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rose

Metropolitan Museum of Art Exterior  CC2 erin.kkr

Metropolitan Museum of Art Exterior CC2 erin.kkr

General Description

The digital image collection available on the website of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is a mixed bag.  I refer, of course, not to the contents of the collection, but to the display and searchability of the subject matter of the works in the collection.

The Met’s description of the digital collection  is as follows:

The Collection Database is a searchable database of artworks and related materials from the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. An individual database record includes information about an object as well as images, when available. The Museum’s curators have selected several works of note within the collection Database as Highlights of the collection. Due to the extremely large number of objects in the Museum’s permanent collection, not all artworks are currently available in the collection Database. Furthermore, information contained in the database records is, in some cases, incomplete, and all information is subject to change according to ongoing research and new acquisitions.

This statement acknowledges that not all objects in the permanent collection are contained in the database, and that those which are do not always have associated images, BUT it would have been nice for the Met to give the user some sense of proportionality.  According to the site there are 128,347 items in the online collection.  But I can’t tell form this what portion of the permanent collection this represents,  The only piece of further information I can easily find is that the Highlights contain only 1407 objects. Equally important I can’t tell how many of  the 128,347 objects have associated images.  I can say, unfortunately, that it appears that the vast majority of the items don’t.  One can browse the works to see page after page of thumbnails stating “image not available”   What a drag. It is not a bad thing that so many objects lack images; better to have access to the text record than to have nothing at all.  It is a major oversight, however, that the interface does not allow [click to continue…]

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Why Ofness?

by Denise on June 20, 2008

Jonah and the Whale Example of Micrography

Jonah and the Whale Example of Micrography

My interest in the issues around retrieving digital images evolved from my interest in art, text, the intersection of the two, a project, a penchant for organization, and a library science degree.

Several years ago I learned Photoshop with a particular project in mind. After working on that project for a year and a half, I had a new idea. This idea was to create a large rose, using one of my watercolors, but to make an image of the rose exclusively out of words. The original inspiration for this was my discovery of micrography. Not the micrography that is about photos of microscopic things; rather the micrography that has been practiced for hundreds of years by Jewish artists.  Jewish micrography creates images related to the texts from which they are made.

For example, as shown here, the text of the book of Jonah is used to create the boat on the water, the whale, etc.  The text is written in calligraphy but in a virtually microscopic form.  From what I understand this art form was an outgrowth of the prohibition against making images. An online exhibit of micrography including this image can be found at the site of the Micrography Exhibit at the Jewish Theological Society . [click to continue…]

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