重构艺术:向多学科研究开放艺术交易商档案

IF 0.3 0 ART Visual Resources Pub Date : 2019-02-13 DOI:10.1080/01973762.2019.1553447
Alan Crookham, Stuart E. Dunn
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去的几年里,可供学者使用的数字化档案资源发生了迅速的变化,这是博物馆和画廊以及更广泛的艺术史领域证据的演变。这种变化起初是可操作的:从20世纪90年代末开始,随着互联网的使用越来越广泛,博物馆、图书馆和档案馆开始将它们的目录放在网上。然后,在21世纪的第一个十年,开发了一些项目,将图书馆和档案馆收藏的精选项目数字化。这些项目使研究人员能够远程访问档案材料的平面图像,近年来,这些数字化项目的范围只会增加,更多的图像被添加到世界各地的网站上;现在的注意力转向检查和提取这些平面图像中包含的数据。2014年,国家美术馆研究中心获得了艺术品经销商托马斯·阿格纽父子公司(Agnew’s)的档案。这是一笔意义重大的收购:该公司的辉煌历史可以追溯到1817年,并处理过一些重要的艺术作品,如迭戈·委拉斯开兹的《洛克比维纳斯》(伦敦国家美术馆)和菲利普四世的肖像(纽约弗里克收藏馆),约翰·康斯特布尔的《索尔兹伯里大教堂》(泰特英国美术馆)和J.M.W特纳的《Helvoetsluys》(东京美术馆)。阿格纽的档案可以追溯到19世纪50年代,是艺术品经销商业务记录中最全面的收藏之一,包括存货簿、日记帐、照片记录和信件,以及其他类型的杂项记录,例如,从伦敦运往美国的作品的综合清单。阿格纽档案的收购增强了研究中心在收藏历史领域现有的丰富馆藏。画廊的图书馆有超过80,000册印刷品,其中包括与私人收藏有关的特别优秀的书籍。同样,档案馆不仅包括画廊的机构记录,还包括许多私人收藏,包括弗朗西斯·哈斯克尔(1928-2000)和尼古拉斯·彭尼有关收藏历史的论文。阿格纽档案在2014年至2016年期间进行了编目,并于2016年4月在网上发布了结果。与此同时,画廊任命了两位博士生Alison Clarke和Barbara Pezzini,在艺术与人文研究委员会的合作博士伙伴计划下,在档案中进行研究。这两项举措都是为了提高档案的知名度,一旦开始,研究中心就开始考虑如何做到这一点
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Reframing Art: Opening Up Art Dealers’ Archives to Multi-disciplinary Research
The archival resources digitally available to scholars have been transforming rapidly in the past few years, an evolution in evidence in museums and galleries as well as in the wider field of art history. This change was, at first, operational: as the use of the Internet becamemore widespread from the late 1990s onwards, museums, libraries and archives started to place their catalogues online. Then, in the first decade of the twenty-first century, projects were developed to digitise selected items from library and archive collections. Such projects enabled researchers to gain remote access to flat images of archival material, and the scope of these digitisation projects has only increased in recent years, with more images being added to websites across the world; attention is now turning to the examination and extraction of the data contained in those flat images. In 2014 the National Gallery Research Centre acquired the archive of the art dealers Thomas Agnew & Sons (Agnew’s). This was a significant acquisition: the firm has an illustrious history dating back to 1817, and has dealt in some major works of art, such as Diego Velazquez’s Rokeby Venus (London National Gallery) and Portrait of Philip IV (New York, Frick Collection), John Constable’s Salisbury Cathedral (Tate Britain) and J.M.W Turner’s Helvoetsluys (Tokyo Art Museum). Agnew’s archives, which date from the 1850s, represent one of the most comprehensive collection of an art dealership’s business records, containing stock books, day books, photographic records and correspondence as well as other types of miscellaneous records such as, for instance, comprehensive lists of works shipped to the United States from London. The acquisition of the Agnew’s Archive enhanced the existing rich holdings of the Research Centre in the field of the history of collecting. The Gallery’s library contains over 80,000 printed volumes, including a particularly excellent holding of books relating to private collections. Similarly, the archive not only comprises the Gallery’s institutional records but also numerous private collections, including the papers of Francis Haskell (1928–2000) and Nicholas Penny relating to the history of collecting. The Agnew’s Archive was catalogued between 2014 and 2016 and the resulting finding aid was published online in April 2016. At the same time the Gallery appointed two doctoral students, Alison Clarke and Barbara Pezzini, to undertake research in the archive under the Arts and Humanities Research Council’s Collaborative Doctoral Partnership scheme. Both these initiatives were intended to raise the profile of the archive and once underway, the Research Centre started to consider how it could
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