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Entries categorized as ‘Art’

Flickr and the expanded museum

July 20, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I’ve always tended to think of a museum as a place, a building or specific space, somewhere one goes to to view (and perhaps experience) collections. While museums have evolved from the draughty, old, quiet places of static displays that I remember from my youth to more vibrant and involving experiences, often with web presences and access to information, images etc online, I still think of a collection, managed by experts, in a place.

An interesting item over on if:book recently, flickr as virtual museum challenged that concept and opened up more possibilities in my mind:

The Brooklyn Museum has been availing itself of various services at Flickr in conjunction with its new “Grafitti” exhibit, assembling photo sets and creating a group photo pool. In addition, the museum welcomes anyone to contribute photographs of grafitti from around Brooklyn to be incorporated into the main photo stream, along with images of a growing public grafitti mural on-site at the museum where visitors can pick up a colored pencil and start scribbling away.

What a great way to connect a very public form of art with the public that creates it and sees it, and form a far more creative, dynamic and involving exploration of the culture as well as the artefacts; an exploration that builds a collection even as it shows it.

Categories: Art · Technology · Using images

BibliOdyssey

February 23, 2006 · Leave a Comment

A blog I love to check every week or so is BibliOdyssey – ‘Books~~Illustrations~~Science~~History~~Visual Materia Obscura~~Eclectic Bookart.’

This blog showcases images drawn from historical collections and publications that are now available on the web. As well as being visual bliss, it’s also a great resource for teachers who may wish to use historical images in their teaching – each posting explains the collection that the images are from, provides some basic details, and links to the web page of the collection.

Recent postings include images from the 14th century Das Buch der Natur (The Book of Nature); 18th and 19th century images of Printers’ Devices; and images from Racinet’s 19th century Complete Costume History.

Categories: Art · History