PHILADELPHIA, PA.- In celebration of its fifth anniversary in Philadelphia, the
Barnes Foundation has launched a new collection website that enables visitors to explore thousands of works in the Barness unparalleled collection based on aesthetics, and download high resolution images of over 1,400 works that are in the public domain.
Led by Shelley Bernstein, Barnes Foundation deputy director for audience engagement & chief experience officer, and funded by a $155,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the new online tool is the first in the museum field designed to search holdings with a deep focus on visual properties such as light, line, color, and space, in addition to more traditional searches by artist name, media, or historical movement. Based on the same criteria that Dr. Albert C. Barnes applied to displaying his collection in ensembles, the website extends the Foundations commitment to promoting visual literacy and discovery for online audiences.
Dr. Albert C. Barnes used his collection to teach students how to understand and appreciate art without an art historical background. By grouping works together according to their formal elements, rather than historical connections, he emphasized the universal nature of human expression, making them more accessible no matter ones level of familiarity with the arts, said Bernstein. This project is an opportunity to apply this pioneering approach in the context of contemporary digital practice. Our goal was to build a next-generation collection website that is designed for all online users without barriers that inhibit deeper connection and discovery.
We are committed to extending our mission of engaging the public with the arts beyond the walls of the Barnes, which is why we are thrilled to expand our online resources as we celebrate five years in the heart of Philadelphia, said Thom Collins, executive director and president of the Barnes Foundation. We look forward to sharing our outstanding holdings with new audiences and providing them with tools for unlocking new discoveries.
Rather than requiring users to be familiar with names of artists or art historical movements, the Barness new collection website, designed by Area 17, takes into account the average persons primary interestthe image of the work. Online audiences can search the collection by the visual characteristics to cluster and filter images according to aesthetic similarities.
The project was developed using new technology widely used on the internet and in digital projects but rarely in the cultural sector. Machine learning and computer vision were used to analyze visual information about collection images to understand the visual relationship between works of art. Elasticsearch, a tool that backs search capability on some of the internets most popular websites, was used to engineer the search of information related to each work in the collection.
This new website offers an entirely new front-end presentation and an innovative approach that provides users a way to engage with the collection online in an accessible and self-directed fashion using the formal elementslight, line, color, and spaceas ways to explore.
Vital to the projects development has been the consistent sharing of findings and methodology with colleagues in the museum field. In releasing code and through blogging about the process, the Barnes sought to foster discussion and information sharing both to identify possible solutions for the Barnes site and to support the work of colleagues in the field. In the near future, as newer technologies form the basis for the online presentation of museum collections, taking these steps helps lead the field toward adopting modern methodologies.
Technology has changed the way we live, and museumgoers have new expectations for their experience both inside and outside the museum, said Victoria Rogers, vice president for arts at Knight Foundation. Institutions like the Barnes continue to play an integral role in communities, yet they will be even more successful if they seize the opportunities of technology and find new avenues for wonder.
There are over 3,000 works in the Barnes collection and over 2,000 have been published online as part of this project. The Barnes has also embarked on an open access project that makes copyright-free collection images available for download. Images of works within the public domain under both US law and the law of the artists nationality are now available for download in high resolution, guaranteeing greater access for students, scholars, and general audiences. This includes over 1,400 works of art in the Barnes collection, which are now newly available for the public to download by clicking on the details tab of the painting or objects record.
The Barnes has also added contextual information about each work of art to accompany the images. Over time, additional contextual information will be addedsuch as provenancealong with visual descriptions of the same works of art for those who are blind or sight impaired. Additionally, for the first time, an objects publication history is included as part of each works record, serving to spotlight scholarship on the works in the collection. These resources will continue to grow, helping make information and scholarship readily available moving forward.