Lippi was a well-known painter working during the High Renaissance in Florence, Italy....
 to create one. Both paintings now hang in the Uffizi
Uffizi

The Uffizi Gallery , one of the oldest and most famous art museums in the world, is housed in the Palazzo degli Uffizi, a palazzo in Florence, Italy, Italy....
 gallery.

Paintings are usually sketched on the canvas
Canvas

Canvas is an extremely heavy-duty plain weave cloth used for making sails, tents, marquees, backpacks, and other functions where sturdiness is required....
 before work begins, and sculptures are frequently planned using a maquette
Maquette

A maquette is a small scale model or rough draft of an unfinished architectural work or a sculpture. It is used to visualize and test shapes and ideas without incurring the cost and effort of producing a full scale product....
. These works-in-progress can be as (or even more) sought-after as completed works by highly-regarded artists because they help reveal the process of creating a work of art. Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Gian Lorenzo Bernini

Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini was a pre-eminent Baroque sculpture and architect of 17th Century Rome....
, a sculptor from the Baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 period, made his bozzeti (an Italian term for the prototype sculpture) from wax
Wax

Wax has traditionally referred to a substance that is secreted by bees and used by them in constructing their honeycombs.It is an imprecisely defined term generally understood to be a substance with properties similar to beeswax, namely...
 or baked terracotta to show those that had commissioned him how the final piece was intended to look. Eleven of these bozzeti were displayed in an exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago
Art Institute of Chicago

The School of the Art Institute of Chicago is one of America's premiere fine arts colleges, located in Chicago, Illinois. It is associated with the museum of the same name, The Art Institute of Chicago, but is not related to, nor should be confused with, the chain of schools known as The Art Institutes....
 in 2004. Some museum
Museum

A museum is a "permanent institution in the service of society and of its development, open to the public, which acquires, conserves, researches, communicates and exhibits the tangible and intangible heritage of humanity and its environment, for the purposes of education, study, and entertainment", as defined by the International Coun...
s specialise in collections of maquettes, such as the Museo dei Bozzetti in Pietrasanta
Pietrasanta

Pietrasanta is a town and comune on the coast of northern Tuscany in Italy, in the province of Lucca. Pietrasanta straddles the last foothills of the Apuan Alps....
, Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
.

During the Renaissance
Renaissance

The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned roughly the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe....
, Donatello
Donatello

Donatello was a famous early Renaissance Italy artist and sculpture from Florence. He is, in part, known for his work in bas-relief, a form of shallow relief sculpture that, in Donatello's case, incorporated significant 15th-century developments in perspectival illusionism....
 made sculptures that appeared unfinished by only sculpting part of the block, leaving the figure appearing to be stuck within the material. He called this technique "non finito
Non finito

Non finito is a sculpture technique literally meaning that the work is unfinished work. Non finito sculptures appear unfinished because the artist only sculpts part of the block, leaving the figure appearing to be stuck within the block of material....
", and it has been used by several artists since then.

In the age of mass media
Mass media

Mass media is a term used to denote a section of the media specifically envisioned and designed to reach a mainstream such as the population of a nation state....
, incomplete work can reach an audience due to sheer demand for material by the artist. Tintin and Alph-Art
Tintin and Alph-Art

Tintin and Alph-Art is the twenty-fourth and final book in the The Adventures of Tintin series, created by Belgium comics artist Herg?....
, the 24th comic
Comics

Comics is a graphic Mass media in which are utilized in order to convey a sequential narrative; the term, derived from massive early use to convey comic themes, came to be applied to all uses of this medium including those which are far from comic....
 in Hergé
Hergé

Georges Prosper Remi , better known by the pen name Herg?, was a Belgian comics writer and artist. "Herg?" is the French pronunciation of "RG", his initials reversed....
's popular The Adventures of Tintin
The Adventures of Tintin

The Adventures of Tintin is a series of comic strips created by Belgium artist Herg?, the pen name of Georges Remi . The series first appeared in French in a children's supplement to the Belgian newspaper on 10 January 1929....
 series, was unfinished at his death. Though he had illustrated much of the book, several sketched panels remained in the final scenes. The book was still published and the story can be followed despite the incomplete artwork.

Architecture, construction and engineering

See also: Unfinished building
Unfinished building

An unfinished building is a building where construction work was abandoned or on-hold at some stage or only exists as a design. It may also refer to buildings that are currently being built, particularly those that have been delayed or at which construction work progresses extremely slowly....
.
Ryugyong Hotel   May 2005
Many construction
Construction

In the fields of architecture and civil engineering, construction is a process that consists of the building or assembling of infrastructure. Far from being a single activity, large scale construction is a feat of multitasking....
 or engineering
Engineering

Engineering is the discipline and profession of applying Technology and science knowledge and utilizing natural laws and physical resources in order to design and implement materials, structures, machines, devices, systems, and process that safely realize a desired objective and meet specified criteria....
 projects have remained unfinished at various stages of development. The work may be finished as a blueprint
Blueprint

A blueprint is a type of paper-based reproduction usually of a technical drawing, documenting an architecture or an engineering design. More generally, the term "blueprint" has come to be used to refer to any detailed plan....
 or whiteprint
Whiteprint

Whiteprint is the commercial terminology to describe document reproduction using the diazo chemical process. It is also known as the blueline or blue-line process....
 and never be realised, or be abandoned during construction.

There are numerous unfinished building
Unfinished building

An unfinished building is a building where construction work was abandoned or on-hold at some stage or only exists as a design. It may also refer to buildings that are currently being built, particularly those that have been delayed or at which construction work progresses extremely slowly....
s that remain partially-constructed in countries around the world, some of which can be used in their incomplete state but with others remaining as a mere shell. An example of the latter is the Ryugyong Hotel
Ryugyong Hotel

The Ryugyong Hotel is a skyscraper intended for use as a hotel in Sojang-dong, in the Potong-gang District of Pyongyang, North Korea. The hotel's name comes from one of the historic names for Pyongyang: Ryugyong, or "capital of willows." Its 105 stories rise to a height of 330 m , and it contains 360,000 m? of floor space, making it the mo...
 in North Korea
North Korea

North Korea, officially the Democratic People's Republic of Korea , is a state in East Asia, occupying the northern half of the Korean Peninsula....
. If finished it would become the tallest hotel in the world and the seventh largest building
List of largest buildings in the world

This list of largest buildings in the world ranks buildings from around the world by usable space and floor space . The term 'building' used by this list refers to single structures that are suitable for continuous human occupancy....
 but is uninhabitable and will not be completed due to the cost and the poor structural integrity. Some projects are intentionally left with an unfinished appearance, particularly the follies
Folly

In architecture, a folly is a building constructed strictly as a decoration, having none of the usual purposes of housing or sheltering associated with a conventional structure....
 of the late 16th to 18th century.

