Promoting prosperity:
the art of early New Zealand advertising
by Peter Alsop and Gary Stewart
Craig Potton, $79.99, October 2013, 978 1 877517 96 9
Pākehā New Zealanders like to regard themselves as being a reticent society,
awkward with words and uncomfortable with art. This hesitancy, a trait shared with
other white Anglophone frontier populations, is part of the settlement myth. It conjures
up the archetypal lone, grizzled, laconic, male, one suspicious of urban luxury; a bloke who calls a spade a grunt. It’s reflected in the utilitarian Pākehā place names of New Zealand: North Island, Bridge Road, New
North Road, Cloudy Bay, Black Range and in the settlement names with which the
newcomers invested the country, either replicated from Britain or appropriated
from Māori:
Auckland and Cambridge; W[h]anganui and Hokitika. It’s a mentality that privileges
faux commodity by engaging with the concepts of make-do and ready-made; the
‘number eight wire’ solution to perceived problems. It’s the favouring of physical
sports over the arts. It’s the simple suspicion of the provinces when confronted
by the sophistries of the metropolis. James Belich, notably in Replenishing the earth (2009), is one of
a number of historians who has observed the settler myth as complicit in an un-nuanced strategy
aimed at concealing the twin processes of colonisation and industrialisation.
Simplified myth permeates Promoting prosperity: the art of early New Zealand advertising. As Susan Buck-Morss observes ‘Myths give
answers to why the world is when an empirical cause and effect cannot be seen,
or when it cannot be remembered.’ (S Buck-Morss, The dialectics of seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project
(Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1989, p. 78). Memory or, more precisely, invented memory, frames the book's stated purpose of, as the introduction avers,
‘circumnavigating the nexus of art and early advertising’. Rediscovered 'memory' comprises the core of this visually-driven account of the history of advertising in New Zealand; an
exercise in a nationalistic visual mythology, Kiwiana, you could say.
[Stanley Davis (1882?-1938)] for Railways Studios.'New life; Lanes emulsion restores and maintains health', [1927]. Alexander Turnbull Library Eph-E-PHARMACY-1927-01 |
Walter Benjamin observes in his essay ‘The work of art in the age of
mechanical reproduction’ - a key discussion about the impact of technology on
the arts and design that is inexplicably
ignored by the authors of the text - that ‘The manner in which human sense perception is organized, the
medium in which it is accomplished, is determined not only by nature but by
historical circumstances as well.’ (W Benjamin, ‘The work of art in the age of
mechanical reproduction’ in Illuminations,
ed. by Hannah Arendt (New York: Schocken, 2007, 217-251, p. 222). While ‘nature’ is essential to an understanding of the
technologies involved, the condition of ‘historical circumstances’ is
critically absent in this instance. If the intention of the book’s editors, is
to ‘rehabilitate’ commercial art, they seem unaware that they are merely
revisiting a nineteenth century dispute about the artistic value of painting
versus photography. This was a debate that Benjamin adjudged ‘devious and
confused’, observing that it ‘was in fact the symptom of a historical
transformation the universal impact of which was not realized … When the age of
mechanical reproduction separated art from its basis in cult, the semblance of
its autonomy disappeared forever.’ (p. 226). This revalidation of the
achievements of ‘commercial artists’ is more about the creation of a false cult
rather than investing their work with a status it has hitherto lacked. The
subject of this book isn’t art but it is design and its texts
and images document the processes embraced by that understanding.
Promoting prosperity
comprises over 750 high quality images, of mostly New Zealand produced
advertising, along with an introductory essay, a brief account of the history
of advertising and nine case studies investigating, in a broad sense, aspects
of the history of advertising in or about New Zealand. Despite the textual
contributions, it’s the images that provide not only the main achievement of
this hefty volume but also its primary raison d’être. They include photographs,
posters, banners, playing cards, book and magazine covers, organised under
general thematic headings and reproduced in full colour with endnotes as to
dates and ownership. It’s an invaluable visual resource, even if the information accompanying the images borders on the sparse; an indication of dimensions and the methods of reproduction would have been useful. With all this visual splendour in a book
that makes claims to redefine a narrative, you would imagine the editors would have realised the importance of getting the text right, by locating the images in a tightly defined theoretical and historical discourse, but it seems they are convinced that the impact of the images alone is sufficiently compelling an argument.
