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MuseumMetadataExchange

Cultural and historical collections (and metadata)

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We’d like your feedback

February 24, 2011 by jcarbon Leave a Comment
BCK - social tagging Flickr: pulguita CC by-sa 2.0

The initial data collection phase of the MME project is well underway and we’d like your feedback, particularly about the preparation of collection level descriptions and your organisation’s capacity to automate the process in the future.

The results will be included in a report to the Steering Committee in early March so it is your opportunity to express your views.

The survey can be accessed here until 5pm on Friday 4th March: http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/470305/MME-Data-Gathering-Feedback

It should take around 8 minutes to complete the survey.

Thanks for taking the time give us your feedback about the project!

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: collection level description, collection system, Defining collections, feedback

Site visit to Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery

December 14, 2010 by jcarbon Leave a Comment
Anzac service, Hobart 1935 | Flickr: ABC Archive | CC by-nc 2.0

I visited Hobart last week (29-30 November) to meet with staff from the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (TMAG). TMAG is a combined museum, art gallery and herbarium and has one of the broadest collections of any of the sites contributing to the MME.

I met Joyce Kloosterman, who is TMAG’s Business Services Officer and will be coordinating the compilation of collection level descriptions at TMAG. Joyce introduced me to Ray Thompson, TMAG’s Honorary Curator of Numismatics and Philatelics. Ray who has volunteered since 1989, knows the Numismatics and Philatelics collection like the back of his hand and will be preparing collection level descriptions for the project.

Later in the day I met with Laurence Paine, Manager, Business Operations, and TMAG site-coordinator. We discussed the project and the practicalities of preparing 50 collection descriptions in less than a month. Like many other sites, TMAG’s approach to providing their initial data to the MME will be to gathering together details of collections that have already been described for other purposes. TMAG’s Acquisition Policies, for example, describe many sub-collections for each of the departments contributing to the MME (Fine Art and Decorative Arts, Cultural Heritage and Indigenous Cultures) and would be a useful source of information.

The next morning I presented the project to staff who will be involved in collating collection level descriptions. Andrew Rozefelds, Deputy Director Collections & Research; Vicki Famery, Curatorial Officer (photographic Collection); Clifford Davey Collection Systems Support Officer; Bill Seager Content Manager; Jo Huxley Information Officer along with Joyce and Laurence were all in attendance. Later that day I also had the opportunity to met with TMAG’s director, Bill Bleathman, to discuss the project.

I left for Sydney the following day to meet up with the rest of the MME project team. I arrived just in time to farewell Ingrid and witness what remained of her very decadent fudge-themed send-off. Ingrid has left the Powerhouse Museum for a role at Intersect, NSW’s peak eResearch organisation. She will be supporting universities in NSW with their eResearch and will be the ANDS’ representative for NSW.

Image Credit: Anzac service, Hobart 1935 | Flickr: ABC Archive | CC by-nc 2.0

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: Bill Bleathman, collection level description, Defining collections, Ingrid Mason, Intersect, Joyce Kloosterman, Laurence Paine, Museum Metadata Exchange, Ray Thompson, Site visits, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery

Site visit to Sovereign Hill

December 7, 2010 by jcarbon Leave a Comment
2000/118/1 Drawer from Collector's Cabinet | Powerhouse Museum Collection

On Wednesday 17th November I travelled to Ballarat to visit Sovereign Hill, which at this stage is the only regional site contributing to the Museum Metadata Exchange project. Sovereign Hill is administered by The Sovereign Hill Museums Association and is made up of an open air museum, representing life on Ballarat’s early goldfields, and the Gold Museum.

At Sovereign Hill I presented the project to Matthew Kaess, IT & Communications Manager and MME Site Coordinator, and Tim Sullivan, Deputy CEO and Museums Director. We discussed how collection groupings could incorporate Sovereign Hill’s range of buildings, artefacts and assets and also the collections of the Ballarat Historical Society, which they manage. We also looked at how collection descriptions, created for other projects, could be used.

Following the presentation I met with Elwyn Blood, who is progressively carrying out inventories of all Sovereign Hill’s outdoor museum buildings and their contents. She was a wealth of information and I was very lucky to be given a tour of the site and told some of the stories behind the buildings and objects. She had many ideas for collection groupings and kindly gave me access to information she has compiled about each building and its contents.

