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{{Short description|New Zealand artist and author}}
{{Short description|New Zealand artist and author (born 1982)}}
{{EngvarB|date=February 2018}}
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| caption =
| caption =
| birth_name = Bronwyn Smith<!--only use if different from name-->
| birth_name = Bronwyn Smith<!--only use if different from name-->
| birth_date = 1982
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1982}}<ref name="Holloway-Smith (2018a)" />
| birth_place = Lower Hutt
| birth_place = Lower Hutt{{citation-needed|date=June 2024}}
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|df=y|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|df=y|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
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| website = {{URL|hollowaysmith.nz/}}
| website = {{URL|hollowaysmith.nz/}}
}}
}}
'''Bronwyn Holloway-Smith''' is a New Zealand artist and author from [[Wellington]].
'''Bronwyn Holloway-Smith''' is a New Zealand artist and author from [[Wellington]]. She holds a PhD in Fine Arts from [[Massey University]], and is Co-Director of Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand, a research initiative based at Massey University's Toi Rauwhārangi College of Creative Arts.<ref name="CV" /><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/expertise/profile.cfm?stref=709050 | title=Ms Bronwyn Holloway-Smith | work=Massey.ac.nz | accessdate=27 November 2014}}</ref>
She holds a PhD in Fine Arts from [[Massey University]],
and is co-director of Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand.


==Education==
==Early life and education==
Holloway-Smith graduated from Massey University with a
Holloway-Smith graduated from [[Massey University]] with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (First Class Honours) in 2006.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.circuit.org.nz/artist/bronwyn-holloway-smith|title=Bronwyn Holloway - Smith|date=2012-01-03|website=CIRCUIT Artist Film and Video Aotearoa New Zealand|language=en|access-date=2018-12-13}}</ref> She completed her PhD at Massey University College of Creative Arts in 2018.<ref>{{cite thesis |last=Holloway-Smith |first=Bronwyn |year=2018 |type=Doctoral thesis |title=The Southern Cross cable : a tour : art, the internet and national identity in Aotearoa-New Zealand |publisher=Massey Research Online, Massey University |hdl=10179/14941 |url=https://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/14941}}</ref>
Bachelor of Fine Arts (First Class Honours) in 2006.{{citation-needed|date=June 2024}}<!--Ed: previous source https://www.circuit.org.nz/artist/bronwyn-holloway-smith does not support the statement-->
<!--Ed: I suspect H-S continued at Massey as a staff member but need a source for that.
By the time she received her PhD, she was working as a teaching and learning administrator at CoCA
(see ... Four Staff Receive Doctorates below)
-->
In 2014, she was awarded a scholarship to study for a PhD in Fine Art.<ref name="Holloway-Smith (2014)">{{cite web
| url = http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170813235219/http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
| archive-date = 2017-08-13
| title = Holloway-Smith Steps Down As CFF Director (Open Letter)
| last = Holloway-Smith
| first = Bronwyn
| date = 2014-07-11
| website =
| publisher = Creative Freedom Foundation
| access-date = 2024-06-15
| quote =
}}</ref>
Holloway-Smith completed her PhD at the university's Toi Rauwhārangi College of Creative Arts (CoCA) in 2018.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://www.massey.ac.nz/about/news/wellington-graduation-sees-four-staff-receive-doctorates/
| title = Wellington Graduation Sees Four Staff Receive Doctorates
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2019-06-07
| website =
| publisher = Massey University
| access-date = 2024-06-15
| quote =
}}</ref><ref name="Holloway-Smith (2018b)">{{cite thesis
| last = Holloway-Smith
| first = Bronwyn
| year = 2018b
| type = Doctoral thesis
| title = The Southern Cross cable : a tour : art, the internet and national identity in Aotearoa-New Zealand
| website = Massey Research Online
| publisher = Massey University
| hdl = 10179/14941
| url = https://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/14941
| access-date = 2024-06-15
}}</ref>


