Object, Text, and Image in the Digital Age

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This conference will bring together experts on various areas of the Calouste Gulbenkian Collection to explore the particular challenges of digitising objects.

 

Digitisation of collections is now a major priority for many museums across the world. The potential benefits are huge: from easy access to their collections for researchers and the general public, to connecting objects and collections in new and revealing ways.

Yet the digital object is not the same as the physical object and the process of digitisation transforms the original item. In particular, the physicality of the object is neglected and it is reduced instead to images and texts. This process raises a vast range of questions. What is gained and lost in making the transformation from physical to digital? Are we prioritising the digitisation of objects that are more easily rendered as image and text?

The field of ancient numismatics is particularly advanced in the process of digitisation. These advances are partly due to coins’ almost unique status as a combination of image, text, and object, and offer an important reference for the field of Digital Humanities as applied to museums.

With this conference, other corpus of objects such as Greek vases or cuneiform tablets will be discussed. Finally we will address the crucial role of documents and archives associated with art, and the inspiring possibilities of digital technologies uses (3D modelling, scanning, etc.) for the understanding of museum collections.


Speakers


Programme

09:30 / Registration

10:00 / Welcome

Guilherme d’Oliveira Martins – Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, LisbonAntónio Filipe Pimentel – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon

10:15 / Opening remarks

George Watson – Lancaster University

Between singularity and corpuses: some digital perspectives

Digital environments offer huge potential for bringing together objects from different collections, or from disparate parts of the same collection. In this session, papers will explore both the challenges of making such connections in the digital space, and the possibilities that it affords for museums and researchers

10:35 / IKMK.net: from digitising coins to building a multinational network

Karsten Dahmen – Staatliche Museen, Berlin

11:05 / From Linked Open Data to Linked Open Research: the CHANGE project on the monetary behaviour in ancient Asia Minor

Andrew Meadows – Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents, Oxford— Intermission 25 min. —

11:55 / CUNE-IIIF-ORM: towards an Internationally Image Interoperable corpus of cuneiform tablets

Els Angenon – Musées Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire, Brussels

12:20 / Kerameikos.org: a digital future for Greek painted pottery

Tyler Jo Smith – University of Virginia, Charlottesville (online)
Moderation:
Maxence Garde – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon George Watson – Lancaster University — Intermission 90 min. —

14:25 / Discussion with the conference speakers

Moderation:
Daniel Alves – NOVA University, LisbonInês Fialho Brandão – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon— Intermission 25 min. —

Beyond materiality: digital and the extension of knowledge

Through its digitization, our perception of an object shifts from its only materiality to new information. This third discussion will address the challenges and possibilities of extending our understanding of museum objects through 3D modelling, scanning techniques or by connecting them with original archival material.

15:50 / Digitizing Ancient Egypt: 3D and digital in the Museo Egizio

Federico Taverni – Museo Egizio, Turin

16:20 / Sloane Lab: connecting people & collections

Alicia Hughes – The British Museum, London (online)
Moderation:
Beatriz Saraiva – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon

16:50 / Final discussion

17:15 / Institutional conclusion

Jessica Hallett – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, LisbonMaxence Garde – Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon

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