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Promoting Visual Literacy Across Campus: a Case StudyVisual Resources CollectionsDepartment of the History of Art, University of Michigan.
VRA Conference 32, Session #4The Teaching Turn: From Static Collections to Dynamic Learning CentersMarch 13, 2014
Molly Schoenschoenm@umich.edu
An Overview of the VRC
• History of Art Visual Resources Collections (HART VRC), at the University of Michigan
• Contains:– 80,000 + digital images
• Copy photography• Digitized slide distribution sets• Vendor images
– 150,000 35mm slides used for teaching (weeded from a collection of 300,000)
– 50,000 lantern slides– 200,000 + archival research images (negatives, prints, slides of
original photography)
An Overview of the VRC
• Examples of collections:– Palace Museum Archive– South Asian Art Archive– Islamic Art Archive– Romanesque Archive– Sinai Archive– Distribution sets, slides
created and sold by UM , 1970-2006• ACSAA: American Council on
Southern Asian Art• AAPD: Asian Art Photographic
Distribution• UMSD:University of Michigan
Slide Distribution (western art)Ilene Forsyth Romanesque Collection
The Ghost of VRC Past
• Inconsistent Record Keeping– AAPD numbering: each slide supposed to have a
unique, four-digit number.– different slides were sometimes replaced in AAPD
sets over time. The staff at the time would just re-use the same numbers, so numerous works share the same accession numbers.
The Ghost of VRC Past• Mysteries everywhere
– Undocumented collections– Incomplete inventory spreadsheets left by temporary
workers with no information on how to finish them.– Inconsistent or nonexistent procedures– Unfinished projects left on tables
VRC in Transition
• Stopped circulating slides for teaching in 2009
• Weeded copy photography slides, slides from certain vendors, and some duplicates.
• Digitization services extended to extra-departmental faculty and UM-Dearborn faculty
• Began services to HART graduate students in 2012– Unofficially, we can sometimes digitize
materials for undergraduate students as well.
Challenges• Steady decline in faculty image orders:
– 2011: 221– 2012: 205– 2013: 144
• Faculty are able to find their own images online now more than ever
• How do we stay relevant?– Increase access to collections– Promote best practices / visual literacy– Collaborate with faculty on writing grants for long-term digitization
projects– Collaborate with other departments across campus– New outreach initiatives
Increase Access to Collections
• Moving away from cataloging individual images at item level
• Instead, focus on creating finding aids in EAD format– Displays online and is searchable– Can be integrated with other UM Library finding aids
• Finding aids created in the past were done just using Word and were not posted online.– Recruited Library & Information Science students from
Wayne State University to convert them to EAD
Promote Best Practices and Visual Literacy
• Classroom presentations on finding images revamped to explain why visual literacy is important:– Know when to trust the
publisher of an image– Accuracy– Copyright concerns
• Presentations given to History of Art classes as well as Classics and other departments
Screenshot showing color variations in Google Images
Collaborating with Faculty• As we uncover collections,
we contact faculty who may be interested– We came across a box of
century-old Japanese and Chinese scrolls, had a student inventory and describe them, then notified faculty involved with Asian art.
– After finding slides of costume and dance photographs, we set up a meeting to show them to a professor within the Department of Dance
Jin Nong. Ink Play, Leaf 2. 1754.
Collaborating with Faculty• Working on writing
several grants with faculty– Promotes the professor’s
work and puts the VRC in the spotlight
– Provides funding for long-term digitization projects, which:• Increases public access
through online availability• Ensures longevity of VRC
Collaborating with other departments
• We frequently meet with UM Library staff on a variety of projects:– Finding aids – using templates created by UM Libraries,
with possibility of using their library catalog platform to host our finding aids.
– Giving joint presentations to students on research and copyright
• Collections Committee: a campus-wide group of people working in museum, library, and digital collections.– Discuss issues and share new developments.
New Outreach Initiatives• Publicity
– Collaborate with HART marketing specialist for updates on the department’s website, facebook page, and email newsletters
– Regularly update our own website
– Announcements on library informations screens
• Faculty Outreach– Fall faculty meeting: do an
“elevator pitch” to inform faculty of VRC services
– Also contact via email at the beginning of each term
The VRC homepage, with new “Search Our Images” button
displayed prominently
New Outreach Initiatives• Event Hosting– Emeriti Appreciation Event– Copyright Q&A – Fall Open House– Technology sessions
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