==Career==
==Career==
She describes herself as interested in "internet culture, 3-dimensional printing, open source art, and space colonisation."<ref name="Creative commons profile">{{cite web |url=https://creativecommons.org.nz/2012/07/bronwyn-holloway-smith/ |title=Bronwyn Holloway-Smith |date=18 July 2012 |access-date=3 November 2017 |archive-date=13 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170813174305/http://creativecommons.org.nz/2012/07/bronwyn-holloway-smith/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> She edited the book ''WANTED: The search for the modernist murals of E. Mervyn Taylor'', published in 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.masseypress.ac.nz/news/2018/january/10-questions-with-bronwyn-holloway-smith/|title=10 questions with Bronwyn Holloway-Smith {{!}} Massey University Press|website=www.masseypress.ac.nz|access-date=2018-12-13}}</ref><ref name="Holloway-Smith (2018a)">{{cite book
[[File:New Zealand Internet Blackout 716.jpg|thumbnail|Holloway-Smith with Peter Dunne at an Internet Blackout protest in February 2009]]
| editor-last = Holloway-Smith
She describes herself as interested in "internet culture, 3-dimensional printing, open source art, and space colonisation."<ref name="Creative commons profile">{{cite web|url=https://creativecommons.org.nz/2012/07/bronwyn-holloway-smith/ |title=Bronwyn Holloway-Smith | date= 18 July 2012}}</ref> She edited the book ''WANTED: The search for the modernist murals of E. Mervyn Taylor'', published in 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.masseypress.ac.nz/news/2018/january/10-questions-with-bronwyn-holloway-smith/|title=10 questions with Bronwyn Holloway-Smith {{!}} Massey University Press|website=www.masseypress.ac.nz|access-date=2018-12-13}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/books/103213738/review-wanted-the-search-for-the-modernist-murals-of-e-mervyn-taylor-edited-by-bronwyn-hollowaysmith|title=Review: WANTED: The search for the modernist murals of E. Mervyn Taylor, edited by Bronwyn Holloway-Smith|website=Stuff|date=21 April 2018 |language=en|access-date=2018-12-13}}</ref>
| editor-first = Bronwyn
| author-link =
| year = 2018a
| title = Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E. Mervyn Taylor
| url = https://natlib.govt.nz/records/38906664
| location = Auckland
| publisher = Massey University Press
| page = <!-- or pages: -->
| isbn = 9780994141552
}}</ref>


===Advocacy for the Creative Freedom Foundation===
===Creative Freedom Foundation===
[[File:New Zealand Internet Blackout 716.jpg|thumbnail|Peter Dunne and Holloway-Smith face media outside Parliament House, NZ Internet Blackout protest, 19 February 2009]]
Holloway-Smith was involved in setting up the organisation Creative Freedom Foundation in 2008. The foundation seeks to "encourage and promote New Zealand artists' views on issues that have the potential to influence their collective creativity" such as copyright law. She was the director of the Creative Freedom Foundation until 2014.<ref name="CV">{{cite web | url=http://bronwyn.co.nz/biography/resume-curriculum-vitae/ | title=Resume Curriculum Vitae | work=bronwyn.co.nz | accessdate=27 November 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://creativefreedom.org.nz/about/ |title=About Us |work=creativefreedom.org.nz }}</ref>
The foundation sought to "... encourage, and promote New Zealand artists' views on issues that have the potential to influence their collective creativity." through advocacy and education.<ref name="Holloway-Smith (2014)" />
It was launched, in December 2008,
to oppose section 92 of the Copyright Act, due to come into force at the end of February 2009.<ref name="CFF (2008)">{{cite web
| url = http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081218095735/http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
| archive-date = 2008-12-18
| title = CreativeFreedom.org.nz Launches with Campaign Against Guilt upon Accusation Laws in NZ
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2008-12-18
| website =
| publisher = Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF)
| access-date = 2024-06-17
| quote =
}}</ref>
Holloway-Smith was a co-founder of Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF),<ref name="Creative commons profile" />
and served as their director and spokesperson.<ref name="Holloway-Smith (2014)" />


The Copyright Act 1994, s 92A<!--following https://www.lawfoundation.org.nz/style-guide2019/chapter-4.html-->
In 2009, she presented a petition on behalf of 149 people requesting "that the House of Representatives immediately repeal section 92A of the Copyright Act 1994 (to be inserted by the Copyright (New Technologies) Amendment Act 2008), or delay its commencement."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.parliament.nz/en-nz/pb/sc/documents/reports/49DBSCH_SCR5146_1/petition-20087-of-bronwyn-holloway-smith-and-148-others |title=Petition of Bronwyn Holloway-Smith and 148 others |work=parliament.govt.nz}}</ref> The petition was a culmination of the [[New Zealand Internet Blackout]], and was presented to Parliament by [[Peter Dunne]].
read
"Internet service provider must have policy for terminating accounts of repeat infringers".<ref name="Copyright Act 1994, s 92A">{{cite web
| url = https://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1994/0143/latest/DLM3288800.html?search=sw_096be8ed81d59d71_92A_25_se&p=1&sr=1
| title = Copyright Act 1994, s 92A
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2008-10-31
| website = New Zealand Legislation
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-17
| quote =
}}</ref>
CFF believed it would force Internet service providers to disconnect customers who
had been accused, but not convicted, of illegally downloading copyrighted content.
<!--Ed: shared account and one bad apple spoils it for those around them-->
It was dubbed the guilt upon accusation law, and the foundation wanted it repealed.<ref name="CFF (2008)" />


