ArtBabble, developed by the Indianapolis Museum of Art, launched this morning. Partnering with other art museums such as LACMA, MOMA, SFMOMA, New York Public Library and the Smithsonian.
From the site itself:
Art-Bab-ble [ahrt-bab-uhl]
noun; verb (used without object) -bled, -bling
1. free flowing conversation, about art, for anyone.
2. a place where everyone is invited to join an open, ongoing discussion - no art degree required.
ArtBabble was conceived, initiated, designed, built, sculpted, programmed, shot, edited, painted and launched by a cross-departmental collection of individuals at the Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA). It is intended to showcase video art content in high quality format from a variety of sources and perspectives.
ArtBabble was created so others will join in spreading the world of art through video.
As a platform this is great, bringing together digital collections into one place and allowing an ongoing conversation focused on the creation and critique of art. As a step forward for museums this is rather large. Within the videos there is additional context added to a sidebar to take what is being talked about to the next level of understanding. Weaving a more cohesive understanding of art and placing this next level of context is much more than just a babble, its placing art and the conversations surrounding it at a more attainable level to users.
Congrats! to the IMA dev team. I had the pleasure to meet some of them last year and their vision and excitement is invigorating and inspirational.
The Brooklyn Museum recently opened an API for their online collection. In and of itself this is impressive and awesome but the collection was just put online a mere six months ago.
Allowing access to all of the collection data is a huge achievement for researchers, individuals and countries of origin. First, researchers get a wealth of information from afar without the need to travel. Secondly, individuals get to casually peruse the collection for fun, school research, and socially. Finally and I believe the most import is virtually repatriating pieces in collections. For example a museum in Cameroon can now connect with the Brooklyn Museum API and use a piece from their collection to help illustrate and show an example of a Guardian Figure. This is cool and all that educators and researchers have access to this from afar but it is even more important that the piece is not even on public display in Brooklyn. Now this educator in Cameroon is using information garnered from a huge distance away on a piece not even on display and allowing another level of information that would not have been possible without this API going online.
It is now up to more museums to take the steps forward and release API hooks so researchers and the public can begin to start connecting our collective history in a more robust and meaningful way.
Last night I attended The Junto at P’unk Ave in South Philadelphia where the topic was ‘Rethinking The Library’. The topic of the library as a whole in Philadelphia conjurs up intense debate as many of our branches were set to close due to budgetary issues. Last night a panel discussion was held focusing how we look at the library system. Much of the discussion was looking forward and and pointing out what the library was lacking for those in attendance, which was made up of mostly middle class well to do folk. I agree that the library needs to be changed but it needs to change in a way that focuses on the majority of constituents it serves. This means there is no easy umbrella answer. Each branch in the library system is different and the community they serve are equally as different. It is great fun to have these great discussions about how things should be if they revolved around you but unfortunately that is not the case. Getting the community involved and give their input is no easy task …
However, a small side discussion that occurred within the framework of the future of the library discussion was how the hands of the library system are somewhat tied in reference to upgrading the online services of the system as far as privacy goes. This conundrum might be for something like Refresh Philly to undertake. The idea of creating a side project tied into the library system where users can opt-into things that the library itself can not provide. There are many projects out there that would lend themselves to this and take away the need to build something from scratch from the ground up. The need to buy into or build a custom system in many instances is overkill and a waste of resources. Rethinking the Library and the way it serves I believe is one of those times where applying a solid foundation based on new media services could go a long way and save a bit of money by creating a public partnership program to build them.
recently there has been a surge in coverage of twitter being used by corporations.i have to ask, why do people care? there are so many great museums/cultural orgs using twitter as a tool to connect in a meaningful way with their followers. using twitter as a tool to connect with your constituents is a no brainer but doing it right is often the hard thing. in my eyes most corps are doing it wrong but thats a post for another day. to be open i was the driving force behind @thefranklin until 12/31/08, which is also a post for another day about the lessons learned and what things i/we could have done to make more of an impact.
the smithsonian does a really great job on twitter. it took them a little bit to find their foot but their random pictures from around the museum trivia questions were a good time. once they finally broke down the institution speak and just using twitter to broadcast events i found their stream much more interesting.
NASA has a few active accounts, most people know of the phoenix account but there are a few other projects tweeting including the cassini project and the jet propulsion laboratory. yes the JPL twitter just spits out links from a RSS feed but i think for an organization like JPL thats ok at the moment. this is not a complete list of NASA projects just the ones i pay attention to.
the adler planetarium in chicago does a great job of dropping knowledge as well as directly interacting with followers by answering questions and linking to relevant information from around the web.
the exploratrium in san fran is one of my favorites. they take direct dispatches from scientists and pass them onto the public. not too much institution/PR speak just nerdy interesting tidbits from their projects worldwide and from around the offices.
in the near future i will be posting a something regarding my time as @thefranklin as well as possibly critiquing specific institutions about what they are doing right and what they could be doing better. i believe in the cultural realm you can not talk trash on what people are doing as they are up against far more than a comparable corporations PR dept that does takes on social media.