There are many reasons for construction work being halted. Amongst others, they include a changing financial climate, unforeseen structural weaknesses, or a dramatic shift in the politics of a country. Work on the Palace of Soviets
Palace of Soviets

The Palace of Soviet was a project to construct an administrative center and a congress hall in Moscow, Russia, near the Moscow Kremlin, on the site of the demolished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour ....
, a project to construct the world's largest building in Moscow
Moscow

Moscow is the capital and the largest types of inhabited localities in Russia of the Russian Federation. It is also the largest European cities and metropolitan areas, with the Moscow metropolitan area ranking among the largest urban areas in the world....
, was halted when the city was attacked
Operation Barbarossa

Operation Barbarossa was the code name for Nazi Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II that commenced on 22 June 1941. Over 4.5 million troops of the Axis powers invaded the USSR along a 2,900 kilometer front ....
 during World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
.

Some buildings are in a cycle of near-perpetual construction, with work lasting for decades or even centuries. Antoni Gaudí
Antoni Gaudí

Antoni Pl?cid Guillem Gaud? i Cornet ? in English sometimes referred to by the Spanish language translation of his name, Antonio Gaud? ? was a Spain Catalonia architecture who belonged to the Modernisme movement and was famous for his unique and highly individualistic designs....
's Sagrada Família
Sagrada Familia

The Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Fam?lia , often simply called the Sagrada Fam?lia, is a massive Roman Catholic church under construction in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain....
 in Barcelona
Barcelona

Barcelona is the capital and most populous city of the Autonomous communities of Spain of Catalonia and the second largest city in Spain, with a population of 1,615,908 in 2008, while the population of the Metropolitan Area was 3,161,081....
 has been under construction for around 120 years, having started in the 1880s. Work was delayed by the Spanish Civil War
Spanish Civil War

The Spanish Civil War was a major conflict in Spain that started after an attempted coup d'?tat by a group of Spanish Army generals, supported by the conservative Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right , Carlist groups and the fascistic Falange, against the government of the Second Spanish Republic, then under the leadership of pr...
, during which the original models and parts of the building itself were destroyed. Today, even with portions of the basilica
Basilica

The Latin word basilica , was originally used to describe a ancient Rome public building , usually located in the Forum of a Roman town. In Hellenistic cities, public basilicas appeared in the 2nd century BC....
 incomplete, it is still the most popular tourist destination in Barcelona with 1.5 million visitors every year. Gaudí spent 40 years of his life overseeing the project and is buried in the crypt. Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
's Cologne Cathedral
Cologne Cathedral

Cologne Cathedral is the seat of the Archbishop of Cologne, under the administration of the Roman Catholic Church and is renowned as a monument of Christianity, of Gothic architecture and of the faith and perseverance of the people of the city in which it stands....
 took even longer to complete; construction started in 1248 and finished in 1880, a total of 632 years.

It is not only buildings that have failed during the construction phase. In the 1920s, the White Star Line
White Star Line

The Oceanic Steam Navigation Company or White Star Line of Boston Packets, more commonly known as the White Star Line, was a prominent British shipping company, most famous for its ill-fated luxury flagship, the RMS Titanic, and the World War I loss of her sister ship, HMHS Britannic....
 hired the shipbuilders Harland and Wolff
Harland and Wolff

Harland and Wolff Heavy Industries is a Diversification Heavy industry company specialising in shipbuilding, ship breaking, offshore construction, Modular design, Civil engineering and marine engineering, renewables and project management, located in Belfast, Northern Ireland....
 to build the first 1000-foot-long ocean liner
Ocean liner

An ocean liner is a passenger ship designed to transport people from one seaport to another along regular long-distance maritime routes according to a schedule....
, with the planned name of Oceanic
Oceanic (unfinished ship)

In the 1920s, the White Star Line gave the shipbuilders Harland and Wolff the commission to build the first -long ocean liner, with the planned name of Oceanic....
. However, a dispute between the companies and eventually the Great Depression
Great Depression

File:International depression.pngThe Great Depression was a worldwide economic Recession starting in most places in 1929 and ending at different times in the 1930s or early 1940s for different countries....
 halted the construction, and eventually the portion of the keel
Keel

In boats and ships, keel can refer to either of two parts: a structural element, or a hydrodynamic element. These parts overlap. As the laying down of the keel is the initial step in construction of a ship, the construction is dated from this event, with only the ship's Ship_naming_and_launching considered more significant in its creati...
 already constructed was broken up and used in building the smaller but similar ship, the MV Britannic. In the 1970s the Hoan Bridge
Hoan Bridge

The Daniel Hoan Memorial Bridge is a tied arch bridge that connects Interstate 794 in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin to the Lake Freeway across the Milwaukee River inlet....
 in Milwaukee
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Milwaukee is the largest city in Wisconsin and List of United States cities by population in the United States. It is the county seat of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin and is located on the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan....
, Wisconsin
Wisconsin

Wisconsin is one of the fifty U.S. state in the United States of America, located in the north central part of the United States. It borders two of the five Great Lakes and four U.S....
 was out of use for five years after its construction when the connecting roads were not completed. In the 1980s, during the Iran–Iraq War, Iraq
Iraq

Iraq , officially the Republic of Iraq , is a country in Western Asia spanning most of the northwestern end of the Zagros Mountains, the eastern part of the Syrian Desert and the northern part of the Arabian Desert....
i president Saddam Hussein
Saddam Hussein

Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti was the President of Iraq of Iraq from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003.A leading member of the revolutionary Ba'ath Party, which espoused secular pan-Arabism, economic modernization, and Arab socialism, Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup that brought the party to long-term power....
 commissioned the Babylon project
Project Babylon

Project Babylon was a project allegedly commissioned by the Iraqi president Saddam Hussein during the Iran?Iraq War to build a series of superguns....
. The supergun
Supergun

A supergun is an extraordinarily large cannon with an extremely high muzzle velocity and large caliber. They were used to bombard an enemy from extremely long range and destroy heavy fortifications....
 design by Gerald Bull
Gerald Bull

Gerald Vincent Bull was a Canadian engineer who developed long range artillery. He moved from project to project in his quest to economically launch a satellite using a huge artillery piece....
 was never fully constructed after Bull's assassination
Assassination

Assassination is the targeted killing of a public figure. Assassinations may be prompted by ideology, politics, or military reasons. Additionally, assassins may be motivated by contract killing, revenge, or celebrity or may be mental disorder....
 in March 1990.

Many projects do not get to the construction phase, halted during or after planning. Ludwig II of Bavaria
Ludwig II of Bavaria

Ludwig II was king of Kingdom of Bavaria from 1864 until shortly before his death. He is sometimes referred to as the Swan King in English language and der M?rchenk?nig in German language....
 commissioned several designs for Castle Falkenstein
Castle Falkenstein

Falkenstein Castle or Castra Pfronten is a High Middle Ages castle ruin in the Bavarian Alps, near Pfronten, a town in southern Germany. The ruin's German language name is Burg Falkenstein ....
, with the fourth plan being vastly different from that of the first. The first two designs were turned down, one because of costs and one because the design displeased Ludwig, and the third designer withdrew from the project. The fourth and final plan was completed and some infrastructure
Infrastructure

Infrastructure can be defined as the basic physical and organizational structures needed for the operation of a society or enterprise , or the services and facilities necessary for an economy to function....
 was prepared for the site but Ludwig died before construction work began. The Palace of Whitehall
Palace of Whitehall

File:Ingo Jones drawing.jpgThe Palace of Whitehall was the main residence of the English List of British monarchs in London from 1530 until 1698 when all except Inigo Jones's 1622 Banqueting House was destroyed by fire....
, at the time the largest palace
Palace

A palace is a grand residence, especially a royal residence or the home of a head of state or some other high-ranking dignitary, such as a bishop or archbishop....
 in Europe, was mostly destroyed by a fire in 1698. Sir Christopher Wren
Christopher Wren

Sir Christopher Wren was a 17th century England designer, astronomer, geometer, and one of the greatest English architects in history. Wren designed 53 London churches, including St Paul's Cathedral, as well as many secular buildings of note....
, most famous for his role in rebuilding several churches after the Great Fire of London
Great Fire of London

The Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through the central parts of London, England, from Sunday, 2 September to Wednesday, 5 September 1666....
 in 1666, sketched a proposed replacement for part of the palace but financial constraints prevented construction.

Whitehallwren
Computer technology has allowed for 3D representations
3D computer graphics

3D computer graphics are graphics that use a Cartesian coordinate system#Three-dimensional coordinate system representation of geometric data that is stored in the computer for the purposes of performing calculations and rendering 2D images....
 of projects to be shown before they are built. In some cases the construction is never started and the computer model
Computer simulation

A computer simulation, a computer model or a computational model is a computer program, or network of computers, that attempts to simulation an abstract model of a particular system....
 is the nearest that anyone will ever get to seeing the finished piece. For example, in 1999 Kent Larson's exhibition "Unbuilt Ruins: Digital Interpretations of Eight Projects by Louis I. Kahn" showed computer images of designs completed by noted architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
 Louis Kahn
Louis Kahn

Louis Isadore Kahn was a world-renowned architect of Estonian origin based in Philadelphia, United States. After working in various capacities for several companies in Philadelphia, he founded his own atelier in 1935....
 but never built. Computer simulations can also be used to create prototype
Prototype

A prototype is an original type, form, or instance of something serving as a typical example, basis, or standard for other things of the same category....
s of engineering projects and test them before they are actually made; this has allowed the design process to be more successful and efficient.

Even without being constructed, many architectural designs and ideas have had a lasting influence. The Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
n constructivism movement
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
 started in 1913 and was taught in the Bauhaus
Bauhaus

' is the common term for the ', a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught....
 and other architecture schools, leading to numerous architects integrating it into their style.

Music


Classical music
See also: Unfinished symphony
Unfinished symphony

Several composers left fragments of symphony that for various reasons could be considered incomplete or 'unfinished'.The archetypal 'unfinished symphony' is Franz Schubert's Symphony No....
.
In the days of classical music
Classical music

Classical music is a broad term that usually refers to mainstream music produced in, or rooted in the traditions of Western art history Religious music and secular music, encompassing a broad period from roughly the 9th century to present times....
 all compositions were sketched on manuscripts – the technology to record music did not exist. Often these manuscripts are roughly sketched, with drafting work scribbled over the top of the music, and have been found in unordered piles. Many unfinished symphonies
Unfinished symphony

Several composers left fragments of symphony that for various reasons could be considered incomplete or 'unfinished'.The archetypal 'unfinished symphony' is Franz Schubert's Symphony No....
 have been pieced together from these original manuscripts by other composers, after the original author's death, with some remaining incomplete until many decades later. One of the most famous examples of unfinished musical compositions is Franz Schubert
Franz Schubert

Franz Peter Schubert was an Austrian composer. He wrote some 600 lieder, nine symphonies , liturgy music, operas, and a large body of chamber music and solo piano music....
's Symphony No. 8 in B minor
Symphony No. 8 (Schubert)

Franz Schubert's Symphony No. 8 in B minor, commonly known as the Unfinished symphony , was started in 1822 but left with only two movements complete even though Schubert would live for another six years....
, or as it is more commonly known, The Unfinished Symphony. Another famous unfinished classical piece is Mozart's Requiem, famous in part by the numerous myths and legends that surround its creation and in part by Mozart's prestige. Gustav Mahler
Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler was a Bohemian-born Austrian composer and conducting. He was best known during his own lifetime as one of the leading orchestral and operatic conductors of the day....
's Symphony No. 10
Symphony No. 10 (Mahler)

The Symphony No. 10 by Gustav Mahler was written in 1910, and was his final composition. At the time of Mahler's death the composition was substantially complete as a draft, but was unperformable in that state....
 was incomplete with only drafts, sketches, and two mostly orchestrated movements existing at the composer's death. Several individuals have "completed" it with varying degrees of success, the most notable of these being Deryck Cooke
Deryck Cooke

Deryck Cooke was a United Kingdom musicology who was born in Leicester.He studied at University of Cambridge and spent two stints working for the BBC music department ....
's "performing version of the draft."

