Search

Internet Archive Open To Art

1 views

We worry so much about click-through rates, ad campaigns, and keyword pricing that it's easy to miss out on the more creative side of what the Internet can offer. Thanks to a grant the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Brewster Kahle and company will be able to bring a number of historic collections of works into the digital realm. Once in place, these works will be available without restrictions on their use. It's a scenario that Kahle has worked hard to encourage through his work on the Boston Public Library: The John Adams collection, which is the complete personal library of the Founding Father, lifelong book collector and second President of the United States. The Getty Research Institute: Major collection of books on art and architecture and an alternate collection on the performing arts. Johns Hopkins University Libraries: The James Birney Collection of Anti-Slavery materials. Bancroft Library of the University of California at Berkeley: Key primary texts documenting the California Gold Rush and Western expansion. Although the technology side of scanning occupies an important place in OCA's efforts, Kahle was careful to emphasize the essential need for the human side of the equation. He said leveraging librarians will be very important. Their skills at assembling sensible collections and cataloging them will make works much more accessible and useful to the public. Older material poses a challenge, Kahle said; he also recommended a resource for some classical material placed online at Tufts University. There, Professor Perseus Project. It is an effort to mashup places mentioned throughout classical literature with online maps and other digital resources to bring people a look at the geography settings for historic events. For example, , an adaptation of Frank Miller's graphic novel of the same name about the Spartan stand at Thermopylae, will be in theaters in 2007. The curious moviegoer can use Perseus to view Thermopylae as it is today, through images collected in its database. One

Found an error or have a suggestion? Let us know and we'll review it.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Please sign in to leave a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!