Digital Art History has often aligned itself with the practical concerns of digital technology and the responsibilities of art institutions and associated institutional roles such as collection managers, information specialists, curators, and conservators. This emphasis on practicalities and implementation, while undeniably important, has often meant that there is little room for critical examination of the broader implications of digital technology and computational methodologies in art history.
This anthology seeks to address the dearth of critical reflection by approaching the use of digital technology in art history from a theoretical perspective and critically assessing specific case study examples. This book also considers the political dimensions associated with the large-scale digitization and the application of digital tools within museums and collection management.
A long-standing concern of the field—and also a major focal point of this book—is museum and collecting practices in the digital era. While there is a certain degree of continuity in the field, there are some important shifts and changes too. One of the key changes is the widespread uptake of artificial intelligence tools and an increased attention to both the broader historical and societal aspects of the use of digital tools within museums and collection management.
विषयसूची
Foreword
Amanda Wasielewski and Anna Näslund
Nina Lager Vestberg
Maribel Hidalgo Urbaneja
Anna Näslund
Leah Lovett and Valerio Signorelli
Lotte Philipsen
Amanda Wasielewski
Benjamin Zweig
Kitty Whittell
About the authors
Index
लेखक के बारे में
Amanda Wasielewski is docent of Art History at Stockholm University and is currently part of the Metadata Culture (metadataculture.se) project Sharing the Visual Heritage, which focuses on the impact of digital tools in cultural heritage institutions. She is the author of Made in Brooklyn: Artists, Hipsters, Makers, Gentrifiers (2018), From City Space to Cyberspace: Art, Squatting and Internet Culture in the Netherlands (2021) and Computational Formalism: Art History and Machine Learning (forthcoming). She has previously taught art history, architectural history and media studies at institutions in New York and Amsterdam.
Contact: Art History, Department of Culture and Aesthetics (IKE), Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden.