Top Banner
Picture This! But Don’t Forget the Context Ron Gagnon, Executive Director
32

Digcomm2007

May 24, 2015

Download

Business

RonGagnon

Digital Commonwealth (Mass.) 2007, Picture This -- but don't forget the context.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Digcomm2007

Picture This!

But Don’t Forget the Context

Ron Gagnon, Executive Director

Page 2: Digcomm2007

What is Context?• Parts that surround and help to

determine meaning• The circumstances in which an

event occurs; a setting. The American Heritage®

Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by

Houghton Mifflin Company.

Page 3: Digcomm2007

Context• At the moment of creation• At the time of presentation• Aids in understanding and

appreciation

Page 4: Digcomm2007

• Who are these people and what are they doing here?

Page 5: Digcomm2007

Answer: “1915 Pageant Saugus”

• But Why? (Saugus Public Library)

Page 6: Digcomm2007

Context Sources• From the original image and

setting• From the selection – then and now• From the metadata – description

and access points• From the display, placement or

arrangement

Page 7: Digcomm2007

Sources Bring Context• Postcards –

promotional, scenic• Commercial –

promote business, investment

• Documentary – who’s funding?

Photos from the Beverly Public Library: Top, United Shoe Machinery Co.,

Bottom, Washington School

Page 8: Digcomm2007

Sources Bring Context• News photos – great calamity• News photos – donated files, more

depth• Organizations – focused, some

depth• Constituents – more everyday life,

balanced

Page 9: Digcomm2007

Original Context?• Posed or candid? • Older photos likely to

be posed due to technology and style.

• Typical or not?• Quality of information

Photos: Beebe Memorial Library, Wakefield, Heywood-Wakefield Company

Page 10: Digcomm2007

Typical 1912 Factory?

Page 11: Digcomm2007

Typical 1912 Factory?

Page 12: Digcomm2007

Context• Top: Stitching Room Personnel, A.

E. Little Co., Lynn, Mass. shoe manufacturer. (Lynn Public Library)

• Bottom: ”At machine is Stanislaus Beauvais, has worked in spinning room for two years. Salem, Mass., 10/26/1911” (National Child Labor Committee Photographs taken by Lewis Hine, ca. 1912, National Archives)

Page 13: Digcomm2007

Commercial Interest?• PR shots of factories or true

conditions?• Contrast with child labor and other

workplace issues• Many old views are postcards –

present community or attraction in best light

Page 14: Digcomm2007

Point of View?• What message is being conveyed?• Intentional or not?• Today’s cultural viewpoints

different than 70 years ago – minorities, women, etc.

Page 15: Digcomm2007

Selection• Finances require some selectivity,

prioritization, at least initially• Select cross section of pictures or focus

on select topics?• Big events vs. everyday life• Influenced by donors/funders?• What about the big annual minstrel

show?

Page 16: Digcomm2007

Create Context• Improve understanding by bringing

together images and information from the same time and place.

• Related images, contemporary newspaper accounts, oral history, passages from local history works.

• Time lines

Page 17: Digcomm2007

Make History Alive and Vital

• Link into packages: pictures with oral histories

• Geotagging: linking images by neighborhood

• “Then and Now” sets• Outreach and cooperation with local

history groups, photography clubs, etc.

Page 18: Digcomm2007
Page 19: Digcomm2007

• Link for public comments (form asks for contact info for follow-up)

• Integrates comments

• Policy link• Purchase

option• Credit to

digitization funder and provider

Page 20: Digcomm2007
Page 21: Digcomm2007

Then and Now• Arcadia book series• Calendars• Newspaper• Web site• Work with

photography groups

• More precise the better

Page 22: Digcomm2007

Worthington Time Machine

http://www.worthingtonmemory.org/time_machine.cfm

Page 23: Digcomm2007

Linking Past with Present

Page 24: Digcomm2007

Geotagging Example

Page 25: Digcomm2007

Today: Tomorrow’s History

• What are you collecting on the Flood of 2006?

• Collect public contributions before they lose/file them

• Develop relationship with local media

Photo: Brian Kelley

Page 26: Digcomm2007

Tomorrow’s History Today

• Check sources like Flickr

• May require contacting photogs

• Probably pleased to be recognized and preserved

Danvers Explosion photos, 11/2006; top photo: Charlie Mulcahey; bottom EPA

Page 27: Digcomm2007

Metadata Provides Context

• Fancy word for cataloging information• Who, What, When, Where and maybe

Why• Finding aid and background information• Harvested by other systems• May require research, an investment• For future generations, not ephemeral

Page 28: Digcomm2007

Enhance the Metadata• “Samuel Hawkes

Home / Walnut St. / Zayres there now” (Saugus Public Library)

• Who remembers Zayre? That’s history, too. (natick.wordpress.com)

• Exact address???

Page 29: Digcomm2007

Why?

• The Future of LibrariesBeginning the Great Transformation

By Thomas Frey, Executive Director of the DaVinci Institute•  

3)       Preserve the memories of your own communities.  While most libraries have become the document archive of their community, the memories of a community span much more than just documents.  What did it sound like to drive down Main Street in 1950?  What did it smell like to walk into Joe’s Bakery in the early mornings of 1965?  Who are the people in these community photos and why were they important?  Memories come in many shapes and forms.  Don’t let yours disappear.

Page 30: Digcomm2007

Community Outreach• Outreach to the community• Take it on the road – Rotary, etc.• Build community interest, funding for

digitization, contribution of collections• Primary search material for school

research• Work with seniors for research and first-

hand knowledge• Role for library in the community

Page 31: Digcomm2007

Unique Niche• Our libraries have unique collections• Integral to the history of the country:

Early Settlers, American Revolution, 1692 Witchcraft, Revolutionary War, Industrial Revolution, Automation

• Institutional history: changes and progress• Underutilized – difficult to access, unknown• In Danger: theft, deterioration, etc.• Irreplaceable

Page 32: Digcomm2007

Thank you!

Ron [email protected]