CFF called for the [[New Zealand Internet Blackout|first New Zealand Internet Blackout]] to run 16{{ndash}}23 February 2009,<ref name="CFF (2009)">{{cite web
==="Ghosts in the form of gifts"===
| url = http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
In 2010, Holloway-Smith produced an exhibition called "Ghosts in the form of gifts", which was commissioned by Massey University in Wellington. The exhibition used 3D printers to recreate 10 objects which had been lost by the [[Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa|Museum of New Zealand]]. The objects she printed included "an adze, poi, a whale's tooth and a tapa beater among others. A Maori fishhook (Matau) sits next to the Utah teapot, a standard object used in graphic design, and a New Zealand giant snail shell." The files which she used to print the objects were released to the public under a [[Creative Commons license|Creative Commons licence]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.computerworld.co.nz/article/490529/3d_printer_deployed_cause_art/ | title=3D printer deployed for the cause of art |work=computerworld.co.nz |author=O'Neill, Robb|date=27 January 2010}}</ref> The project won the Open Art Award at the 2010 [[New Zealand Open Source Awards]].
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090217084713/http://creativefreedom.org.nz/
| archive-date = 2009-02-17
| title = CFF Announce Internet Blackout Against Guilt upon Accusation Laws
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2009-02-16
| website =
| publisher = Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF)
| access-date = 2024-06-17
| quote =
}}</ref>
and organised online and paper petitions.
On 19 February, Holloway-Smith led around 200 protestors at parliament.<ref name="Radio NZ (2009)">{{cite web
| url = https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/30305/protesters-want-copyright-provision-scrapped
| title = Protesters Want Copyright Provision Scrapped
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2009-02-19
| website =
| publisher = Radio NZ
| access-date = 2024-06-16
| quote =
}}</ref>
She handed the petitions to [[Peter Dunne]] MP with over 10,000 virtual and 149 written signatures.<ref name="Greer (2009)">{{cite news
| last = McDonald
| first = Greer
| date = 2009-02-20
| title = Internet Law Change 'Unjust'
| url = https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/1751041/Internet-law-change-unjust
| work = The Dominion Post
| location = Wellington
| access-date = 2024-06-16
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.parliament.nz/en-nz/pb/sc/documents/reports/49DBSCH_SCR5146_1/petition-20087-of-bronwyn-holloway-smith-and-148-others
| title = Petition 2008/7 of Bronwyn Holloway-Smith and 148 Others
| last = Holloway-Smith
| first = Bronwyn
| date = 2009-02-20
| website =
| publisher = New Zealand Parliament
| access-date = 2024-06-16
| quote =
}}</ref>
[[Radio New Zealand]] interviewed Holloway-Smith at the protest,<ref name="Smith (2009)">{{cite web
| url = https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/2530870/copyright-act-amendment-protest
| title = Copyright Act Amendment Protest
| last = Smith
| first = Emma
| date = 2009-02-19
| website =
| publisher = [[Radio New Zealand]]
| access-date = 2024-06-14
| quote =
}}</ref>
the first of many appearances over the next ten years.<ref>
{{cite web
| url = https://www.rnz.co.nz/search/results?q=bronwyn+holloway-smith&commit=Search
| title = Search Results: Bronwyn Holloway-Smith
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website =
| publisher = Radio New Zealand
| access-date = 2024-06-19
| quote =
}}</ref>


Section 92A never came into force and was repealed by the Copyright (Infringing File Sharing) Amendment Act 2011.<ref name="Copyright Act 1994, s 92A" />
==="Pioneer City"===
CFF advocated for creative freedom on that act, other domestic law and international treaties.<!--From Holloway-Smith (2014): [[Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement]], Copyright (Parallel Importing of Films) Amendment Bill 2013 and the [[Trans-Pacific Partnership]].-->
In July 2014, Holloway-Smith stepped down from CFF to start her PhD.
Lacking a successor, the trustees put the foundation into hiatus.<ref name="Holloway-Smith (2014)" />
<!-- Ed: Holloway-Smith commented on the newly ratified but ill-fated TPP on behalf of CFF over a year
after she had resigned.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/concert/programmes/upbeat/audio/201774605/bronwyn-holloway-smith-copyright-and-the-tpp
-->