Ian F Grant’s ambitious chapter describes an outline history of advertising
in New Zealand up to the 1960s that seems intended to provide the chronological narrative on which to locate the subsequent eight essays. Grant specifies the origins of the New Zealand practice in two ‘advertising
agencies’ operating in Dunedin and Christchurch prior to 1891. If the British
model of the mid-nineteenth century advertising agency was that adopted by
these South Island agents then their primary
function was to act as a conduit between retailers, manufacturers and importers
and selected papers while undertaking responsibility for payments. They also
passed information between local newspapers, and supplied copies of other
provincial and overseas newspapers to the newspapers they represented. They
were more a cross between a subscription agent and a jobbing journalist than an advertising agency as the role is understood today. While these agents may
have had input into the language used, they had very little to do
with the composition and layout of advertisements, a function usually
handled by outside studios or independent commercial artists.
An overwhelming expansion in commodity production combined with an explosion in literacy and advances in printing
technologies gave advertising critical mass during the latter part of the nineteenth century. The connection between the development of advertising and the availability of technically superior printed media has long been
recognised and is demonstrated, quite graphically, from the returns of
advertisement duty connected with newspaper taxes collected between 1800 and 1853
when it was abolished (see T R Nevett, Advertising
in Britain: a history (London: Heinemann, 1982), pp. 26-27). Grant undervalues the colonial dimension, opining ‘the United States [was] the birthplace of modern advertising techniques’
(Promoting prosperity, p. 26).
Advertising agencies in the United States at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries may well have been the hotbed of
‘modern advertising techniques’, but in New Zealand, well until the 1950s, these practices were mediated through Britain.
Advertisement from the British trade publication Advertisers Weekly (27 May 1927).
From Creating customers: the story of Ilott Advertising New Zealand: 1892-1982 (Auckland: Richards, 1984)
By making his chronology so tightly focussed on New Zealand and because histories of advertising in New Zealand are so thin on the ground Grant depends on the canonical trope of the heroic pioneer, the dynamic leader setting the ground for lesser men - and they are all men - to follow. From the South Island pioneers he progresses through a ‘late 19th century revolution in printing techniques’ interpretation of the rise of
advertising – although there’s no mention of the extraordinary New Zealand
printer, typographer and journalist Robert Coupland Harding – and into the twentieth century, a period that saw the formation of what might
be described as modern advertising agencies: J Inglis Wright, Charles Haines
Advertising and J Ilott Ltd being the three local agencies deemed worthy of
mention. Then, in the afterglow of the agencies, advertising clubs emerge; like
the agencies, they appear to have developed fully formed out of nowhere.
In the 1920s we see the establishment of new competitors to this recently formulated establishment, organisations such as Carlton Studios, the Government Publicity Studios and, about 1928, the Goldberg Advertising Agency. This singularity is remarkable: in this ‘man alone’ version of the history of advertising in New Zealand there’s no evident political, cultural, social or economic context; New Zealand is no longer enthralled by a colonial relationship with Britain; the First World War hardly impinges on things while the Second World War merely enables agencies to ‘[gain] a new level of respectability […] with campaigns that filled war loans and boosted morale’ (p. 32). In Grant’s assessment it would seem that New Zealand advertising agencies functioned largely uncontaminated by overseas connections, despite having offices overseas, recruiting from overseas, modelling their organisations on overseas templates, reading overseas publications such as Modern publicity and Advertiser's weekly, losing their personnel to overseas wars and, not least, relying on technologies and strategies first developed overseas.
In the 1920s we see the establishment of new competitors to this recently formulated establishment, organisations such as Carlton Studios, the Government Publicity Studios and, about 1928, the Goldberg Advertising Agency. This singularity is remarkable: in this ‘man alone’ version of the history of advertising in New Zealand there’s no evident political, cultural, social or economic context; New Zealand is no longer enthralled by a colonial relationship with Britain; the First World War hardly impinges on things while the Second World War merely enables agencies to ‘[gain] a new level of respectability […] with campaigns that filled war loans and boosted morale’ (p. 32). In Grant’s assessment it would seem that New Zealand advertising agencies functioned largely uncontaminated by overseas connections, despite having offices overseas, recruiting from overseas, modelling their organisations on overseas templates, reading overseas publications such as Modern publicity and Advertiser's weekly, losing their personnel to overseas wars and, not least, relying on technologies and strategies first developed overseas.
