| Academic Image Exchange (Published
in CAANews, September 1999) The College Art
Association and the Digital
Library Federation are pleased to announce
that they are sponsoring the development of the Academic
Image Exchange.
In service to the teaching and practice of the history of
art and related disciplines, the Academic Image Exchange
(AIE) intends to offer students, teachers, and the
general public "curriculum-based" sets of
screen-sized digital images for their free and
unrestricted educational nonprofit use. (Higher,
projectable resolutions will also be available.)
First to be introduced will be a selection of images that
satisfies a significant portion of the digital image
requirements of most college- and university-level
introductory courses in art history. The AIE will provide
several kinds of exchange facilities:
- for faculty to create and advertise want lists of
images for teaching
- for scholars, museums, libraries, and
photographers for nonprofit educational use to
contribute from the public domain or provide
under license high quality images sufficient for
classroom projection
- for visual resource specialists to participate in
shared cataloguing of the images and the works
they represent
- for faculty, students, and others to develop a
variety of scholarly products for learning
environments, such as distance learning, and for
publication.
Images offered through the AIE will be chosen on the
basis of their proximity to traditional course
selections. An online concordance will link images to
standard art history survey books. This concordance-index
will thus serve as one of the entry-points to the image
database, allowing teachers and students access to a
wider variety of images than is available in any single
textbook. All AIE offerings will be reviewed by an
independent panel of art historians. This panel will
select images based on their overall quality and on their
utility for teaching.
The key to the present and future success of the Image
Exchange will be its ability to enlist the cooperation
and advocacy of the community of scholar-photographers
who produce high quality color photographs to aid their
own teaching and research. By using the facilities of the
Internet to pool this vast resource, we will have an
opportunity to create a much needed public database of
art-historical images for all to use for educational
purposes.
CAA and the Digital Library Federation are currently
focused on the creation of a prototype of the Academic
Image Exchange. The AIE development team is composed of
art librarians, art and architectural historians, visual
resources curators, photographers, and specialists in
digital imagery and in systems design. Members and staff
of CAA, the Digital Library Federation, the Society of
Architectural Historians, and the faculty of the Imaging
Systems Laboratory of Carnegie Mellon University are
contributing to the AIE prototype development effort.
Robert Baron is serving as project manager for the AIE.
The Academic Image Exchange plans to demonstrate a
prototype program and a selection of images at CAAs
upcoming Annual Conference in
New York, February 2000.
During the course of the prototype development
a variety of groups and interested parties will be
consulted. Notice of future developments will be posted
in CAA News. For more information, contact Robert
Baron at ImExch@mindspring.com.
Robert A. Baron
|