Later I met with Roger Trudgeon, Deputy Director, Museums at Sovereign Hill and Manager/Curator of the Gold Museum, who took me through the Museums’ cataloguing processes and showed me their Collection Management System, Inmagic. Roger explained that they have built up their object classification schemes over many years, but they are based on ‘Summerfield’s ‘Historical Collections Classification Scheme’ and ‘The Small Museums Cataloguing Manual Supplements- Classification and Authority Lists’. They have had to extend these terminologies over time to deal with specific areas of Sovereign Hills’ collections, such as mining.

The next morning I collated some additional collection ideas and squeezed in another visit to the outdoor museum before it was time to leave.

This year marks Sovereign Hill’s 40th anniversary and while my visit coincided with the lead up to a huge week of birthday celebrations, everyone was very generous with their time while I was there. Thanks Sovereign Hill and Happy Birthday!

Image Credit: Drawer from Collector’s Cabinet 2000/118/1. Powerhouse Museum Collection

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: Defining collections, Elwyn Blood, Gold Museum, Inmagic, Julie-Anne Carbon, Matthew Kaess, Museum Metadata Exchange, Roger Trudgeon, Site visits, Sovereign Hill, Sovereign Hill Museums Association, thesaurus, Tim Sullivan

Site Visits to Western Australian Museum, History SA and South Australian Museum

November 23, 2010 by jcarbon Leave a Comment
Dr C T Madigan and Sandy preparing Simpson Desert Expedition | Flickr: ABC Archive | CC by-nc 2.0

I recently travelled to Western Australia and South Australia to visit sites participating in the Museum Metadata Exchange project.

I started the trip in Perth and spent Tuesday 2 November 2010 at the Western Australian Museum’s Collections and Research Facility in Welshpool. I presented the project to Stephen Anstey, Curator, Social History and MME site coordinator; Ann Delroy, Head of Department, Social History and Dr Moya Smith, Head of Department of Anthropology & Archaeology. Following the presentation Stephen and Ann looked through the list of collection ideas I had compiled from WAM’s website, Annual reports and other online sources. They selected four collections and we worked through compiling full collection level descriptions for these. Maybe not surprisingly, we found that the collection description which covered the largest group of objects was much more difficult to complete than the others, which were smaller and more focused collections.

As each curatorial area at WAM uses a different collection management system – Social history use Vernon CMS, the Anthropology and Archaeology department use Filemaker Pro and the Maritime Archaeology and Maritime History departments use other systems, curatorial staff have decided to compile CLDs in Excel and then manually upload these into the MME.

My visit to Perth was brief, but before I left for Adelaide on Wednesday I managed a quick visit to the Western Australian Museum and saw an Object Gallery and Australian Museum touring exhibition, Menagerie – Contemporary Indigenous Sculpture. Menagerie is a contemporary sculpture exhibition which features Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander’s works.

I spent Thursday and Friday, 4-5 November, at History SA. On Thursday Kristy Dermody, Online Collections Projects Coordinator and Site Coordinator, showed me through History SA’s draft collection level descriptions and how they’ve been entered in KE EMu.

Full collection descriptions are being compiled by curators from History SA’s three Museums (The Migration Museum, The National Motor Museum and the South Australian Maritime Museum) and are being transferred into KE EMu by Kristy. There were over 20 collections entered in KE EMu at the time and nearly 46 drafts completed in total. These collection descriptions, linked to a small selection of examples, will form the basis of History SA’s collections online when their website is re-launched. Additional object records will then be linked to the collections as they become available. In the afternoon I met with Margaret Anderson, Director of History South Australia and Co-Chair of the MME Steering Committee and later visited the Migration Museum.

On Friday I presented the project to curators from History SA’s three museums and other staff. In attendance were Lindl Lawton, South Australian Maritime Museum Senior Curator; Matthew Lombard, National Motor Museum Curator; Elspeth Grant, Migration Museum Curator; Mandy Paul, Community History Programs Senior Curator; Jill Mackenzie, Public Programs Officer and Kristy Dermody. The presentation focused on the broader context of the project and the thesaurus development. Curators were very interested in the Collection lists from others sites and got some new ideas for their own Collections by looking at these.