Edward Bawden (1903-1989), dust jacket for Modern Publicity: 1939-40. Ed by F A Mercer and W Gaunt (London: Studio, 1939). This much-repaired example was retailed by the Dunedin bookseller Hyndman's |
The remaining essayists adopt two modes of approach: the opinionated anecdote and the
populist academic. Dick Frizzell's contribution incarnates the anecdotal with a racy autobiographical reminiscence of his experiences in the advertising industry. Brian Sweeney's chapter on myth-making 'Kiwi chutzpah: the art of the sale' also relies on an anecdotal, loose-with-the-facts approach to the subject. While the inclusion of such views might broaden the book's popular appeal, from a design historical perspective it’s the second, more rigorous, approach that's of interest. This counterpoints the archive against a set of
identifiable historical benchmarks and processes, enabling a more informed and nuanced analysis.
Gail Ross’s account of the Auckland Quoin Club, a graphic arts ‘club’ established by Thomas Gulliver and Arnold Goodwin in September 1916 seems intended to support the revisionist editorial aim. Modelled on London prototypes, the club functioned as an Auckland hybrid of the independent studios - such as the Carlton Studios - who supplied many of the London advertising agencies with commercial art combined with the clubs – such as the Column Club, which provided art workers with training and social facilities. Ross’s essay seeks to locate the club and its activities within the Auckland art establishment by de-emphasising its commercial character. In fact, the Quoin Club with its practitioner base and emphasis not only on commercial art but also design – the applied arts and crafts – was, rather than being ‘an independent art society’, a predecessor organisation of the Auckland Design Guild (1949) and the New Zealand Society of Industrial Artists (1959) later incorporated as the New Zealand Society of Industrial Designers (1962).
Gail Ross’s account of the Auckland Quoin Club, a graphic arts ‘club’ established by Thomas Gulliver and Arnold Goodwin in September 1916 seems intended to support the revisionist editorial aim. Modelled on London prototypes, the club functioned as an Auckland hybrid of the independent studios - such as the Carlton Studios - who supplied many of the London advertising agencies with commercial art combined with the clubs – such as the Column Club, which provided art workers with training and social facilities. Ross’s essay seeks to locate the club and its activities within the Auckland art establishment by de-emphasising its commercial character. In fact, the Quoin Club with its practitioner base and emphasis not only on commercial art but also design – the applied arts and crafts – was, rather than being ‘an independent art society’, a predecessor organisation of the Auckland Design Guild (1949) and the New Zealand Society of Industrial Artists (1959) later incorporated as the New Zealand Society of Industrial Designers (1962).
Noel Waite’s contribution on New Zealand industrial exhibitions provides a useful overview of this significant aspect of national self-regard.
New Zealanders were fascinated by the idea of these 'secular cathedrals' from the first. As early as May 1850 the Southern Cross was suggesting that there should be
a New Zealand contribution to the 1851 Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of all Nations, the London spectacle that determined the template of them all, declaring
that:
The advantage to be derived by such a contribution must be obvious to
every one, since, however comparatively obscured by the more gorgeous displays
of the arts and industrial skills of wealthy and populous Europe, the very fact
of the productions of the Colony being admitted into such gay and goodly
fellowship, must prove to be an instrument far more effective than the most
elaborate Standing Advertisement, the most powerful Leading Article, or the
most painstaking Book.
Waite’s
account is equally upbeat. He argues that ‘from the beginning [New Zealand
exhibitions] sought not ephemeral vistas but remarkably tangible and productive
vistas that would sustain the industrial and social infrastructure of cities,
regions and the nation well into the 20th century.’ It’s a moot
argument and, with the essay’s focus restricted to the so-called
‘international’ exhibitions held in New Zealand, one based on a partial
account of the phenomenon.
