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MuseumMetadataExchange

Cultural and historical collections (and metadata)

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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 Visit to National Museum of Australia

November 22, 2010 by Lynne McNairn Leave a Comment
Anatomical model of a male silkworm moth made by Jerome Auzoux, 1884

Last week I undertook a small road trip to Canberra. On Tuesday 16th (after the excitement of a flat tyre in the work car) I got to the National Museum to meet with Tim Sherratt and Tikka Wilson from the Web Team, Simon King, EMu Administrator, Carol Cooper, Curator and Karen Peterson and Patrya Kay from Registration.

The Web Team at the NMA is closely involved in the project and the Museum is fortunate to have the services of Tim Sherratt who until recently worked at ANDs. This means that the Museum has the capacity to automate their contribution to a higher level than many other sites. Discussion centred on how the Web Team could extract data from the EMu collection database to provide collection level descriptions for MME.

The NMA demonstrated development work they have undertaken mapping the origin of their collection objects. The map was achieved by extracting place names from the collection database and using a tool to create lat/long data which could be plotted on a map. The NMA may also be able to provide lat/long details to MME.

The NMA are already using the Powerhouse Object Name Thesaurus to catalogue their objects and there was some discussion about collection areas, particularly indigenous artefacts, which are not included in the thesaurus. It will be interesting to see how these types of issues evolve as the Powerhouse Thesaurus is applied to more collections outside the Powerhouse.

The NMA are in a strong position to provide data to this project.

Anatomical model of a male silkworm moth by Jerome Auzoux, Paris, France, purchased 1884 and Commemorative Florin for opening of Parliament House, Canberra, 1927: Collection Powerhouse Museum

Image credits: Anatomical model of a male silkworm moth by Jerome Auzoux, Paris, France, purchased 1884 and Commemorative Florin for opening of Parliament House, Canberra, 1927: Collection Powerhouse Museum

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: collection level description, National Museum of Australia, Site visits, thesaurus

The Is-Ness of Objects

November 2, 2010 by phmrego Leave a Comment
Lettering at Uncommon Objects Flickr: nicksherman CC by-nc-sa 2.0

Within the Powerhouse Museum we are very excited about the idea of the Museum Metadata Exchange using the Powerhouse Object Name Thesaurus as a vocabulary control for collection descriptions. The Museum Metadata Exchange is providing us with a great opportunity to make our thesaurus more widely available as well as developing the thesaurus even more, with the possibility of input from other institutions.

We have been using our object name thesaurus as a structured vocabulary control within our collection information system, since our first system back in 1993. The Thesaurus was published in 1995 as a hard copy and has been available on the Powerhouse Museum’s website for about a year now.

Powerhouse Museum Object Name Thesaurus

The purpose of the Powerhouse Museum Object Name Thesaurus is to provide object name terms within an Australian context, for indexing museum collections. The thesaurus also provides a controlled vocabulary that facilitates easier searching of collection databases for specific object types.

There are currently about 8,600 terms in the thesaurus that name or categorise object types. The level of specificity for object names varies amongst different collection areas. Some areas have more terms than others. This is because the thesaurus has developed as Powerhouse staff have documented objects within the collection database. Some areas such as social history and decorative arts are much better represented than other areas.

Aboriginal weapons | Abrading instruments

33mm cameras | 35mm film

Some areas, such as fine arts and natural history, have only minimal object name terms, as the Powerhouse does not actively collect in these areas. There is a great opportunity to get input from other institutions with varied collections to develop the thesaurus further.

The thesaurus can be used to make a semantic link from individual objects to collections included in the Museum Metadata Exchange. It will be interesting to see how the thesaurus develops.

Sue Davidson
Registrar, Documentation
Powerhouse Museum

Image Credit: Lettering at Uncommon Objects, Flickr: nicksherman, CC by-nc-sa 2.0

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: community of interest, Controlled vocabularies, domain of knowledge, museum documentation, ontologies, Powerhouse Museum, Powerhouse Museum Object Name Thesaurus, semantics, thesaurus

Joining the MME

October 10, 2010 by Lynne McNairn Leave a Comment
Collection Flickr: madelinetosh CC by-nc-nd 2.0

I joined the Museum Metadata Exchange Project as a Data Analyst in September. I’m based in Sydney at the Powerhouse Museum and will be looking after the contributing institutions in Sydney, Canberra, Brisbane and possibly Darwin. I’ve recently been in Melbourne to meet up with my Southern based counterpart, Julie-Anne Carbon, at Museum Victoria. We conducted two site visits at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image and Museum Victoria. Both meetings went well with staff at both institutions keen to contribute and exited about the development of an Australian thesaurus.

We aim to list some of the controlled vocabularies and thesauri museums are using to describe their collections. So far we’ve learned that people are using (and/or interested in) the Schools Online Thesaurus, the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus and the Australian Pictorial Thesaurus.

Image Credit: Collection Flickr: madelinetosh CC by-nc-nd 2.0

Filed Under: Updates Tagged With: Australian, data analyst, Lynne McNairn, Museum Metadata Exchange, Site visits, thesauri, thesaurus

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