Picture-Work How Libraries, Museums, and Stock Agencies Launched a New Image Economy
Materialtyp:
ArtikelSerie: Utgivningsinformation: Cambridge The MIT Press The MIT Press [Imprint] 2023Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (324 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780262377041
- 9780262547000
- Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects
- Library and information sciences / Museology
- IT, Internet and electronic resources in libraries
- Museology and heritage studies
- Society and Social Sciences
- Society and culture: general
- Cultural and media studies
- Media studies
- Media studies: advertising and society
- History of photography
- digitization
- documentary photography
- documentation
- libraries
- media history
- museum studies
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
How the image collection, organized and made available for public consumption, came to define a key feature of contemporary visual culture.The origins of today's kaleidoscopic digital visual culture are many. In this book, Diana Kamin traces the sharing of photographs to an image economy developed throughout the twentieth century by major institutions. Picture-Work examines how three of these institutions—the New York Public Library, the Museum of Modern Art, and the stock agency H. Armstrong Roberts Inc.—defined the public's understanding of what the photographic image is, while building vast collections with universalizing ambitions. Highlighting underexplored figures, such as the first rights and reproduction manager at MoMA Pearl Moeller and visionary NYPL librarian Romana Javitz, and underexplored professional practices, Diana Kamin demonstrates how bureaucratic work communicates ideas about images to the public.Kamin artfully shows how the public interfaces with these image collections through systems of classification and protocols of search and retrieval. These interactions, in turn, shape contemporary image culture, including concepts of authorship, art, property, and value, as well as logics of indexing, tagging, and hyperlinking. Together, these interactions have forged a concept of the image as alienable content, which has intensified with the advent of digital techniques for managing image collections. To survey the complicated process of digitization in the nineties and early aughts, Kamin also includes interviews with photographers, digital asset management system designers, librarians, and artists on their working practices.
Creative Commons Licence cc by-nc-nd cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/BY-NC-ND/4.0/
eng
Freely available e-book