With the
exception of the State of California exhibit at the New Zealand Centennial
Exhibition of 1940 (located, appropriately, in the Motors and Transportation
Court and a trade off for New Zealand participation in the 1939 San Francisco
Golden Gate Exposition), ‘international’ in the New Zealand exhibitions context
meant British empire. Rather than the prestige of state-sponsored foreign exhibits any non-imperial involvement was generally undertaken by
manufacturers’ local agents. For example, Belgian representation at the 1925 Dunedin
New Zealand and South Seas Exhibition seems to have been restricted to commercial displays on behalf of a safety match manufacturer, Union Allumettière SA of Brussels and a wallpaper manufacturer Usines Peters-Lacroix SA, also of Brussels. The United States was represented by a display of canned
vegetables and soups manufactured by Libby, McNeill & Libby of Chicago and by a small selection of heating devices sourced from various manufacturers including the Edison Electric Appliances Co Inc also of Chicago.
Nonetheless, these displays demonstrated the allure of the visual in terms of
the packaging of their products. Their appearance alone would have led them to
stand out in contrast to the more familiar and conventional packaging design of
local and imperial products.
Burton Brothers (fl 1866-1914), [Industrial Exhibition Building (1885)]. Museum of New Zealand/Te Papa Tongarewa C.11315 |
Probably
the most ‘tangible and productive’ exhibitions held in New Zealand are ignored in this account,
possibly on the grounds that they lacked an international
component other than those exhibits sourced from Britain. Prime among the roll
call of the absent is the 1885 New Zealand Industrial Exhibition held in
Wellington, which, like the 1865 New Zealand Exhibition, was an initiative of
the premier, the exhibition-minded Julius Vogel. The exhibition had the general purpose of gathering 'material evidence of all that the colonists could accomplish in the way of useful productions and manufactures' but its primary purpose was to attract both capital and trained artisans to the country, something that explains why such a relatively modest exhibition had so immodest a published record; it was produced for external consumption. It was also the catalyst for an essay-writing competition on
the subject of ‘New Zealand Industries, the Past and the Present’ and the winning essays were published in the Official record as a further lure for investors. But while
this move toward a degree of industrialisation garnered support from the urban
population, it was anathema to those members of the agricultural industry
dominating the legislature.
Cover of New Zealand Industrial Exhibition, 1885, Wellington: the official record (Wellington: Government Printer, 1886) |
Other
hiatuses in the list include the 1898-99 Auckland Industrial and Mining
Exhibition and the 1913-14 Auckland Industrial, Agricultural and Mining
Exhibition. While the former, held on the site now occupied by the city campus
of the University of Auckland was adjudged a success, the latter, held in the
Auckland Domain, was the subject of a slew of criticisms for its empty halls
and reliance on visitors attending the associated fun fair, Wonderland. It’s pertinent
to this text to question whether or not these exhibitions had anything to do
with the emergence of advertising art in New Zealand. Surviving photographs of
the displays suggest not; to the contrary, most publicity seems to have been
organised by importers, producers and retailers. The dominant visuality of
these commodity spectacles seems to have been the objects on display rather
than the promotional art.
There’s another aspect of the New Zealand exhibition
phenomenon that’s also omitted, one that possibly had a more significant impact
on the way the country both perceived and promoted itself. The first
independent New Zealand representation at an international exhibition occurred
at the 1873 Vienna Welt-Außtellung; participation in this non-British
spectacle was another Vogel initiative and its primary purpose was to attract
settlers, both urban and rural. This foray into overseas exhibitions was
followed by New Zealand displays at Philadelphia (1876) and Sydney (1879), Melbourne (1880 and 1888), London (1886, 1909 and 1924-25), Paris (1889), Louisiana (1904), San Francisco (1915 and 1939), Johannesburg (1936) and Glasgow (1938). A display at the 1878 Paris Exposition
Universelle was aborted at the last minute owing to government
incompetence. In fact, none of New Zealand’s overseas promotions seem to have
been effective, even by the hardly challenging standards of the day. They were
under-resourced and poorly designed: a visitor to the Philadelphia exhibition expressed his astonishment that ‘nothing
appeared in the [New Zealand] court but a case like a large packing-case made
of rough timber, something like a cucumber frame, […] covered over with wire
netting [and] all the wool and grain exhibits.’ It’s this amateurism, the
absence of a coherent visual narrative, that seems to be a
more authentic reflection on the condition of the New Zealand promotional
industry during the period under interrogation. Not so much of a ‘tangible and
productive vista’ but more a myopic and uncritical sense of national hubris.