Some compositions are finished "in the style of" the original composer, with someone who is highly familiar with their work adopting their writing style and continuing the musical tone. Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach was a German composer and organ whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of the Baroque music period and brought it to its ultimate maturity....
's The Art of Fugue
The Art of Fugue

The Art of Fugue or The Art of the Fugue , BWV 1080, is an incomplete work by Johann Sebastian Bach . The work was probably started in the beginning of the 1740s, if not earlier....
, which was broken off abruptly during Contrapunctus XIV by the death of the composer, was first published in the mid 18th century. Many reconstructions have been written, but in 1991 Zoltán Göncz
Zoltán Göncz

Zolt?n G?ncz is a Hungarian composer who often applies archaic forms and complex structures in his compositions....
 used the form of a permutation fugue
Fugue

In music, a fugue is a type of counterpoint composition or technique of composition for a fixed number of melody, normally referred to as "voices"....
 to make a strong argument as to the structure of the Fugue to come. Edward Elgar
Edward Elgar

Sir Edward William Elgar, 1st Baronet, Order of Merit, Royal Victorian Order was an England composer. Several of his first major orchestral works, including the Enigma Variations and the Pomp and Circumstance Marches, were greeted with acclaim....
 was composing a Symphony No. 3 at the time of his death and left 130 pages of sketches. These sketches were put into a reasonable order, orchestrated in the style of Elgar, and elaborated by Anthony Payne
Anthony Payne

Anthony Payne is an England composer, most famous for the work published as Symphony No. 3 .Born in London, Payne was interested in composing music from an early age....
. Payne's reconstruction has been played numerous times to great acclaim.

In May 2000 composer Colin Matthews
Colin Matthews

Colin Matthews is an England composer of European classical music.Matthews was born in London in 1946; his older brother is the composer David Matthews ....
 premiered his "completion" of Gustav Holst
Gustav Holst

Gustav Theodore Holst was an English composer and was a teacher for nearly 20 years. He is most famous for his orchestral suite The Planets....
's The Planets
The Planets

The Planets Opus number 32 is a seven-Movement orchestral suite by the United Kingdom composer Gustav Holst, written between 1914 and 1916....
, whereby he composed a piece for the ninth planet Pluto
Pluto

Pluto , Minor planet names Pluto, is the second-largest known dwarf planet in the Solar System and the tenth-largest body observed directly orbiting the Sun....
, giving it the name "Pluto, The Renewer". When Holst had written the original piece Pluto had not been discovered, and this addition therefore updated the suite and completed the eight movement
Movement (music)

A movement is a self-contained part of a musical composition or musical form. While individual or selected movements from a composition are sometimes performed separately, a performance of the complete work requires all the movements to be performed in succession....
s that represented the planets of the solar system
Solar System

The Solar System consists of the Sun and those Astronomical object bound to it by gravity: the eight planets and five dwarf planets, their 173 known Natural satellite, and billions of Small Solar System body....
 (Earth was never included) some 80 years after it was originally performed. Ironically in August 2006 Pluto was officially demoted to a dwarf planet
Dwarf planet

A dwarf planet, as defined by the International Astronomical Union , is a celestial body orbiting the Sun that is massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity but has not Clearing the neighbourhood of planetesimals and is not a natural satellite....
, thus meaning that Holst's original work now more accurately represented the solar system.

Some extremely famous 20th century operas have been left incomplete at their composers' deaths. Giacomo Puccini
Giacomo Puccini

Giacomo Antonio Domenico Michele Secondo Maria Puccini was an Italians composer whose operas, including La boh?me, Tosca, Madama Butterfly and Turandot, are among the most frequently performed in the List of important operas....
 left the finale of Turandot
Turandot

Turandot is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini, set to a libretto in Italian by Giuseppe Adami and Renato Simoni. Though Puccini's first interest in the subject was based on his reading of Friedrich Schiller's adaptation of the play, his work is most nearly based on the earlier text Turandot by Carlo Gozzi....
 unfinished and the missing music had to be provided by Franco Alfano
Franco Alfano

Franco Alfano was an Italy composer and piano. Though today best known for completing Giacomo Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot in 1926, he had considerable success with his own works during his lifetime....
 for the premiere in 1926. Recently, Luciano Berio
Luciano Berio

Luciano Berio, Italian orders of merit was an Italian composer. He is noted for his experimental music work and also for his pioneering work in electronic music....
 composed an alternative ending. Alban Berg
Alban Berg

Alban Maria Johannes Berg was an Austrian composer. He was a member of the Second Viennese School with Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern, and produced compositions that combined Gustav Mahler Romantic music with a personal adaptation of Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique....
 had only finished the first two acts of his opera Lulu
Lulu (opera)

Lulu is an opera by the composer Alban Berg. The libretto was adapted by Berg himself from Frank Wedekind's Play Earth Spirit and Pandora's Box ....
 at the time of his death in 1935. Due to objections from his widow it was not until 1979 that a full version was performed, with music for the final act devised by Friedrich Cerha
Friedrich Cerha

Friedrich Cerha is an Austrian composer and conductor.Cerha received his education at the Viennese Music Academy and at the University of Vienna ....
 using Berg's sketches.

Modern recordings
Since recording equipment has been an integral part of writing music it has been possible to use the original master tapes and demos
Demo (music)

A demo version or demo of a song is one recorded for reference rather than for release. A demo is a way for musicians to approximate their ideas on Magnetic tape or compact disc, and provide an example of those ideas to record labels, Record producers or other artists....
 to construct a song from the parts that had already been completed. Many demos are released officially if the artist has been unable (or unwilling) to complete it, or made available as a bootleg recording
Bootleg recording

A bootleg recording is an sound recording and/or video recording of a performance that was not officially released by the artist, or under other legal authority....
. The continued popularity of The Beatles
The Beatles

The Beatles were a rock music and pop music band from Liverpool, England that formed in 1960. During their career, the group primarily consisted of John Lennon , Paul McCartney , George Harrison and Ringo Starr ....
 led to "Free as a Bird
Free as a Bird

"Free as a Bird" is a song performed by The Beatles. The single was released on 4 December 1995, as part of the promotion for the release of The Beatles Anthology video documentary and the band's Anthology 1 compilation album....
" and "Real Love" being released in the mid 1990s after the band members pieced together incomplete recordings by the deceased John Lennon
John Lennon

John Winston Ono Lennon, Order of the British Empire was an English Rock music musician, singer, songwriter, artist, and peace activist who gained worldwide fame as one of the founding members of The Beatles....
. Both songs reached the top five in the British singles chart.

One of rock music's most famous unfinished albums is the 1967 Beach Boys album, Smile. Recorded in 1966 and 1967, Smile was to be a very ambitious followup to the acclaimed Pet Sounds
Pet Sounds

Pet Sounds is a 1966 in music recorded by United States popular music group The Beach Boys. The group's eleventh album, it has been widely ranked as one of the most influential records ever released in western pop music and has been ranked at number #1 in several music magazines' lists of greatest albums of all time, including New Musical...
 album, but due to Brian Wilson
Brian Wilson

Brian Douglas Wilson is a Grammy Award-winning United States musician best known as a member of the American rock and roll band, the Beach Boys....
's deteriorating mental health and increased friction among band members, The Beach Boys abandoned the project after completing numerous recordings slated for the project. In 2004, Brian Wilson and writing partner Dick Van Dyke went into the studio, and newly recorded the material and released it as a completed solo album.

Another famous unfinished rock album is Jimi Hendrix's First Rays of the New Rising Sun
First Rays of the New Rising Sun

The CD First Rays of the New Rising Sun is an attempt to recreate the album Jimi Hendrix was working on at the time of his death in 1970, as he would have wanted it ....
. Due to his untimely death at the age of 27, Hendrix was unable to complete the album. It has been issued in various posthumous forms in the ensuing years.

Several artists have found that some of their studio work has been leaked onto the Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
 before their album has been completed. System of a Down
System of a Down

System of a Down is an American rock music band, from Glendale, California, formed in 1994 . System of a Down consisted of Serj Tankian , Daron Malakian , Shavo Odadjian , and John Dolmayan , the band has released five albums since 1998....
's 2002 follow-up to Toxicity
Toxicity (album)

Toxicity is System of a Down's second album release. Produced by Rick Rubin, Toxicity was released on September 4, 2001 by American Recordings, debuting at #1 on both the United States and Canada charts....
, untitled at the time, was leaked onto the Internet as MP3
MP3

MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, more commonly referred to as MP3, is a digital audio Encoder format using a form of lossy data compression. It is a common audio format for consumer audio storage, as well as a de facto standard encoding for the transfer and playback of music on digital audio players....
 files. When the album was released under the title Steal This Album!
Steal This Album!

Steal This Album! is the third album by System of a Down. Produced by Rick Rubin and Daron Malakian, Steal This Album! was recorded in mid-2002 and released on November 26, 2002 by American Recordings....
 the songs were significantly different from the work-in-progress, with different titles, lyrics and even melodies. There were some reports that the changes were a direct result of negative feedback about the leaked material.

Some artists will try to ensure that their work is completed (as much as possible) before their health prevents them from continuing. Johnny Cash
Johnny Cash

Johnny Cash was a Grammy Award-winning American singer-songwriter and one of the most influential musicians of the 20th century. Primarily a country music artist, his songs and sound spanned many other genres including rockabilly and rock and roll , as well as blues, folk music and Gospel music....
, aware of his failing health, made sure that he recorded the vocals for 60 more songs, with the music being completed after his death. These songs were compiled by producer Rick Rubin
Rick Rubin

Frederick Jay "Rick" Rubin is an United States record producer and is currently the co-head of Columbia Records. He is given credit for merging hip hop music and heavy metal music as well as producing the "Johnny Cash discography#American Recordings" albums with Johnny Cash....
 and released as American V: A Hundred Highways
American V: A Hundred Highways

American V: A Hundred Highways is a List of works published posthumously album by Johnny Cash released on July 4 2006. As the title implies, it is the fifth entry in Cash's Johnny Cash discography#American Recordings, and it is also his final studio album....
 and American VI. However, not all artists get the chance to complete their work before their death, and the recordings that are made public may be somewhat different from what had originally been intended. From a Basement on the Hill
From a Basement on the Hill

From a Basement on the Hill is the sixth studio album by the late singer-songwriter Elliott Smith. Released posthumously on October 19, 2004 by ANTI- in Compact Disc, double LP album, and digital download, it peaked at #19 in the US and #41 in the UK....
 by Elliott Smith
Elliott Smith

Steven Paul "Elliott" Smith was an American singer-songwriter and musician. Smith was born in Omaha, Nebraska, Nebraska, raised primarily in Texas, and resided for a significant portion of his life in Portland, Oregon, Oregon, where he first gained popularity....
 was released posthumously in 2004 with comments from the initial album producer saying that "[t]he record he would have delivered would [have] had more songs, would have had different mixes and [been] a little more in your face". The album was still well-received by critics.

