Revisualizing Visual Culture
豆瓣
简介
In the past twenty years digital technology has had a radical impact on all the disciplines associated with the visual arts - this book provides expert views of that impact. By looking at the advanced ICT methods now being employed, this volume details the long-lasting effects and advances now made possible in art history and its associated disciplines. The authors analyze the most advanced and significant tools and technologies, from the ongoing development of the Semantic Web to 3D visualization, focusing on the study of art in the various contexts of cultural heritage collections, digital repositories and archives. They also evaluate the impact of advanced ICT methods from technical, methodological and philosophical perspectives, projecting supported theories for the future of scholarship in this field. The book not only charts the developments that have taken place until now but also indicates which advanced methods promise most for the future.
目录
Preface
Introduction: making knowledge visual, Chris Bailey
Do a thousand words paint a picture?, Mike Pringle
The semantic web approach to improving access to cultural heritage, Kirk Martinez and Leif Isaksen
Resource discovery and curation of complex and interactive digital datasets, Stuart Jeffrey
Digital exploration of past design concepts in architecture, Daniela Sirbu
Words as keys to the image bank, Doireann Wallace
For one and all: participation and exchange in the archive, Sue Breakell
The user-archivist and collective (in)voluntary memory: read/writing the networked digital archive, James McDevitt
Internet art history 2.0, Charlotte Frost
Museum migration in century 2.08, Jemima Rellie
Slitting open the Kantian eye, Charlie Gere
Bibliography
Index