Archives of American Art announces grant from the Walton Family Foundation to support digitization
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Archives of American Art announces grant from the Walton Family Foundation to support digitization
Oscar Bluemner papers, 1886-1939, 1960. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.



WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art announced today that it has received a three-year grant of up to $900,000 from the Walton Family Foundation to support the ongoing digitization of the Archives’ collections. The Archives is obliged to match the grant that will be given in three annual installments of up to $300,000 each. The support enables the Archives to double its current rate of collections digitization in stages from 50 linear feet to 100 linear feet per year and will result in at least 240 additional linear feet of archival material to be available online by September 2019.

Headquartered in Washington, D.C., with a second research facility in New York City, the Archives holds nearly 6,000 collections of archival material on the artists, collectors, dealers and scholars who have shaped the history of art in America. Its oral-history program, containing interviews with important artists ranging from Charles Burchfield to Kehinde Wiley, preserves the voices and personal stories of nearly 2,300 art-world luminaries recorded since 1958. Transcripts for many of these are available on the Archives’ website.

“The Archives, with more than 20 million items in our ever-expanding collections, is the world’s largest and most widely used resource dedicated to collecting and preserving the papers and primary records of the visual arts in America,” said David Skorton, Secretary of the Smithsonian. “This generous grant from the Walton Family Foundation will help us provide more material available online at a faster pace. On behalf of the Archives and the growing number of people around the globe who explore our singular collections online, we are deeply grateful for the foundation’s support.”

Since the inception of its digitization program in 2004 with support from the Terra Foundation for American Art, the Archives has created nearly 2.5 million digital images that together represent full online access to more than 160 of its most important collections, including the papers of art world luminaries such as Milton Avery, Joseph Cornell, Lee Krasner, Horace Pippin, Jackson Pollock and Grant Wood among many others. As the program has grown, visitation to the Archives has increased from about 2,000 users a year via its reading rooms and interlibrary loan program for its microfilm to more than 500,000 users a year, with the vast majority visiting online.

“The task of digitizing the Archives’ vast collections for broad accessibility requires a dedicated team of experts and time,” said Kate Haw, director of the Archives of American Art. “This challenge grant from the distinguished Walton Family Foundation allows us to expand both our technical and staff capacities to ramp up our pace beyond what we could have imagined. We look forward to getting underway to achieve our ultimate goal of making our collections available to anyone, anytime, anywhere and stimulating understanding and appreciation of American art worldwide.”










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