===''Ghosts in the Form of Gifts'' (2009)===
[[File:Cicada_(from_the_series_Ghosts_In_The_Form_Of_Gifts,_2009).jpg|thumbnail|Replacement cicada]]
Massey University commissioned Holloway-Smith to produce an artwork
for permanent display on their Wellington campus.
The university's College of Creative Arts building on Buckle Street
used to belong to the [[National Museum of New Zealand]]
which moved out to become Te Papa.<ref name="O'Neill (2010)">{{cite web
| url = http://www.computerworld.co.nz/article/490529/3d_printer_deployed_cause_art/
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150923205802/http://www.computerworld.co.nz/article/490529/3d_printer_deployed_cause_art/
| archive-date = 2015-09-23
| title = 3D Printer Deployed for the Cause of Art
| last = O'Neill
| first = Rob
| date = 2010-01-27
| website =
| publisher = Computerworld: New Zealand
| access-date = 2024-06-13
| quote =
}}</ref><ref name="Dornauf (2012)">{{cite web
| url = https://eyecontactmagazine.com/2012/05/glancing-at-the-history-of-digital-art
| title = Glancing at the History of Digital Art
| last = Dornauf
| first = Peter
| date = 2012-05-06
| website =
| publisher = EyeContact
| access-date = 2024-06-13
| quote =
}}</ref>
Holloway-Smith imagined museum pieces that might have been lost in the move.<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />

''Ghosts in the Form of Gifts'' (2009) was a collection of ten replacement pieces
produced with an [[open design]] [[RepRap]] 3D printer.<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />
Three of the originals were from nature:
a [[cicada]] in flight, a [[sperm whale]] tooth,<ref name="Dornauf (2012)" /> and a giant snail shell.
The rest were man made and, with one exception, generic and of unknown origin.<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />
They included a [[Māori people|Māori]] matua (English: [[fish hook]]) and [[poi (performance art)|poi]],
a [[tapa cloth]] beater and an [[adze]].<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />
The exception was the [[Utah teapot]] a [[3D modelling|3D model]] whose origin was well known.
Holloway-Smith gifted the 3D printer instructions for the collection
from her official website under the [[Creative Commons]] Attribution-ShareAlike license.<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />

In 2010, ''Ghosts in the Form of Gifts'' won the Open Source in the Arts category at the
New Zealand Open Source Awards.<ref name="NZOSA (2010)">{{cite web
| url = https://nzosa.org.nz/previous-nzosa-winners/nzosa-awards-2010/
| title = 2010 Winners and Finalists
| author = <!--not stated-->
| year = 2010
| website =
| publisher = New Zealand Open Source Awards
| access-date = 2024-06-13
| quote =
}}</ref>
In 2012, the collection was shown at RAMP Gallery in [[Hamilton, New Zealand|Hamilton]],<ref name="Dornauf (2012)" />
and reviewed by artist Peter Dornauf.<ref name="EyeContact writers">{{cite web
| url = https://eyecontactmagazine.com/writers/
| title = Writers
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website =
| publisher = EyeContact
| access-date = 2024-06-13
| quote =
}}</ref>
He wrote that everyday museum pieces had been transformed by 3D printing.
The replacements
"... present themselves as highly tactile yet prohibit touch because of their strange translucent ghostly nature."<ref name="Dornauf (2012)" />
The work also raised questions.<!--generalisation of the following sentences-->
Holloway-Smith asked "Is something a sculpture if you print it out from a machine?"<ref name="O'Neill (2010)" />
And Dornauf linked open sourcing the instructions
to the issue of [[wikt:authorship|authorship]].<ref name="Dornauf (2012)" />

===''Pioneer City'' (2011)===
In 2011, Holloway-Smith produced a series of works exploring the possibility of settling Mars. As part of this project, she won a competition to erect a billboard on Ghuznee Street, Wellington, advertising "Pioneer City" on Mars.<ref name="Billboard">{{cite web | url=http://connectingwithart.com/2011/03/28/a-second-public-art-billboard-project/ | title=A second public art billboard project | publisher=bartley + company art | date=28 March 2011 | accessdate=27 November 2014 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110901012250/http://connectingwithart.com/2011/03/28/a-second-public-art-billboard-project/ | archive-date=1 September 2011 | url-status=dead }}</ref> The intention behind the work was to explore how the real estate industry has aimed its marketing at people's aspirations, and how residential developments are sometimes utopian:
In 2011, Holloway-Smith produced a series of works exploring the possibility of settling Mars. As part of this project, she won a competition to erect a billboard on Ghuznee Street, Wellington, advertising "Pioneer City" on Mars.<ref name="Billboard">{{cite web | url=http://connectingwithart.com/2011/03/28/a-second-public-art-billboard-project/ | title=A second public art billboard project | publisher=bartley + company art | date=28 March 2011 | accessdate=27 November 2014 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110901012250/http://connectingwithart.com/2011/03/28/a-second-public-art-billboard-project/ | archive-date=1 September 2011 | url-status=dead }}</ref> The intention behind the work was to explore how the real estate industry has aimed its marketing at people's aspirations, and how residential developments are sometimes utopian:
<blockquote>"We have seen this with the boom in inner-city apartment living in the past decade. We saw it in the 19th century in the way the New Zealand Company sold a romanticised picture of New Zealand to prospective settlers before they’d visited the country. My project responds to this kind of marketing in the inner city and draws attention to its timelessness".<ref name="Billboard" /></blockquote>
<blockquote>"We have seen this with the boom in inner-city apartment living in the past decade. We saw it in the 19th century in the way the New Zealand Company sold a romanticised picture of New Zealand to prospective settlers before they'd visited the country. My project responds to this kind of marketing in the inner city and draws attention to its timelessness".<ref name="Billboard" /></blockquote>
A website was also produced.<ref name="pcwebsite">{{cite web | url=http://pioneer-city.com/ | title=Pioneer-City.com | date=1 January 2011 | accessdate=1 January 2011}}</ref>
A website was also produced.<ref name="pcwebsite">{{cite web
| url = http://pioneer-city.com/
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110521234211/http://pioneer-city.com/
| archive-date = 2011-05-21
| title = Pioneer City
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website =
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-14
| quote =
}}</ref>