Gregory Brown (1887-1941) for the Empire Marketing Board, 'Sheep raising - New Zealand' [about 1926].
National Archives of the United Kingdom CO 956/528
|
It’s an essay discussing an overseas political initiative that provides
the vital key to understanding both the political economy of advertising in New Zealand and the mechanism through which its practitioners embraced new visual forms and concepts. Felicity
Barnes’s essay ‘Britain’s farm: empire marketing at home’, an exploration of
the activities of the British Empire Marketing Board (EMB) in relation to New
Zealand, not only articulates the prepotent political, social and economic
links between the two countries but also raises the possibility that the local circulation
of these arresting images, which represented the way New Zealand
was perceived by the former colonial power, had a marked effect on the practice
of design in the country. Not only was a
selection of the 800 EMB posters toured around New Zealand in 1929 but also their
display in Britain was reported in local newspapers.
One of the great debates of the early twentieth century, in
Britain at least, was the Liberal ideal of free trade. Unlike their neo-liberal
descendants, free traders argued that a global
competitive market would not only reduce prices but also empower labour and make the world a better place for all. Conservative interests rejected this stance
arguing that the imperial interests would be best served by a tariff preference
that favoured imperial goods. Britain would sell its manufactured commodities
to the empire while the dominions and colonies would sell their unconverted raw
materials and foodstuffs to Britain. It was a view that found acceptance amongst
the agriculturally-minded, conservative New Zealand government, keen to ensure
continued access of its primary produce to what, in effect, was a captive
market.
In an effort to win over a sceptical public, a British Conservative
government, on the advice of Leo Amery, Secretary of State for the Dominions,
formed a partnership between the state and private sectors to
facilitate and promote imperial trade. Endowed with an sizeable budget, the EMB’s activities were not only aimed at promoting imperial produce
to British consumers but also improving the quality and efficiency of colonial
and dominion production. In pursuit of the former objective the EMB established
a Publicity Committee, whose vice-chairman (not, as Barnes avers, its ‘head’) was
William Crawford of the eponymous advertising agency W S Crawford Ltd, a progressive British agency and one of the first to
identify design as a discrete practice. He
was also principal advisor to its Poster Sub-Committee, chaired by Frank Pick
of the London Passenger Transport Board responsible for one of the
largest poster campaigns ever undertaken anywhere in the
world.
Léon Gischia (1903-1991), cover of Gebrauchsgraphik, 8:5 (May 1931), a Berlin-based monthly magazine for promoting art in advertising and the official organ of the Bundes Deutscher Gebrauchsgraphiker |
Crawford, who had been educated in Germany, was a promoter of modernism: the advertising he promoted was pared of ornament,
rich with colour and entranced by the mechanical; his London office was housed
in modernist, sub-Corbusierian, construction; and he was an equal opportunities
employer avant la lettre. In 1925 he
arranged a visit to London by members of the modernist Bundes Deutscher Gebrauchsgraphiker (the
Association of German Commercial Graphic Designers), which inter alia prompted the formation of the British Society of
Industrial Artists in 1931. This formal connection between the design
practiced by the members of the Gebrauchsgraphiker
and that promoted by Crawford in his role at the EMB is of particular interest
because it also descries a link connecting the graphic arts
of Weimar Germany with those of 1930s New Zealand.
In 1927 the Wellington-based advertising agency J Ilott Ltd opened an office in London to both service the company’s Glaxo account and capture those of British manufacturers selling in New Zealand. While Ilotts was proud to claim that it ‘was the first New Zealand advertising agency to bring copy and art specialists from overseas’, this almost accidental internationalisation of New Zealand advertising prompted the company into recruiting British art directors such as Eric Lee-Johnson (a New Zealander working in London) and Howard Wadman to ensure that its advertising remained on a par with that of the metropolitan centre (J Ilott, Creating customers: the story of Ilott Advertising New Zealand 1892-1982 (Auckland: Richards, 1985) p. 142). Wadman and Lee-Johnson were both members of the Society of Industrial Artists and, following their stints at Ilotts, separately edited Harry Tombs’ Year book of the Arts in New Zealand. While Lee-Johnson was the subject of the first monograph devoted to a New Zealand artist - Eric McCormick's 1956 publication, his move from ‘commercial artist’ to ‘professional artist’ came at considerable personal cost and saw him actively suppress his earlier achievements as both a graphic and an industrial designer.