Richard Carpenter
Richard Carpenter (musician)

Richard Lynn Carpenter is an United States Pop music musician, best known as one half of the brother/sister duo the Carpenters, along with his sister Karen Carpenter....
 released several tracks decades after his sister Karen died in 1983, leaving a multitude of unfinished work. One track, released on the "Interpretations" album in the mid-nineties, included Karen's lead vocal for the song "Trying To Get The Feeling Again" which had previously been recorded and released by Barry Manilow
Barry Manilow

Barry Manilow is an United States singer-songwriter, musician, arrangement, record producer and conducting, best known for such recordings as "I Write the Songs", "Mandy ", "Weekend in New England" and "Copacabana "....
. The lead had been lost for years on a mislabelled tape. Strings, piano, and backup singers were added to the sound of Karen's lead vocal, while Richard left the sound of her turning the lead sheet over in the finished product. Another track was Karen's cover "The Rainbow Connection
The Rainbow Connection

"The Rainbow Connection" is a popular song written by Paul Williams and Kenneth Ascher and originally performed by Kermit the Frog in The Muppet Movie in 1979....
", which had been written by Kenny Ascher and Paul Williams
Paul Williams (songwriter)

Paul Hamilton Williams is an United States musician, music composer, songwriter and actor....
 for Jim Henson
Jim Henson

'James Maury "Jim" Henson' , was one of the most widely known puppeteers in American television history. He was the creator of The Muppets, Fraggle Rock, and the leading force behind their long run in the television series Sesame Street and The Muppet Show and films such as The Muppet Movie and The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth...
 to sing as Kermit The Frog
Kermit the Frog

Kermit the Frog is a Muppet, one of puppeteer Jim Henson's most famous creations, first introduced in 1955. Kermit was performed by Henson until his death in 1990....
 in The Muppet Movie
The Muppet Movie

The Muppet Movie is the first of a series of live-action musical film feature films starring Jim Henson's Muppets. Released in 1979 in film, the film was produced by The Jim Henson Company under their second name and ITC Entertainment....
 (1979). Recording it only a year later, Richard claims that Karen just didn't like the song and that was why it was left off of their 1981 album, Made In America. A toy piano, choir, and strings were added against Karen's vocals. The song was released in 2001 on the album "As Time Goes By".

Film

Orson Welles 1937
Film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
s may not be completed for several reasons, with some being shelved
Shelved

In the film industry, a film is considered shelved if it is not released for public viewing after filming has started, or even completed.A film can be shelved for a number of reasons:...
 during different stages of the production. Arrive Alive
Arrive Alive

Arrive Alive is the title of an shelved comedy film starring Willem Dafoe and Joan Cusack, Film director by Jeremiah S. Chechik and Film producer by Art Linson....
 was scrapped after a week of filming when the comedy was not living up to the screenplay. Shelving a film without it ever being released can be very expensive for the studios, with Arrive Alive costing $7 million.

With so many people involved in filmmaking
Filmmaking

Filmmaking is the process of making a film, from an initial story idea or commission through scriptwriting, shooting, editing and finally distribution to an audience....
 it is very possible for a film to remain incomplete because of an injury or death. While a member of the crew (even a producer
Film producer

A film producer is someone who creates the conditions for making film. The producer initiates, co-ordinates, supervises and controls matters such as fund-raising, hiring key personnel and arranging for distributors....
 or director
Film director

A film director, or filmmaker, is a person who directs the making of a film. A film director visualizes the Screenplay, controlling a film's artistic and dramatic aspects, while guiding the technical crew and actors in the fulfillment of his or her vision....
) can often be replaced, it is much more difficult to change to a different actor
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
 if many of the scenes have already been filmed. For example, Dark Blood
Dark Blood

Dark Blood is an unfinished work about a character named Boy . Boy is a widower who lives as a hermit on a nuclear testing site, waiting for the end of the world while making dolls that he believes have magical powers....
 was cancelled halfway through filming due to the death of its star River Phoenix
River Phoenix

River Jude Phoenix was an United States film actor. He was listed on John Willis's Screen World, Vol. 38 as one of twelve "promising new actors of 1986", and was hailed as highly talented by such critics as Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel....
. Some films have been completed despite such problems. A famous example is Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee

Bruce Jun Fan Lee was a Chinese people martial artist, philosopher, instructor, martial arts actor and the founder of the Jeet Kune Do combat form....
's Game of Death
Game of Death

The Game of Death was the film Bruce Lee had planned to be the demonstration piece of his martial art Jeet Kune Do. 100 plus minutes of footage was shot before his death, some of which was later misplaced in the Golden Harvest archives, and has not yet been recovered ....
; Lee died during the filming and the rest of the filming was finished by Tai Chung Kim
Tai Chung Kim

Kim Tai-Jung , sometimes known by his Chinese stage name Tung Long , is a Korean born expert in Taekwondo. In 1978, he was chosen to play the double for the late Bruce Lee in Bruce Lee's swan song, Game of Death....
, a Lee lookalike and Yuen Biao
Yuen Biao

Yuen Biao is an actor from Nanjing, China. He specialises in martial arts and has worked on over 80 films as actor, stuntman and stage combat. Along with Peking Opera School "brothers" at the China Drama Academy, Sammo Hung and Jackie Chan, he was one of the Seven Little Fortunes....
, a then-stunt actor who later became a TV/movie actor. His son, Brandon Lee
Brandon Lee

Brandon Bruce Lee was an American actor. He was the son of the late legendary martial arts film star Bruce Lee and Linda Lee Cadwell and the brother of actress Shannon Lee....
 also suffered from the same fate: he died after filming most of The Crow
The Crow (film)

The Crow is a 1994 in film Cinema of the United States action film-thriller film film adaptation of the 1989 The Crow by James O'Barr. The film was adapted by David J....
, but the remaining scenes were played by stunt double
Stunt double

A stunt double is a type of body double, specifically a skilled replacement used for dangerous Sequence , in movies and television , and for other sophisticated stunts ....
 Chad Stahelski with Lee's face digitally composited onto the double.

Continued delays can prevent a film from ever being completed. Something's Got to Give
Something's Got to Give

Something's Got to Give is one of the most notorious unfinished work films in Hollywood history. The light bedroom comedy was a remake of My Favorite Wife , a screwball comedy starring Cary Grant and Irene Dunne and released by RKO Radio Pictures....
 was a 1962 film
1962 in film

The year 1962 in film involved some significant events....
 with a difficult production history, which included the firing of leading lady Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe was an American actress, singer, model, and a sex symbol.After spending much of her childhood in foster homes, Monroe began a career as a model, which led to a film contract in 1946....
. She was later rehired but died before filming started; without the delay the film might have been completed.