===''Whisper Down the Lane'' (2012)===
In 2012, the [[City Gallery Wellington]] ran ''The Obstinate Object: Contemporary New Zealand Sculpture'' exhibition
24 February{{ndash}}10 June.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://citygallery.org.nz/exhibitions/the-obstinate-object-contemporary-new-zealand-sculpture/
| title = The Obstinate Object: Contemporary New Zealand Sculpture
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website = [[City Gallery Wellington]]
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-07-14
| quote =
}}</ref>
Running alongside the exhibition was ''Whisper Down the Lane'' (2012)
through which Holloway-Smith continued to raise awareness of copyright and
produce art with 3D technologies.<!--generalisation of this section that links back to earlier sections-->

Holloway-Smith picked one sculpture a week from the exhibition.<ref name="Amery (2012)">{{cite web
| url = https://eyecontactmagazine.com/2012/04/the-stubbornness-of-sculpture-2
| title = The Stubbornness of Sculpture 2
| last = Amery
| first = Mark
| date = 2012-04-10
| website =
| publisher = EyeContact
| access-date = 2024-07-14
| quote =
}}</ref>
She discussed copyright issues with the artist
then got permission to create a 3D model of the sculpture and 3D print the model as a miniature.
The miniatures were sufficiently transformed from the originals that Holloway-Smith saw them as her works.
She named them ''After ...'' the original artist and work in acknowledgement.<ref name="Radio NZ (2012)">{{Cite episode
| title = The Thorny Issue of Copyright
| episode-link =
| url = https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/artsonsunday/audio/2511708/the-thorny-issue-of-copyright
| access-date = 2024-07-14
| series = Arts on Sunday
| series-link =
| first = Lynn
| last = Freeman
| network = [[Radio New Zealand]]
| station = [[RNZ National]]
| date = 2012-03-04
| season =
| series-no =
| number =
| minutes =
| time =
| transcript =
| transcript-url =
| quote =
| language =
}}</ref>
The miniatures were shown in the gallery's reading room and sold online.<ref name="Amery (2012)" />
Again, the 3D printer instructions were gifted under a Creative Commons license,
this time Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (BY-NC-SA).<ref name="Radio NZ (2012)" />

''Whisper Down the Lane'' was reviewed by art critic Mark Amery.<ref name="EyeContact writers" />
He wrote that it was "... one smart project, charged in its complexity by contemporary issues of copyright,
reproduction and future changes to the art market."<ref name="Amery (2012)" />
It also won the Open Source in the Arts category at the
New Zealand Open Source Awards 2012.<ref name="NZOSA (2012)">{{cite web
| url = https://nzosa.org.nz/previous-nzosa-winners/nzosa-awards-2012/
| title = 2012 Winners and Finalists
| author = <!--not stated-->
| year = 2012
| website =
| publisher = New Zealand Open Source Awards
| access-date = 2024-07-14
| quote =
}}</ref>

===Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand===
Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand (PAHANZ) "... is a research initiative to find, document and protect [the nations's] 20th century public art heritage.", according to their website.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://publicart.nz/
| title = Haere mai! <!--English: Welcome!-->
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website = Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-10
| quote =
}}</ref>
At Massey University's Toi Rauwhārangi College of Creative Arts,
Holloway-Smith and Sue Elliott's research into the murals of [[E. Mervyn Taylor]] developed
into an informal register of public art.<ref name="Elliott (2023)">{{Cite episode
| title = Safeguarding 20th Century Artwork in Aotearoa from Disappearing
| episode-link =
| url = https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/afternoons/audio/2018900026/safeguarding-20th-century-artwork-in-aotearoa-from-disappearing
| access-date = 2024-06-06
| series = Afternoons
| series-link =
| first =
| last =
| network = [[Radio New Zealand]]
| station = [[RNZ National]]
| date = 2023-07-26
| season =
| series-no =
| number =
| minutes =
| time =
| transcript =
| transcript-url =
| quote =
| language =
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| url = https://publicart.nz/about/
| url-status = deviated
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191129070451/https://publicart.nz/about/
| title = About
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| archive-date = 2019-11-29
| website = Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-10
| quote =
}}</ref>
By the late 2010s,
PAHANZ planned to make the register accessible through their website.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://publicart.nz/register/
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191129070451/https://publicart.nz/register/
| title = Public Art Register
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| archive-date = 2019-11-29
| website = Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-10
| quote =
}}</ref>
In the early 2020s, the initiative received $300,000 from the [[Ministry for Culture and Heritage]]'s innovation fund
to put the register on the web and establish a forum for those working with public art
to share resources and best practice.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://www.mch.govt.nz/publications/arts-and-culture-covid-recovery-programme-funding-recipients#innovation-fund-recipients
| title = Innovation Fund Recipients
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = 2023-09-20
| website =
| publisher = Ministry for Culture and Heritage
| access-date = 2024-06-07
| quote =
}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine
| author = <!--not stated-->
| year = 2022
| issue = 4
| title = Discovering and Protecting Our Public Art
| url = https://www.massey.ac.nz/research/rangahau-magazine/rangahau-issue-4-2022/discovering-and-protecting-our-public-art/
| magazine = Rangahau: Research at Massey
| location = Wellington
| publisher = Massey University
| access-date = 2024-06-10
}}</ref>
The national register of 20th century public art was launched on the PAHANZ website in July 2023.<ref name="Elliott (2023)" />

{{As of|2024|09|post=,}} the register on the web lists 403 works.
Each work has a current status for the viewing public: accessible, hidden or lost (whereabouts unknown or destroyed).
The public is invited to submit further works for registration and
further information about selected works whose details are incomplete.<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://publicart.nz/artworks
| title = Artworks
| author = <!--not stated-->
| date = n.d.
| website = Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand
| publisher =
| access-date = 2024-06-06
| quote =
}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 57: Line 463:
==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Bronwyn Holloway-Smith}}
{{commons category|Bronwyn Holloway-Smith}}
*[http://hollowaysmith.nz/ Official website]
* [http://hollowaysmith.nz/ Official website]
** [https://hollowaysmith.nz/gifts/ ''Ghosts in the Form of Gifts'' (2009)]
** [https://hollowaysmith.nz/pioneer-city/ ''Pioneer City'' (2011<!--it's really {{ndash}}2015-->)]
** [https://hollowaysmith.nz/whisper-down-the-lane/ ''Whisper Down the Lane'' (2012)]<!--
** ''Pioneer City (2010)'' does not have a page
** [https://hollowaysmith.nz/projects/whisper-down-the-lane/ ''Whisper Down the Lane'' (2012)]
-->
*[https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/culture/101974892/city-gallery-exhibition-explores-kiwi-identity-and-bronwyn-hollowaysmiths-inquiry-into-digital-nz City Gallery exhibition explores Kiwi identity and Bronwyn Holloway-Smith's inquiry into digital NZ, Stuff, 5 March 2018]
*[https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/culture/101974892/city-gallery-exhibition-explores-kiwi-identity-and-bronwyn-hollowaysmiths-inquiry-into-digital-nz City Gallery exhibition explores Kiwi identity and Bronwyn Holloway-Smith's inquiry into digital NZ, Stuff, 5 March 2018]
*[https://publicart.nz/ Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand]


{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}

Latest revision as of 03:24, 28 October 2024

Bronwyn Holloway-Smith
Born
Bronwyn Smith

1982 (age 41–42)[1]
Lower Hutt[citation needed]
NationalityNew Zealand
Alma materMassey University
Websitehollowaysmith.nz

Bronwyn Holloway-Smith is a New Zealand artist and author from Wellington. She holds a PhD in Fine Arts from Massey University, and is co-director of Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand.

