Full Program (as of September 6, 2011)
Tuesday, September 20
10:00 a.m. Welcome, introductions, and opening remarks.
10:30 a.m. Johanna Drucker (UCLA): Keynote presentation: "Humanistic Approaches to Digital Scholarship", followed by group discussion.
12:00 -1:30 p.m. Lunch.
Session 1: Digital Humanities and Digital Art History: General Overview
2:00 p.m. Juan Martín Prada (Universidad de Cádiz): “Some Considerations on the History of Internet Art”.
2:30 p.m. Nuria Rodríguez Ortega (Universidad de Málaga) and Murtha Baca (Getty Research Institute): “Digital Art History: Current Status, Future Challenges”.
3:00 p.m. Group discussion, moderated by Murtha Baca.
Wednesday, September 21
Session 2: Data Visualizations in Art History
10:00 a.m. Johanna Drucker: “Framing Data Visualizations”.
10:15 a.m. Christian Huemer (Getty Research Institute): “Patterns of Collecting: InfoViz for Art History”.
10:45 a.m. Bernard Frischer (University of Virginia): “Visualizing Sculpture”.
11:30 a.m. Alejandro Bia (Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche): “Visual Modeling of Document Structures Using UML and Mind Maps”.
12:00 p.m. Anne Helmreich (Getty Foundation): “Network Analysis and the Art Market”.
12:30 p.m. Discussion.
1:15 p.m. Lunch.
Session 3: Art-historical scholarship in the Digital Age
3.00 p.m. Johanna Drucker: “Scholarship in the Digital Age: Framing the Question”.
3:15 p.m. Anne-Lise Desmas (J. Paul Getty Museum): “Willing to Benefit from the Digital Age: A Curator/Scholar's Experience and Voice”.
3:45 p.m. Anna Bentkowska-Kafel (King’s College London): “Scholarship of Digital Visualization of Cultural Heritage”.
4:15 p.m. Susan Chun (Universita della Svizzerà Italiana and Johns Hopkins University): “Teaching Art Historians to Think Visually”.
4:45 p.m. Martin Warnke (University of Lüneburg): “Networking Image Motifs”.
5:15 p.m. Discussion.
Thursday, September 22 Session 4: Documentation for Digital Resources in Art History
10:00 a.m. Murtha Baca (Getty Research Institute): ‘Documentation Issues for Art-historical Materials”.
10:45 a.m. Bill Ying (Vice President of Technology for ARTstor): “Application of a Knowledge Organization System in ARTstor and Shared Shelf: A Digital Library and a Networked Image Cataloguing and Management Solution”.
11:30 a.m. Break
Session 5: Social Participation in the Digital Realm
11:45 a.m. Peter Boot (Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands): “Investigating Usage and Users of Digital Resources”.
12:15 p.m. Elisabel Chaves Guerrero (Museo del Patrimonio Municipal): "An Involving Partnership for Social Presence on a Networked Local Museum Audience: Museo del Patrimonio Municipal (MUPAM)".
12:45 p.m. Lunch
2:45 p.m. Nuria Rodríguez Ortega, with Murtha Baca: “ Digital Mellini: an Experiment in Art-historical Collaboration”.
3:30 p.m. Group discussion. Johanna Drucker: Final Observations, Next Steps.
10:00 a.m. Welcome, introductions, and opening remarks.
10:30 a.m. Johanna Drucker (UCLA): Keynote presentation: "Humanistic Approaches to Digital Scholarship", followed by group discussion.
12:00 -1:30 p.m. Lunch.
Session 1: Digital Humanities and Digital Art History: General Overview
2:00 p.m. Juan Martín Prada (Universidad de Cádiz): “Some Considerations on the History of Internet Art”.
2:30 p.m. Nuria Rodríguez Ortega (Universidad de Málaga) and Murtha Baca (Getty Research Institute): “Digital Art History: Current Status, Future Challenges”.
3:00 p.m. Group discussion, moderated by Murtha Baca.
Wednesday, September 21
Session 2: Data Visualizations in Art History
10:00 a.m. Johanna Drucker: “Framing Data Visualizations”.
10:15 a.m. Christian Huemer (Getty Research Institute): “Patterns of Collecting: InfoViz for Art History”.
10:45 a.m. Bernard Frischer (University of Virginia): “Visualizing Sculpture”.
11:30 a.m. Alejandro Bia (Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche): “Visual Modeling of Document Structures Using UML and Mind Maps”.
12:00 p.m. Anne Helmreich (Getty Foundation): “Network Analysis and the Art Market”.
12:30 p.m. Discussion.
1:15 p.m. Lunch.
Session 3: Art-historical scholarship in the Digital Age
3.00 p.m. Johanna Drucker: “Scholarship in the Digital Age: Framing the Question”.
3:15 p.m. Anne-Lise Desmas (J. Paul Getty Museum): “Willing to Benefit from the Digital Age: A Curator/Scholar's Experience and Voice”.
3:45 p.m. Anna Bentkowska-Kafel (King’s College London): “Scholarship of Digital Visualization of Cultural Heritage”.
4:15 p.m. Susan Chun (Universita della Svizzerà Italiana and Johns Hopkins University): “Teaching Art Historians to Think Visually”.
4:45 p.m. Martin Warnke (University of Lüneburg): “Networking Image Motifs”.
5:15 p.m. Discussion.
Thursday, September 22 Session 4: Documentation for Digital Resources in Art History
10:00 a.m. Murtha Baca (Getty Research Institute): ‘Documentation Issues for Art-historical Materials”.
10:45 a.m. Bill Ying (Vice President of Technology for ARTstor): “Application of a Knowledge Organization System in ARTstor and Shared Shelf: A Digital Library and a Networked Image Cataloguing and Management Solution”.
11:30 a.m. Break
Session 5: Social Participation in the Digital Realm
11:45 a.m. Peter Boot (Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands): “Investigating Usage and Users of Digital Resources”.
12:15 p.m. Elisabel Chaves Guerrero (Museo del Patrimonio Municipal): "An Involving Partnership for Social Presence on a Networked Local Museum Audience: Museo del Patrimonio Municipal (MUPAM)".
12:45 p.m. Lunch
2:45 p.m. Nuria Rodríguez Ortega, with Murtha Baca: “ Digital Mellini: an Experiment in Art-historical Collaboration”.
3:30 p.m. Group discussion. Johanna Drucker: Final Observations, Next Steps.