In Orson Welles
Orson Welles

George Orson Welles , better known as Orson Welles, was an Academy Award-winning United States actor, director, writer and producer, who worked extensively in film, theatre, television, and radio....
' lifetime his unfinished films became legendary. For decades he worked on a version of Don Quixote
Don Quixote

, fully titled is an early novel written by Spain author Miguel de Cervantes. Cervantes created a fictional origin for the story based upon a manuscript by the invented Moors historian, Cide Hamete Benengeli....
, and he claimed that the film could be finished despite the deaths of his two leading actors. Citizen Kane
Citizen Kane

Citizen Kane is a 1941 in film United States dramatic film and the first feature film directed by Orson Welles. It was nominated for an Academy Award in nine categories, but won only for Best Original Screenplay by Herman Mankiewicz and Welles....
 remains one of the only films that was released as Welles intended, with most of his other films remaining incomplete or being changed by the studios. His death on 10 October 1985 came while he was working on The Other Side of the Wind
The Other Side of the Wind

The Other Side of the Wind is an unreleased 1972 in film film directed by Orson Welles and starring John Huston, Peter Bogdanovich, Dennis Hopper and Oja Kodar....
 and The Dreamers, the former being nearly completed.

Stanley Kubrick
Stanley Kubrick

Stanley Kubrick was an influential American-British filmmaker, screenwriter, Film producer and photographer. He directed a number of highly acclaimed and often controversial films....
 also had a famous unfinished film, Napoleon
Napoleon in popular culture

Napoleon I of France, List of French monarchs, has become a worldwide cultural icon symbolizing strength, genius, and military and political power....
. Reputedly, he wanted Jack Nicholson
Jack Nicholson

John Joseph "Jack" Nicholson is an United States actor, film director, film producer, and screenwriter, Movie star for his often dark-themed portrayals of Neurosis Fictional character....
 to play the famous Emperor after seeing him in Easy Rider
Easy Rider

Easy Rider, a Cinema of the United States road movie written by Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper and Terry Southern and directed by Hopper, about two bikers who travel through the Southwest United States and U.S....
. However, it never got made, due to budgetary constraints and the box office failure of Sergei Bondarchuk
Sergei Bondarchuk

Sergei Fedorovich Bondarchuk was a Soviet Union film director, screenwriter, and actor....
’s Waterloo
Waterloo (film)

Waterloo is a Soviet Union-Italy film of 1970, directed by Sergei Bondarchuk and produced by Dino De Laurentiis. It was the story of the preliminary events and the Battle of Waterloo, and was famous for its lavish battle scenes....
. He eventually used his research on Napoleon to make Barry Lyndon
Barry Lyndon

Barry Lyndon is a period film by Stanley Kubrick loosely based on the novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray. It recounts the exploits of unscrupulous 18th century Ireland adventurer Barry Lyndon, particularly his rise and fall in England society....
, regarded by many to be his most personal film.

It is not only live-action films that can be problematic. The Thief and the Cobbler
The Thief and the Cobbler

The Thief and the Cobbler is animated feature film by Canadian animator Richard Williams , who worked 26 years on the project. Beginning the work in 1964, Williams intended for the film to be his masterpiece, and a milestone in the art of animation....
 was a twenty-six-year animated film
Animation

Animation is the rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. It is an optical illusion of Motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in a number of ways....
 project by Richard Williams which was taken away from him and completed by Fred Calvert. The workprint
Workprint

A workprint is a rough version of a motion picture, used by the film editor during the editing process. Such copies generally contain original recorded sound that will later be re-dubbed, stock footage as placeholders for missing shots or special effects, and animation tests for in-production animated shots or sequences....
 of the original film became available as a bootleg. The 1978 animated adaptation of The Lord of the Rings
The Lord of the Rings (1978 film)

J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings is a 1978 in film animation fantasy film directed by Ralph Bakshi. It is an adaptation of the first half of J....
 was not viewed by the studio as enough of a commercial success to warrant the funding of a sequel, thus not completing the story from the original trilogy of books.

Software

Computer software, particularly games
Computer and video games

A video game is an electronic game that involves interaction with a user interface to generate visual feedback on a display device. The word video in video game traditionally referred to a raster graphics display device....
, are sometimes cancelled quite far into their development
Software engineering

Software engineering is the application of a systematic, disciplined, quantifiable approach to the development, operation, and maintenance of software, and the study of these approaches....
. Occasionally they are demonstrated to the press so that preview
PREview

PREview is a requirements methodology which focuses on the early stage of Requirements analysis: discovering and documenting requirements. PREview uses a Viewpoint-Oriented Approach to enable the conversion of top-level goals into requirements and constraints [1]....
s can be written but are never completed or published. Amen: The Awakening
Amen: The Awakening

Amen: The Awakening was a planned first-person shooter/computer role-playing game with some stealth elements by Cavedog Entertainment. It was to be the first FPS by Cavedog....
 had an extensive preview written in the magazine PC Paradox in 1999, including numerous screenshot
Screenshot

A screenshot, screen capture, or screen dump is an taken by the computer to record the visible items displayed on the Computer display or another visual output device....
s, which generated a lot of interest in the project. However, it was cancelled the following year. Due to continued interest in a game, some are eventually made available in their unfinished state. Combat 2
Combat 2

Combat 2 is video game for the Atari 2600. Originally announced in 1982, it was subsequently cancelled. Developed by Atari, the game was supposed to be the sequel to the classic Atari VCS game Combat , which was bundled with the system....
, the sequel to the 1977 Atari VCS
Atari 2600

The Atari 2600 is a video game console released in October 1977. It is credited with popularizing the use of microprocessor-based hardware and cartridge containing game code, instead of having non-microprocessor dedicated console hardware with all games built in....
-bundled game Combat
Combat (video game)

Combat is an early video game by Atari for the Atari 2600. It was released as one of the nine launch titles for the system in October 1977, and was included in the box with the system from its introduction until 1982....
, was never completed but, many years later at the 2001 Classic Gaming Expo, 200 copies of the unfinished game were sold after a company created a box and manual.