In 1927 the Wellington-based advertising agency J Ilott Ltd opened an office in London to both service the company’s Glaxo account and capture those of British manufacturers selling in New Zealand. While Ilotts was proud to claim that it ‘was the first New Zealand advertising agency to bring copy and art specialists from overseas’, this almost accidental internationalisation of New Zealand advertising prompted the company into recruiting British art directors such as Eric Lee-Johnson (a New Zealander working in London) and Howard Wadman to ensure that its advertising remained on a par with that of the metropolitan centre (J Ilott, Creating customers: the story of Ilott Advertising New Zealand 1892-1982 (Auckland: Richards, 1985) p. 142). Wadman and Lee-Johnson were both members of the Society of Industrial Artists and, following their stints at Ilotts, separately edited Harry Tombs’ Year book of the Arts in New Zealand. While Lee-Johnson was the subject of the first monograph devoted to a New Zealand artist - Eric McCormick's 1956 publication, his move from ‘commercial artist’ to ‘professional artist’ came at considerable personal cost and saw him actively suppress his earlier achievements as both a graphic and an industrial designer.
Barnes has previously explored the impact of the EMB on New Zealand in New Zealand's London: a colony and its metropolis (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2012) although she curiously ignores the fact that the board's secondary aim of improving production
standards forced a reluctant New Zealand government into establishing the
Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in 1926. As she asserts,
the EMB had a significant cultural impact, in ‘epitomising the idea of New
Zealand, and the other dominions, as rural hinterlands of Britain’ through its
films and posters. She notes too that this fantasy of New Zealand cows and
farmers being displaced Britons ‘managed to overlook the innovations of
Taranaki-based, Chinese dairy farmer Chew Chong, Danish and American
contributions to the industry; and of course Māori dairy farming.’ This was
myth making in the service of the state: one of the EMB posters used to
illustrate the essay, by Frank Newbould, depicts a ‘New Zealand’
mustering scene; the central figure is a lone, mounted shepherd. Newbould’s
poster not only conveyed the EMB’s emphatic message to British consumers that
empire was theirs but it also provided Pākehā New Zealanders with a visual
fiction that eradicated not only the distance between metropolis and the
frontier but also the compromises and the economic, environmental and social
damage inherent in colonialism.
Promoting prosperity, like its companion volume Selling the dream: the art of early New Zealand tourism published in 2012, represents a significant commitment on the part of the editors and their publisher Craig Potton Publishing to making available to a wider public one of the more extraordinary visual archives to be found in New Zealand. It's an impressive achievement. Future publications though would benefit from being more than vehicles for personal rediscoveries of this long disregarded body of work. A preponderance of the texts accompanying the images suggest that the contributors to these volumes see their subject matter in purely formal terms, disconnected from wider, social, economic and political narratives. This position is exacerbated by both a disregard of theory and an undeveloped sense of where 'commercial art' - or, deploying a more contemporary term, graphic design - fits into the wider visual culture of New Zealand. If graphic design in the service of advertising and
promotion was all about creating an alternative visual narrative to the humdrum
existence of provincial life, then Promoting prosperity succeeds in conveying the richness and
diversity of the archive it produced. The book is less successful in its aim
of transmogrifying ‘commercial art’ into the canon of 'legitimate fine art' because,
ultimately, such a model has neither historical validity nor practical
justification. A more nuanced and appropriate approach, as both the archive and
historical circumstance suggests, would be to see this body of work as a part
of a yet unwritten history of design in New Zealand.
Hi Christopher. That's an impressive review; thanks for your comprehensive treatment/appraisal of the book. I think your comments are fair, and highlight some of the weaknesses of the book, which is the role of a good reviewer. I think greater social and cultural context could have enhanced the book, as could some international context around the evolution of design (beyond Felicity's good piece that you've paid close attention to). I'm pleased though that you've had such a close look at the book and see some of the upside it offers various interest groups. I'd like to get in touch re a new project you may have an interest in (or useful knowledge) - I couldn't find an email so would appreciate you dropping me a line at palsop@paradise.net.nz if possible please. Thx again for your robust and in-depth consideration of PP. Peter
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