Under the title Play Out, over the coming two years the Netherlands
Media Art Institute in Amsterdam will be making its own documentation collection
and a part of the collections it administers available digitally. Together
with research into uncompromised storage on hard discs, this will be made possible
by the award of a grant from SenterNovem as part of the Digitizing with Policy
(DmB) program.
After the necessary first wave of digitization in which the emphasis lay on digitizing
and conserving media art works, it is now high time for the second wave of digitization,
in which the accent will be on the consolidation of generated content and making
it widely accessible. The most important motive for this is the potential created
by digitization and the internet, which involves presentation, distribution and
collection alike, and offers the possibility of reaching a world-wide audience.
Beginning in 2005, in the Content in Context project the Netherlands Media Art
Institute placed its own collection of autonomous video art on a streaming server
and developed a new database. This made the distribution collection available
digitally in-house, where it can be viewed full screen. At the same time, the
distribution collection went on line on the website http://catalogue.montevideo.nl.
In addition to reading a description of the works, the visitor can view video
fragments, and search titles, artists, date of creation and subjects via the
internet.
The Netherlands Media Art Institute administers the largest video art collection
in Europe, comprised of 1900 works by Dutch and international artists. According
to research report by the Dutch Social and Cultural Planning Agency presented
on December 13, 2006, the Netherlands Media Art Institute is one of the creative
pioneers in the European Union in the development of innovative applications
in making collections available digitally.
Through the subsidy as a part of the Digitizing with Policy program, the Netherlands
Media Art Institute can take the next important steps in the process. The history
of the Institute itself, including for instance its own productions and video
recordings of interviews and exhibitions, will be conserved and made available
digitally. But even more important is offering digital access to a number of
important media art collections that are managed by the Institute, making these
available to interested parties for research in our mediatheque, to the institutions
involved, and openly accessible to the public via internet. We will begin with
the collections of the ICN, de Appel, the Kröller-Müller Museum and
the Groningen Museum. In addition the Netherlands Institute will carry out a
technical pilot project for the following step in permanent and massive storage
after Digital Betacam.
The accessibility of the collection of media art in The Netherlands will be substantially
improved as a result of this project.
For more information:
Gaby Wijers, project leader Play Out gaby@montevideo.nl
http://www.senternovem.nl/Digitaliserenmetbeleid/nieuws