Collaboration – THATCamp ARLIS/NA + VRA Seattle 2016 http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org Just another THATCamp site Tue, 08 Mar 2016 19:10:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Linked data for cultural heritage metadata http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/02/12/linked-data-for-cultural-heritage-metadata/ http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/02/12/linked-data-for-cultural-heritage-metadata/#comments Fri, 12 Feb 2016 18:08:00 +0000 http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/?p=190

Hi all,

Would love to brainstorm how to implement linked data on a variety of cultural heritage institutional metadata. We’ve been working on a project about artist books and enhancing with Getty LOD vocabs and would love to get a feel for how or if others are thinking about how to enhance their legacy data to be more usable for others. Some thoughts about what would be discussed:

  • What to do with legacy data – what forms it takes, what is best for the objects and what is best for interoperability?
  • Identifying relevant tools for cleaning and enhancing data, such as OpenRefine, Heidelberg tool?
  • Relevant team members for such a project, including domain expert and metadata and systems experts – how to communicate effectively across multiple expertise backgrounds
  • Balancing over- or underenhancement, particularly for works of art
  • What are some ways to visualize connections and relationships between creators and artifacts?
  • How can we ensure that a project is sustainable?
]]>
http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/02/12/linked-data-for-cultural-heritage-metadata/feed/ 2
Web Archiving Workshop for Art & Design Resources http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/01/31/web-archiving-workshop-for-art-design-resources/ http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/01/31/web-archiving-workshop-for-art-design-resources/#comments Sun, 31 Jan 2016 21:08:08 +0000 http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/?p=204

As exhibition, publishing, and access, paradigms move swiftly to digital platforms, cultural heritage and memory institutions are compelled to collect and curate completely novel visual and art historical resources with the same breadth and rigor as they do their traditional, paper-based predecessors. Emergent tools and models for web archiving make preserving and accessing archived materials feasible, but it can be difficult to know where to begin. This workshop will demystify the process of establishing a web archiving program based on institutional needs and strengths, will expose participants to the tools and resources they need to start such a program, and briefly train them in software designed to meet their needs at their respective scales of need.

 

CAB Web ArchiveSnapshot from the Chicago Architecture Biennial 2015 Web Archive

 

Each attendee to this 60-to-90-minute workshop will devise a collecting scope for web-based resources vital to their institution, then work together in small groups to archive material from the live web using web archiving software. After reviewing the process and its results, attendees will be empowered to articulate the best next steps for their respective programs and propose opportunities for the further use of their web archives in data mining, exhibition, integrated discovery, and other related areas.

This workshop will be led by Karl-Rainer Blumenthal, Web Archivist for the Internet Archive’s Archive-It service and former National Digital Stewardship Resident embedded with the web archiving program at the New York Art Resources Consortium (NYARC).

 

 

]]>
http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/01/31/web-archiving-workshop-for-art-design-resources/feed/ 1
DH Possibilities for Architecture + Design Records http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/2016/01/24/dh-possibilities-for-architecture-design-records/ Sun, 24 Jan 2016 01:00:48 +0000 http://arlisnavra2016.thatcamp.org/?p=196

My campus has recently seen a surge of collaboration among scholars in the fields of architecture/design, public history, and the visual/performing arts. Scholars and students are learning to engage with the built environment in dynamic and innovative ways through emerging technologies like drone-based aerial photography, geo-tagging, 3D printing and scanning, and virtual reality environments. With our wealth of unique primary sources and information skills, it seems like library, archives, and museum professionals could add tremendous value to these kinds of projects.

Discussions might include topics like:

  • How are digital humanities scholars currently using primary sources from archival collections on architecture and design?
  • What new possibilities can we (LAM professionals) imagine for these resources?
  • How do we tackle barriers to use, such as low primary source literacy for visual materials, intellectual property and copyright fears, mistaken assumptions by scholars about LAM organizations, etc?
  • How can we engage design professionals (architects, industrial designers, engineers, etc) in this work?
]]>