Software undergoes a testing phase
Software testing

Software Testing is an empirical investigation conducted to provide stakeholders with information about the quality of the product or service under test , with respect to the context in which it is intended to operate....
 that helps to eliminate problems before it is released; however, beta testing
Development stage

A software release is the distribution of an initial or upgraded Software versioning of a computer software product. The software engineering and company doing the work decide on how to distribute the program or system, or changes to that program or system....
 is a form of testing where the software is open to the public (usually limited to a set number of people or organisations) but is still essentially unfinished. This is often an important part of the development of a software package.

If a piece of software is becoming overly delayed the developer may just release the program despite the presence of a few bugs
Software bug

A software bug is an error, flaw, mistake, failure, or fault in a computer program that prevents it from behaving as intended . Most bugs arise from mistakes and errors made by people in either a program's source code or its software architecture, and a few are caused by compilers producing incorrect code....
. The Internet has allowed patch
Patch (computing)

A patch is a small piece of software designed to fix problems with or update a computer program or its supporting data. This includes fixing computer bug, replacing graphics and improving the usability or performance....
es to be deployed that fix these bugs, but before such technology was available the problems could not be fixed after the game was published. Even with this, a game with too many bugs when it is made public will receive very poor reviews that will undoubtedly affect sales. For example, 2002's Destroyer Command
Destroyer Command

Destroyer Command is a naval simulation released by Ubisoft in 2002 and developed by the now-defunct Ultimation Inc. The game placed the player in command of a destroyer during World War II, featuring campaigns from both the Pacific War and the Second Battle of the Atlantic....
 received some very positive reviews about many aspects of the game but was criticised for the number of glitches it contained that, given a lengthier software testing phase, should have been fixed. Some developers choose to disable certain features in order to release the game on time, especially if a project has seen an amount of feature creep
Creeping featurism

Feature creep is the proliferation of features in a product such as computer software. Extra features go beyond the basic function of the product and so can result in Baroque#Modern_usage over-complication rather than simple, elegant design....
. One such title was Cinemaware
Cinemaware

Cinemaware was a video game developer and video game publisher that released several popular titles in the 1980s based on various film themes....
's Defender of the Crown
Defender of the Crown

Defender of the Crown is a strategy game computer game designed by Kellyn Beck. It was Cinemaware's first game, and was originally released for the Commodore Amiga in 1986, setting a new standard for graphic quality in home computer games....
, which was released before all the features were completed when the company was faced with a strict deadline and the loss of two programers.

Unfinished work and the law

Unfinished work is often covered by the copyright
Copyright

Copyright is a form of intellectual property which gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights for a certain time period in relation to that work, including its publication, distribution and adaptation; after which time the work is said to enter the public domain....
 laws of the country of origin. The United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 have taken the step of creating a law which specifically mentions ongoing work, whereby work which is in progress but will in the future be completed can be covered by copyright. On 27 April 2005 the "Artist's Rights and Theft Prevention Act", a subpart of the Family Entertainment and Copyright Act
Family Entertainment and Copyright Act

The Family Entertainment and Copyright Act is a Government of the United States Act of Congress regarding United States copyright law that became law in the United States in 2005....
, was signed into U.S. law. This act allows for organisations or individuals to apply for copyright protection on unfinished commercial products, such as software, films, and other visual or audible media. For example, a photographer
Photographer

A photographer is a person who takes a photograph using a camera. A professional photographer uses photography to make a living whilst an amateur photographer does not earn a living and typically takes photographs for pleasure and to record an event, place or person for future enjoyment....
 can preregister a photograph by giving a written description of what the final piece (or collection thereof) will look like before the work is finished.

In copyright law, an artistic creation that includes major, basic copyrighted aspects of an original, previously created first work is known as a 'derivative work
Derivative work

In copyright law, a derivative work is an expressive creation that includes major, copyright-protected elements of an original, previously created first work....
'. This holds for all kinds of work, including those that have never officially been published. The rights of the first work's originator must be granted to the secondary work for it to be rightfully called a 'derivative work'. If no copyright permission is granted from the originator, it is instead called a 'copy'. Upon completion of the new piece both parties hold a joint copyright status, with both having to agree to any publications. When the copyright has lapsed for the original work the second artist fully owns the copyright for their work, but cannot stop distribution of the original piece or another artist from completing the work in their own way. However, such copyrights can only be granted if the work shows significant new creative content.

See also

  • Lacuna
    Lacuna

    Generally, a lacuna is a gap. The term may refer to:* Lacuna , a missing section of text* Lacuna , an extended silence in a piece of music* Lacuna , a lexical gap in a language...
     – a gap in a manuscript
    Manuscript

    A manuscript is any document that is written by hand, as opposed to being printed or reproduced in some other way. The term may also be used for information that is hand-recorded in other ways than writing, for example inscriptions that are chiselled upon a hard material or scratched as with a knife point in plaster or with a stylus on a wa...
    , inscription, text, or a musical work.
  • Shared universe
    Shared universe

    A shared universe is a literary technique in which several different authors create works of fiction that share aspects such as settings or characters and that are intended to be read as taking place in a single fictional universe....
     – a literary technique
    Literary technique

    A literary technique or literary device is an identifiable rule of thumb, convention or structure that is employed in literature and storytelling....
     whereby a series can continue after the death of the original author.
  • Tower of Babel
    Tower of Babel

    The Tower of Babel according to chapter 11 of the Book of Genesis, was an enormous tower built at the city of Babel, the Hebrew name for Babylon ....
     – a tower mentioned in Genesis
    Genesis

    Genesis or Breishit is the first book of the Bible used by Judaism and Christianity, and the first of five books of the Pentateuch or Torah....
     in the Bible
    Bible

    The Bible is the central religious text of Judaism and Christianity. The exact Books of the Bible is dependent on the religious traditions of specific denominations....
     where God
    God

    God is a deity in theism and deism religions and other belief systems, representing either the sole deity in monotheism, or a principal deity in polytheism....
     halted the construction.
  • List of comics that were never published
    List of comics that were never published

    Stories, issues of limited series/ongoing series, or even entire series which were written or promoted, and solicited for release but for whatever reason were never published....
  • Lost work
    Lost work

    A lost work is a document or literature work produced some time in the past of which no surviving copies are known to exist. Works may be lost to history either through the destruction of the original manuscript, or through the non-survival of any copies of the work....