Friday, 2 November 2018

Copy right/left

Copyright questions

What is copyright?
Is the law that gives the owner of a work (like art or photographs) the right to say how other people are able to use it. Copyright laws make it easier for authors to make money by selling their works. It is one part of a group of laws about intellectual property.

What are the laws that apply to copyright in New Zealand?
 In New Zealand, there is no copyright register or application process needed to be granted copyright protection. Protection comes into effect automatically when an original copyright work is created, published or performed (Copyright Act 1994).

When is a painting or book for example, no longer in copyright in New Zealand?
Copyright protects the expression of ideas or information − not the ideas or information itself. For example, if you write a novel, the text will be protected, but not the ideas or plot. Someone could write their own novel using your ideas, without necessarily infringing copyright.

What is copyleft?
Copyleft is a general method for making a program (or other work) free (in the sense of freedom, not “zero price”), and requiring all modified and extended versions of the program to be free as well.

Why was copyleft (Creative Commons) created?
Creative Commons licences make it easy for you to share your copyright works. The six Creative Commons licences ensure that others can copy and distribute your work, provided they give you credit — and only on the conditions you specify.
Creative Commons has been described as being at the forefront of the copyleft movement, which seeks to support the building of a richer public domain by providing an alternative to the automatic "all rights reserved" copyright, and has been dubbed "some rights reserved".

What types of CC license are there?
ATTRIBUTION
This means that others must credit you as the original creator of the work. All Creative Commons licences require users to provide attribution.

NONCOMMERCIAL
This means that others may not share, adapt or reuse use your work if their use is primarily intended for commercial advantage or monetary compensation.

 NODERIVATIVES
This means that others can share your work, but they must not change it. Note that users still have the range of Fair Dealing rights granted to them under the Copyright Act 1994.

 SHAREALIKE
This means that those who adapt or remix your work must use the same Creative Commons licence on any derivative works. Before remixing works that have different licences, check the licence compatibility chart.

How do you apply a copyright license(s) to your own work?
Before 1989, United States law required the use of a copyright notice, consisting of the copyright symbol (©, the letter C inside a circle), the abbreviation "Copr.", or the word "Copyright", followed by the year of the first publication of the work and the name of the copyright holder. Several years may be noted if the work has gone through substantial revisions

If you are commissioned to create a work of art or design who owns the copyright, and under what conditions?

One of the most important parts of the Copyright Act for artists, software developers, designers and other creators of original works – and their clients – is the “Commissioning Rule”.  This Rule (contained in section 21(3) of the Copyright Act 1994) provides that, where an original work is created on a client’s instructions for a fee (or other reward), then the client (not the creator) owns the copyright in the work.

Wednesday, 31 October 2018

Creative context

Creative context



As an artist, I try to develop ideas into works that make a statement with a thing I see going on around me.

Part of how my ideas come to me is by looking online at interesting new things that I can use in my works. I look at how something like resin can be used in a project and how it fits in with the brief given to me. I then work out how I can best bring the idea into an art piece or pieces.

One artist I found had done some work with glass and Concrete in a similar way as how I wanted to do my project. http://www.contemporist.com/glass-and-concrete-sculptures-by-artist-ben-young/, Glass and Concrete Sculptures by Self-Taught Artist Ben Young


December 4, 2017.  

References 

Thursday, 6 September 2018

Creative Work

 Creative Work



I put the dark sand at the bottom of vases before adding the white sand. Once I had done that and had got the stones I placed them in on the sand like at to walkway here in New Plymouth.

Once that was done I was able to start melting the soap and adding the colour to get the deep blue till the light see-through blue you get on the top. When I was happy with how the soap was looking me carefully poured the soap on top of the sand.


In the last few layers of soap, I put glow in the dark colour to represent the sea when a micro-organism in the water is disturbed by oxygen, making the sea "glow".













Thursday, 23 August 2018

Creative redesign

Redesign

This is the creative redesign of my critical studies project based on water /flow

I chose to make the work 3D and use resin for the medium as it looks like water. I Still use the different tide levels and to show this I used the sand again using the resin to hold down the sand and adding the same blue colour I got a very similar look and effect to water and the first project.












Copy right/left

Copyright questions What is copyright? Is the law  that gives the owner of a  work  (like art or photographs) the  right  to say h...