原住民艺术的虚拟平台:原住民主导的数位策略

G. McMaster, M. Rattray, Natalja Chestopalova, Brittany Pitseolak Bergin, Mariah Meawasige, Maya Filipp, Yiyi Shao, B. Griebel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的十年中,为公众开发了许多与土著祖先物品收藏有关的数字平台,以重新考虑和重新定义虚拟空间中的获取和土著所有权的概念。土著艺术虚拟平台(VPIA)是一项与现场画廊合作的倡议,是一项新开发的资源,起源于加拿大多伦多OCAD大学瓦帕塔土著视觉知识中心Gerald McMaster博士的纠缠凝视项目。VPIA是一个战略性的数字平台,汇集了来自全球博物馆收藏的土著艺术品和文化物品的特定数据集,这些数据集描绘了欧洲和亚洲的新来者来到海龟岛。该平台的收藏创新方法以双重记录格式为基础,邀请访客创建社区成员档案,并向艺术品页面提供知识和信息,这些页面由永久的机构记录和不断发展的社区生成的VPIA记录组成。VPIA旨在为社区和机构提供桥梁,以促进有关海龟岛接触区和殖民时期影响的新想法的数字化贡献,从早期接触到二十世纪。
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The Virtual Platform for Indigenous Art: An Indigenous-led Digital Strategy
Over the past decade, a multitude of digital platforms engaging with Indigenous collections of ancestral belongings have been developed for the public in an effort to reconsider and reconceptualize notions of access and Indigenous ownership in virtual space. An initiative in partnership with the Onsite Gallery, the Virtual Platform for Indigenous Art (VPIA) is a newly developed resource that originates from Dr. Gerald McMaster’s Entangled Gaze Project at the Wapatah Centre for Indigenous Visual Knowledge, OCAD University in Toronto, Canada. VPIA is a strategic digital platform that brings together a specific dataset of Indigenous artworks and cultural belongings that portray European and Asian newcomers to Turtle Island, drawn from global museum collections. The platform’s innovative approach to collections is grounded in a dual record format, where visitors are invited to create a Community-Member profile and contribute knowledge and information to artwork pages that consist of a permanent institutional record and an evolving community-generated VPIA record. The VPIA is intended to bridge communities and institutions to facilitate digital contributions of novel ideas about the Turtle Island contact zone and the implications of the colonial period, from early contact through to the twentieth century.
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