Since History SA use a combination of the Powerhouse Museum Object Name Thesurus (PHMONT) and their own locally developed thesaurus there was a lively discussion about how the PHMONT would be developed and extended as part of this project. As we’ve found at many sites, there was also a lot of interest in being able to nominate and elect new terms to the thesaurus.

On Monday 8 November I visited the last site on this trip, South Australian Museum. I met with Robert Morris, Head of Collections and Site Coordinator, and presented the project to Dr Barry Craig, Senior Researcher Foreign Ethnology; Aphrodite Rose, Collection Manager Foreign Ethnology; Tara Dodd, Collection Manager, Australian Aboriginal Collections and Alexis Tindall, Project Manager, Atlas of Living Australia Digitisation. We discussed how the MME offered the opportunity for museums to publish collection level information online while avoiding the pitfalls of legacy data issues associated with publishing individual object records. Much like Western Australian Museum, staff at SAM use a number of different databases to manage their collections and as a result have decided to compile their Collection descriptions using Excel.

Barry Craig mentioned that in the area of foreign ethnology there are resources with similar aims to the MME. The Upper Sepik-Central New Guinea Project (USCNGP) explores the relationships between material culture and language, geography, population, subsistence and environment in two adjacent regions of Papua New Guinea. The data consists of objects located in museums and private collections within Australia and overseas, assembled as a single, virtual collection. In addition Lissant Bolton and Jim Specht’s produced an Inventory of Polynesian and Micronesian artefacts in Australian collections in the early 1980s. Barry also provided a copy of a functionally-based classification scheme created by Dr Andrew Fyfe, Visiting Fellow at the University of Adelaide, while he was a PhD candidate working on the USCNG project. Andrew created this scheme based on the collections he recorded from a particular region of New Guinea for this project.

In the afternoon I had the opportunity to visit SAM’s new Biodiversity Gallery. There were a number of Indigenous artifacts placed throughout the gallery in related environmental conditions. These provided a link to the Australian Aboriginal Cultures Gallery downstairs and illustrated various themes. A bilbly tail apron, for instance, demonstrated Aboriginal use of the biliby, which was once common in Australia, but declined dramatically after European settlement. Placed in the context of the Biodiversity Gallery, these objects are intersting examples of how cultural and historical collections, when viewed from a different perspective, can generate new connections and ideas.

Image Credit: Dr C T Madigan and Sandy preparing Simpson Desert Expedition | Flickr: ABC Archive | CC by-nc 2.0

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: Alexis Tindall, Andrew Fyfe, Ann Delroy, Aphrodite Rose, Barry Craig, Biodiversity Gallery, collection level description, Elspeth Grant, Filemaker Pro, History SA, Inventory of Polynesian and Micronesian artefacts in Australian collections, Julie-Anne Carbon, KE EMu, Kristy Dermody, Lindl Lawton, Margaret Anderson, Matthew Lombard, Moya Smith, Museum Metadata Exchange, Powerhouse Museum Object Name Thesaurus, Robert Morris, Site visits, South Australian Maritime Museum, South Australian Museum, Stephen Anstey, Tara Dodd, The Migration Museum, The National Motor Museum, Upper Sepik-Central New Guinea Project, Vernon CMS, Western Australian Museum

Storing Collection Level Descriptions in Vernon CMS

October 21, 2010 by jcarbon Leave a Comment
2000/118/1 Drawer from Collector's Cabinet, Powerhouse Museum Collection

I’ve been chatting with Matt Crozier at Vernon Systems and Cecelia Ryan at Queensland Museum about where Collection Level Descriptions for the MME can be stored in Vernon CMS. The consensus seems to be that the easiest way to do this at the moment is to use an Authority file which can be linked to an Object record. An obvious one to use would be Collection or a User Defined Authority file. Any other Authority file would work the same way though.

