George(s) Lessard on Tue, 23 Jan 2001 22:26:29 -0500 |
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Syndicate: Conf.: MUSEUMS & THE WEB 2001 |
SEATTLE, WA March 14 - 17, 2001 Sheraton Seattle Hotel and Towers MUSEUMS AND THE WEB 2001 Now in its fifth year, MUSEUMS AND THE WEB 2001 will review the state of the web in arts, culture, and heritage. In a special Opening Plenary, Cary Karp and Ken Hamma will talk about the genesis and future of the .museum TLD. They kick off three days of presentations featuring reports from over 25 countries, including Opening Plenary A TOP LEVEL DOMAIN FOR MUSEUMS Cary Karp, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Sweden Ken Hamma, J. Paul Getty Museum, USA The Museum Domain Management Association (MUSEDOMA) with its two foundermembers the International Council of Museums (ICOM) in Paris and the J. Paul Getty Trust in Los Angeles submitted an application to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) for the establishment of a museum top level domain (TLD). In November 2000, ICANN approved the new TLD. Session: Digital Art NEW MEDIA CURATING: SITES OF CHANGE Sarah Cook, University of Sunderland, UK Beryl Graham, University of Sunderland, UK Curating artworks using new media (including CD-ROMs, interactive installations, Virtual reality, and the Internet) brings up challenges and changes for concepts of presentation, reception and collection. APPROACHES TO INTERNET ART PRESERVATION AND ACCESS: THE RHIZOME ARTBASE Jennifer Crowe, Rhizome.org, USA This report on the progress of Rhizome.org's ArtBase will present new protocols and applications for the description, archiving, preservation, and retrieval of Internet art in an online context. BEYOND THE MUSEUMS' WALLS - A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF EMERGING APPROACHES TO MUSEUM WEB-BASED EDUCATION Kevin Sumption, Powerhouse Museum, Australia "As part of the research undertaken to develop Australian Museums On Line's new Education Gateway, I have spent considerable time examining why and how museums are using the Internet for education outreach. In this paper I will explore these reasons as well as the diversity of emerging on-line education expressions...." Session: Accessibility ACCESSIBILITY TECHNIQUES FOR MUSEUM WEB SITES Susan Anable, The Dayton Art Institute, USA Adam Alonzo, Wright State University, USA Like other public institutions, museums strive to make their facilities accessible to people with disabilities, yet these same patrons may be hindered in their use of museum Web sites due to electronic accessibility barriers. This presentation will demonstrate how access was a primary design factor in the Virtual Museum Tour, part of the Web site of The Dayton Art Institute. Developed in collaboration with Wright State University. ART TALES: A STORY OF COLLABORATION AND INTEGRATION Robin Davis, Community Discovered, USA Ponteir Sackrey, National Museum of Wildlife Art, USA Empowering K-12 teachers to create meaningful learning experiences which will integrate art and technology in a constructivist setting -- the goal of a collaboration between the National Museum of Wildlife Art in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and Community Discovered in Omaha, Nebraska -- will be discussed in this presentation. Session: Closing Plenary THE VIRTUAL AURA Susan Hazan, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel This paper evaluates the different ways that museums are responding to life on the net, and will look to three models of museum web-sites, the documentation of traditional collections through online databases, the virtual museum with no concrete counterpart to resonate the online experience and the proliferation of web based contemporary art. This attempt to map out the different ways that museums formulate their identity on the net will address the notion of the lost aura or perhaps the emergence of new cultural phenomena, the virtual aura. Session: Closing Plenary EXTENDING THE VIRTUAL MUSEUM: INTEGRATING MUSEUM WITH OTHER KINDS OF WEBSITES George Landow, National University of Singapore, Singapore Museums face problems letting people know what they have and providing a context so people can understand them and their importance. George Landow, a pioneer in hyperlinking, runs 3 interlinked websites totalling more than 40,000 docs and images, two of which are recommended by NEH, the ministries of education in France, Ireland, and BBC. These sites (the Victorian and Postcolonial Webs) contain thousands of documents and images from real and virtual museums. Strategies for integrating museum content into such thematic webs will be discussed. For information about many more presentations as well as registration information, visit http://www.archimuse.com/mw2001/ ------------ Note that the .museum TLD will be detailed in an upcoming issue of Arts Wire CURRENT _______________________________________________________ :-) Message ends, Signature begins (-: George Lessard, living @ 61.10N 94.05W Member, ICANN @Large Member # 375469 Comments should be sent to mediamentor_no_spam_@cyberdude.com MSN Messanger address lessard99_no_spam_@hotmail.com [Remove _no_spam_ from addresses to e-mail] "Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go." T.S. Eliot... "If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping in a closed room with a mosquito..." African Proverb ICQ # 8501081 Moderator Creative-Radio http://www.eGroups.com/list/creative-radio MediaMentor Weblog http://www.eGroups.com/list/mediamentor Homepages http://media002.tripod.com Caveat Lector, Disclaimers & (c) info http://members.tripod.com/~media002/disclaimer.htm Semi-random signature quotes follow: Thought for the day: Dictatorship (n): a form of government under which everything which is not prohibited is compulsory. ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress