Categories
Art History

New Museum Digital Archive

Through the 40-year legacy of the New Museum, the Digital Archive tells the history of contemporary art, its early days as a radical departure from modernism to its global present. The Digital Archive narrates the history of the New Museum, through the works of the hundreds of pioneering artists who have been exhibited, and tells a larger story about the dramatic changes in art at the end of the twentieth century that have laid the ground for culture and emerging art today. Since 1977, the New Museum has been at the forefront of presenting contemporary art and cultural practice. It is Manhattan’s only dedicated contemporary art museum that works actively with living artists.

Leading with its mission “New Art, New Ideas”—the Museum is recognized internationally for the ambitious scope of its curatorial program, in addition to its innovative leadership in the field of art and technology. As a non-collecting institution, the New Museum’s programmatic background and resulting documentation serve as the primary materials in its archival collection, forming its historical footprint. The Museum’s physical archive contains printed matter, photographic materials and other ephemera, which are being digitized and added on an on-going basis to a growing digital collection. As it stands, the Digital Archive contains over 10,000 objects (images, video, audio) spanning forty years of the Museum’s existence. It is a searchable online database of media from over 5,500 artists, curators, and organizations who have enriched the institution’s history over the decades.

https://archive.newmuseum.org/

Level: All

Categories
Architecture History

Visualizing Venice

Visualizing Venice is a Digital Humanities initiative that consists of students, scholars and architects at all levels of their careers who are actively involved in research projects to generate digital models and maps of the city of Venice, its territories, and its lagoon. Our goals are two:
– to enhance the understanding of the city, the lagoon, and its region as an on-going process of change and transformation over time,
– to communicate new knowledge about place and space to the public through portable devices and on the Visualizing Venice website.
Our research is based on archival and printed sources (documents, cartography, images) from which we generate three-dimensional models and animations that address questions of change and transformation. Begun in 2009, Visualizing Venice is collaboration between Duke University, the Università Iuav di Venezia (Iuav) and the Università degli Studi di Padova. The team now consists of approximately 30 faculty, post-docs and graduate students. Several of our initiatives involve teaching undergraduate students about the history of Venice through the vehicle of mapping and modeling projects and developing undergraduate-graduate research teams such as the VIVA initiative.

http://www.visualizingvenice.org/visu/

Level: All

Categories
History

CIRCLE: A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c. 1244 – 1509

The records of the Irish chancery were destroyed on 30 June 1922 in an explosion and fire in the Public Record Office of Ireland, located at the Four Courts, Dublin. Among the most important classes of record destroyed were the medieval Irish chancery rolls.
CIRCLE (Principal Editor, Dr Peter Crooks, Trinity College Dublin) is the culmination of nearly four decades of work reconstructing these lost records. It brings together all known letters enrolled on the Irish chancery rolls during the Middle Ages (1244–1509) drawing on originals, facsimiles, transcripts and calendars located in archival repositories in The Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland, England and the USA.

The site contains over 20,000 Irish chancery letters translated from Latin into English, together with an unparalleled collection of digital images of surviving medieval chancery letters and rare printed volumes.

Find out more about CIRCLE by listening to ‘Rediscovering Medieval Ireland’—a public lecture delivered by Robin Frame to mark the official launch of CIRCLE.

https://chancery.tcd.ie/

Level: All

Categories
Information Studies

Digital Refuge: Exploring the European Refugee Crisis

Over a million displaced people have entered Europe over the last few years, fleeing war-torn regions. Digital Refuge maps their journeys through their own words.

Through this site, viewers can compare asylum seekers’ hopes and worries to official reports, see how their most pressing concerns and unmet needs change during the crisis, and explore Greek camp conditions. We focus on the height of the crisis, 2015-2017.

https://digitalrefuge.berkeley.edu/

Level: All

Categories
Architecture

National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH)

The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH) is a state initiative under the administration of the Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht and established on a statutory basis under the provisions of the Architectural Heritage (National Inventory) and Historic Monuments (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1999.

The purpose of the NIAH is to identify, record, and evaluate the post-1700 architectural heritage of Ireland, uniformly and consistently as an aid in the protection and conservation of the built heritage. NIAH surveys provide the basis for the recommendations of the Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht to the planning authorities for the inclusion of particular structures in their Record of Protected Structures (RPS).

The published surveys are a source of information on the selected structures for relevant planning authorities. They are also a research and educational resource. It is hoped that the work of the NIAH will increase public awareness and appreciation of Ireland’s architectural heritage.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/niah-data-download/

Level: All

Categories
Architecture Art History English History

UCD Writing Centre

UCD Writing Centre provides free, one-to-one tuition and a range of workshops on all aspects of the writing process. You can find us in Link Space 2 of the James Joyce Library.

http://www.ucd.ie/writingcentre/?fbclid=IwAR29qz9uioDFg3CAQWjKK1tjmyTovKXwCldYMD2o0oZg1kwq_ObY84ecEcY

Level: All

Categories
Art History

Google Arts and Culture

Google Art Camera – Explore High Definition Art Works. Working with museums around the world, Google has used its Art Camera system to capture the finest details of artworks from their collection.

https://artsandculture.google.com/search/asset?project=art-camera

Level: All

Categories
Art History

Frick Digital Collection

The Photoarchive is a study collection of more than one million photographic reproductions of works of art by fourth to mid-twentieth century artists trained in the Western tradition. Each photograph is accompanied by historical documentation that traces the essential elements of the biography of a work of art — changes of attribution, ownership, and condition. The images together with the historical documentation provide an unparalleled resource for the study of the history of art. At present, the Frick is systematically digitizing the Photoarchive collection and making it available on this site.

Note: Some of the images in this collection are currently being cataloged and have limited metadata. Images without documentation are searchable only by Creator name and National School.

https://digitalcollections.frick.org/

Level: All

Categories
Computer Science Information Studies

Royal Irish Academy Digital Observatory

The Digital Humanities Observatory (DHO) is a central component within the Humanities Serving Irish Society (HSIS) initiative. The DHO was established under auspices of the Royal Irish Academy to manage and coordinate the increasingly complex e-resources created in the arts and humanities. It enables research and researchers in Ireland to keep abreast of international developments in the creation, use, and preservation of digital resources.

https://www.ria.ie/research-projects/archive/digital-humanities-observatory

Level: All

Categories
English

Radio MoLI: A Digital Radio Station for Irish Literature

Radio MoLI is a digital radio station for Irish literature.

Discover Ireland’s rich literary heritage from past to present in the historic UCD Newman House on St Stephen’s Green in the heart of Dublin. MoLI is a partnership between University College Dublin and the National Library of Ireland.

https://moli.ie/radio/

Level: All