Several Collection Description elements fit neatly into Authority file fields that are already available:

  • Name, Name (alternate), Name (brief) could be entered in the Name, Short Name, Long Name fields.
  • Description (brief) and Description (full or significance) could be entered in the Description and Scope Notes fields.
  • Related Collection could be entered into the Related Term field.

Collection Vernon

Collection Vernon

The Management Flag edit table could then be used to deal with all remaining Collection Description elements. A Management Flag for each of these could be created and then data would be entered in the Notes field.

Data for a multi-value element, like Place and Subject, could be entered in the one Notes field separated by a bar. For example, Place: Being, China | Peking, China | Hong Kong, Subject: British Empire | Chinese Culture | the Fifties

Collection Vernon

There are other ways this data could be entered using the Management Flag edit table, but I think this is a simple and straight forward way to approach it.

To make it easier to find and export your data, you could also group your Collection Descriptions together. They could be linked to a top term (eg, Museum Metadata Exchange) or alternatively you could use the Authority Status field or create a Management Flag.

There’s also some information about storing MME data in Vernon on the Vernon User Forum.

Image credit: 2000/118/1 Drawer from Collector’s Cabinet Powerhouse Museum Collection

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: Cecelia Ryan, collection level description, collection system, Julie-Anne Carbon, Matt Crozier, Queensland Museum, Vernon CMS

Site visits to ACMI and Museum Victoria

October 18, 2010 by jcarbon 2 Comments
Objects from Matchbox Collection Powerhouse Museum Collection

I took the opportunity to formally present the MME project to staff at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) and Museum Victoria (MV) while Lynne was in Melbourne last week.

On Thursday (14/10) we went to ACMI where we met with Michael Perry, Head of Media Technology (and MME Site coordinator) and Nick Richardson, Collections and Access Manager. The meeting went well and even though ACMI are in the midst of a collection re-valuation, they were enthusiastic about their involvement in the project and especially interested in the establishment of an Australian Object thesaurus.

On Friday (15/10) Lynne and I presented the MME to Museum Victoria staff and again the project was very well received. While the Museum already has many collection descriptions it can modify for inclusion in the MME, Curators were also keen to develop some new collection groupings and descriptions specifically tailored to a research and academic audience.

The issue of how all the data required for a Full Collection Description could be stored the Museum’s CMS, EMu, was also raised during the meeting. As many of the missing fields like a second description field and a URL for an online link, could be useful for other purposes, the possibility of modifying EMu in the future to accommodate this data was discussed. The potential involvement other EMu sites, contributing to the MME, in this conversation was also considered.

As with other sites we’ve visited, the Object thesaurus component of the project generated much interest and the ability to vote for terms was greeted with great enthusiasm by several people!

Since last week’s meeting at Museum Victoria, Ely Wallis, Manager, Online Collections, has organised fortnightly meetings for those involved in the MME, and Curators expect to have a initial list of 50 collections selected for the MME in about a fortnight.

Image Credit: Objects from Matchbox Collection Powerhouse Museum Collection

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: ACMI, collection level description, collection system, Julie-Anne Carbon, Museum Victoria, Site visits

In Museum Victoria

September 27, 2010 by jcarbon 2 Comments
Kindergarten of the Air Flickr: ABC Archive CC by-nc 2.0

Hi, my name’s Julie-Anne and I’m the newest member of the Museum Metadata Exchange Project team. I’m one of the Data Analysts working on the project and I’ll be based at Museum Victoria in Carlton. I’ve come from the Registration Department at National Gallery of Victoria, where I managed the collection management system, Vernon.

I’ve spent my first day on the job with Ingrid, learning all about the project and trying not to get lost in the Museum’s corridors.. so far so good.

Julie-Anne Carbon | Data Analyst | Museum Metadata Exchange project

Julie-Anne Carbon | Data Analyst

I’m off to the Australian Digital Forum ‘Unconference’ at ACMI tomorrow where Ingrid will be talking about the project and I’ll be meeting Michael Parry who is the Site Coordinator for ACMI for this project.

Image Credit: Kindergarten of the Air Flickr: ABC Archive CC by-nc 2.0

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: ACMI, ANDS, collection description, Julie-Anne Carbon, Museum Metadata Exchange, Museum Victoria, National Gallery of Victoria, Registration, site coordinator

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