Education

[edit]

Holloway-Smith graduated from Massey University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (First Class Honours) in 2006.[citation needed] In 2014, she was awarded a scholarship to study for a PhD in Fine Art.[2] Holloway-Smith completed her PhD at the university's Toi Rauwhārangi College of Creative Arts (CoCA) in 2018.[3][4]

Career

[edit]

She describes herself as interested in "internet culture, 3-dimensional printing, open source art, and space colonisation."[5] She edited the book WANTED: The search for the modernist murals of E. Mervyn Taylor, published in 2018.[6][1]

Creative Freedom Foundation

[edit]
Peter Dunne and Holloway-Smith face media outside Parliament House, NZ Internet Blackout protest, 19 February 2009

The foundation sought to "... encourage, and promote New Zealand artists' views on issues that have the potential to influence their collective creativity." through advocacy and education.[2] It was launched, in December 2008, to oppose section 92 of the Copyright Act, due to come into force at the end of February 2009.[7] Holloway-Smith was a co-founder of Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF),[5] and served as their director and spokesperson.[2]

The Copyright Act 1994, s 92A read "Internet service provider must have policy for terminating accounts of repeat infringers".[8] CFF believed it would force Internet service providers to disconnect customers who had been accused, but not convicted, of illegally downloading copyrighted content. It was dubbed the guilt upon accusation law, and the foundation wanted it repealed.[7]

CFF called for the first New Zealand Internet Blackout to run 16–23 February 2009,[9] and organised online and paper petitions. On 19 February, Holloway-Smith led around 200 protestors at parliament.[10] She handed the petitions to Peter Dunne MP with over 10,000 virtual and 149 written signatures.[11][12] Radio New Zealand interviewed Holloway-Smith at the protest,[13] the first of many appearances over the next ten years.[14]

Section 92A never came into force and was repealed by the Copyright (Infringing File Sharing) Amendment Act 2011.[8] CFF advocated for creative freedom on that act, other domestic law and international treaties. In July 2014, Holloway-Smith stepped down from CFF to start her PhD. Lacking a successor, the trustees put the foundation into hiatus.[2]

Ghosts in the Form of Gifts (2009)

[edit]
Replacement cicada

Massey University commissioned Holloway-Smith to produce an artwork for permanent display on their Wellington campus. The university's College of Creative Arts building on Buckle Street used to belong to the National Museum of New Zealand which moved out to become Te Papa.[15][16] Holloway-Smith imagined museum pieces that might have been lost in the move.[15]

Ghosts in the Form of Gifts (2009) was a collection of ten replacement pieces produced with an open design RepRap 3D printer.[15] Three of the originals were from nature: a cicada in flight, a sperm whale tooth,[16] and a giant snail shell. The rest were man made and, with one exception, generic and of unknown origin.[15] They included a Māori matua (English: fish hook) and poi, a tapa cloth beater and an adze.[15] The exception was the Utah teapot a 3D model whose origin was well known. Holloway-Smith gifted the 3D printer instructions for the collection from her official website under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.[15]

In 2010, Ghosts in the Form of Gifts won the Open Source in the Arts category at the New Zealand Open Source Awards.[17] In 2012, the collection was shown at RAMP Gallery in Hamilton,[16] and reviewed by artist Peter Dornauf.[18] He wrote that everyday museum pieces had been transformed by 3D printing. The replacements "... present themselves as highly tactile yet prohibit touch because of their strange translucent ghostly nature."[16] The work also raised questions. Holloway-Smith asked "Is something a sculpture if you print it out from a machine?"[15] And Dornauf linked open sourcing the instructions to the issue of authorship.[16]

Pioneer City (2011)

[edit]

In 2011, Holloway-Smith produced a series of works exploring the possibility of settling Mars. As part of this project, she won a competition to erect a billboard on Ghuznee Street, Wellington, advertising "Pioneer City" on Mars.[19] The intention behind the work was to explore how the real estate industry has aimed its marketing at people's aspirations, and how residential developments are sometimes utopian:

"We have seen this with the boom in inner-city apartment living in the past decade. We saw it in the 19th century in the way the New Zealand Company sold a romanticised picture of New Zealand to prospective settlers before they'd visited the country. My project responds to this kind of marketing in the inner city and draws attention to its timelessness".[19]

A website was also produced.[20]

Whisper Down the Lane (2012)

[edit]

In 2012, the City Gallery Wellington ran The Obstinate Object: Contemporary New Zealand Sculpture exhibition 24 February–10 June.[21] Running alongside the exhibition was Whisper Down the Lane (2012) through which Holloway-Smith continued to raise awareness of copyright and produce art with 3D technologies.

Holloway-Smith picked one sculpture a week from the exhibition.[22] She discussed copyright issues with the artist then got permission to create a 3D model of the sculpture and 3D print the model as a miniature. The miniatures were sufficiently transformed from the originals that Holloway-Smith saw them as her works. She named them After ... the original artist and work in acknowledgement.[23] The miniatures were shown in the gallery's reading room and sold online.[22] Again, the 3D printer instructions were gifted under a Creative Commons license, this time Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (BY-NC-SA).[23]

Whisper Down the Lane was reviewed by art critic Mark Amery.[18] He wrote that it was "... one smart project, charged in its complexity by contemporary issues of copyright, reproduction and future changes to the art market."[22] It also won the Open Source in the Arts category at the New Zealand Open Source Awards 2012.[24]

Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand

[edit]

Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand (PAHANZ) "... is a research initiative to find, document and protect [the nations's] 20th century public art heritage.", according to their website.[25] At Massey University's Toi Rauwhārangi College of Creative Arts, Holloway-Smith and Sue Elliott's research into the murals of E. Mervyn Taylor developed into an informal register of public art.[26][27] By the late 2010s, PAHANZ planned to make the register accessible through their website.[28] In the early 2020s, the initiative received $300,000 from the Ministry for Culture and Heritage's innovation fund to put the register on the web and establish a forum for those working with public art to share resources and best practice.[29][30] The national register of 20th century public art was launched on the PAHANZ website in July 2023.[26]

As of September 2024, the register on the web lists 403 works. Each work has a current status for the viewing public: accessible, hidden or lost (whereabouts unknown or destroyed). The public is invited to submit further works for registration and further information about selected works whose details are incomplete.[31]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Holloway-Smith, Bronwyn, ed. (2018a). Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E. Mervyn Taylor. Auckland: Massey University Press. ISBN 9780994141552.
  2. ^ a b c d Holloway-Smith, Bronwyn (11 July 2014). "Holloway-Smith Steps Down As CFF Director (Open Letter)". Creative Freedom Foundation. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  3. ^ "Wellington Graduation Sees Four Staff Receive Doctorates". Massey University. 7 June 2019. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  4. ^ Holloway-Smith, Bronwyn (2018b). The Southern Cross cable : a tour : art, the internet and national identity in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Massey Research Online (Doctoral thesis). Massey University. hdl:10179/14941. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Bronwyn Holloway-Smith". 18 July 2012. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  6. ^ "10 questions with Bronwyn Holloway-Smith | Massey University Press". www.masseypress.ac.nz. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  7. ^ a b "CreativeFreedom.org.nz Launches with Campaign Against Guilt upon Accusation Laws in NZ". Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF). 18 December 2008. Archived from the original on 18 December 2008. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  8. ^ "CFF Announce Internet Blackout Against Guilt upon Accusation Laws". Creative Freedom Foundation (CFF). 16 February 2009. Archived from the original on 17 February 2009. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  9. ^ "Protesters Want Copyright Provision Scrapped". Radio NZ. 19 February 2009. Retrieved 16 June 2024.
  10. ^ McDonald, Greer (20 February 2009). "Internet Law Change 'Unjust'". The Dominion Post. Wellington. Retrieved 16 June 2024.
  11. ^ Holloway-Smith, Bronwyn (20 February 2009). "Petition 2008/7 of Bronwyn Holloway-Smith and 148 Others". New Zealand Parliament. Retrieved 16 June 2024.
  12. ^ Smith, Emma (19 February 2009). "Copyright Act Amendment Protest". Radio New Zealand. Retrieved 14 June 2024.
  13. ^ "Search Results: Bronwyn Holloway-Smith". Radio New Zealand. n.d. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g O'Neill, Rob (27 January 2010). "3D Printer Deployed for the Cause of Art". Computerworld: New Zealand. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  15. ^ a b c d e Dornauf, Peter (6 May 2012). "Glancing at the History of Digital Art". EyeContact. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  16. ^ "2010 Winners and Finalists". New Zealand Open Source Awards. 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  17. ^ a b "Writers". EyeContact. n.d. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  18. ^ a b "A second public art billboard project". bartley + company art. 28 March 2011. Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  19. ^ "Pioneer City". n.d. Archived from the original on 21 May 2011. Retrieved 14 June 2024.
  20. ^ "The Obstinate Object: Contemporary New Zealand Sculpture". City Gallery Wellington. n.d. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
  21. ^ a b c Amery, Mark (10 April 2012). "The Stubbornness of Sculpture 2". EyeContact. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
  22. ^ a b Freeman, Lynn (4 March 2012). "The Thorny Issue of Copyright". Arts on Sunday. Radio New Zealand. RNZ National. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
  23. ^ "2012 Winners and Finalists". New Zealand Open Source Awards. 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
  24. ^ "Haere mai!". Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand. n.d. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  25. ^ a b "Safeguarding 20th Century Artwork in Aotearoa from Disappearing". Afternoons. 26 July 2023. Radio New Zealand. RNZ National. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  26. ^ "About". Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand. n.d. Archived from the original on 29 November 2019. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  27. ^ "Public Art Register". Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand. n.d. Archived from the original on 29 November 2019. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  28. ^ "Innovation Fund Recipients". Ministry for Culture and Heritage. 20 September 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  29. ^ "Discovering and Protecting Our Public Art". Rangahau: Research at Massey. No. 4. Wellington: Massey University. 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  30. ^ "Artworks". Public Art Heritage Aotearoa New Zealand. n.d. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
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