Two post-doctoral Research Fellow positions are available at De Montfort University, Leicester, to work on the AHRC funded FuzzyPhoto project that is developing and testing computer-based “finding aids” for recommending potential matches between historical photographic exhibition catalogue records and images of photographs that appear in online collections. One will have a knowledge of the Semantic Web, metadata schemas and Web site development, the other will be responsible for investigating and trialling modern database engines and management systems. For further details see http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/AFD578/research-fellow-semantic-web/ and http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/AFD581/research-fellow-data-warehousing/
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We invite international submissions to be included in this forthcoming book, to be published by MuseumsEtc in 2013. The photograph album carries the potential to convey meaning beyond the images contained within it. However, the long history of the photograph and the album is currently changing because of the way in which we are now making and using photographs. This could be seen as a challenge to the album or viewed as an opportunity to take us in new directions and offer alternative interpretations.
Submissions: We welcome submissions of between 2000-6000 words from writers, academics, curators, photographers, artists and other visual practitioners. If your submission is of a visual nature it will extend to 6-8 pages of the published book.
We are seeking contributions that deal with a wide range of issues in connection with the photograph and the album and the relationship between them. This could encompass conceptual, cultural, historical and visual concerns relating to:
- the album as home-made, hand-made and/or domestic artefact
- the album as art object
- the family album
- the travel album
- the commercially-made photograph album
- the digital album
- the photograph album and the museum
- the collecting of albums
- the photograph album as social memory and political document
- the presence and the absence of the photograph album
Submitting a proposal: If you are interested in being considered as a contributor, please submit a proposal of between 300-500 words with a short biography and CV to the following address: J.Carson@salford.ac.uk by Monday 1 October 2012. If you have any queries about this CFP please email:J.Carson@salford.ac.uk
The book will be published in print and digital editions by MuseumsEtc in 2013. Contributors will receive a complimentary copy of the publication and a discount on more.
The Editors: Jonathan Carson is Associate Head (Academic) and Senior Lecturer in Critical & Contextual Studies in the School of Art & Design, University of Salford, UK. Rosie Miller is a Lecturer and Critical & Contextual Studies Area Leader in the School of Art & Design, University of Salford, UK. Theresa Wilkie is Director of Design & Culture and Senior Lecturer in Critical & Contextual Studies in the School of Art & Design, University of Salford, UK. All three previously edited Photography and the Artist’s Book (MuseumsEtc, 2012).
DEADLINES:
ABSTRACTS DUE: 1 OCTOBER 2012
CONTRIBUTORS NOTIFIED: 1 NOVEMBER 2012 (provisional)
COMPLETED PAPERS DUE: 28 JANUARY 2013 (provisional)
Click here to download the PDF version of this Call for Papers
British Pathé has created a collection of photos showing amazing vintage cameras in its '50 Classic Cameras' album but has little knowledge of old cameras. It is seeking commentwith some information on any of the photos. Any information on make, age, etc would be greatly appreciated.
There are three ways of contacting British Pathé:
1. Register with the website (for free) and leave a comment on the gallery itself
2. Join the archive's Facebook page
3. Find British Pathé on Twitter and chat there @britishpathe
The link for the gallery is below:
http://www.britishpathe.com/gallery/50-classic-cameras-gallery
David Burder FRPS, FBIPP, BSc, and Terry King, who was made an FRPS back in 1982 will be running a a very special workshop on 21 and 22 September 2012. David G Burder will be running the hands-on daguerreotype part of the workshop while Terry King will lead an exercise in making heliographs using asphalt in the way Nicéphore Niépce made the first extant photograph of the view from his window at Chalon sur Saone in 1826.
Not many people have done this!
David is Director of 3D Images Ltd in London, and holder of a dozen 3D imaging patents. He is a Fellow Of The Royal Photographic Society, and a previous recipient of several RPS awards, including The Saxby award for 3D imaging. Terry has been making alternative process photographs since the early seventies and has many exhibitions and articles on his work published. He founded the Alternative Processes International Symposium.
David is one of only a handful of practising Daguerreoptypists/ lecturers in the world today, David appeared on BBC TV, as well as in in The Guinness book of records, for creating the Worlds largest Daguerreotype. (having first had to build a 2 metre tall camera to house the 24x48 inch plate holder.)
He also created the worlds first 3D Lenticular “Dag”, as well as re-discovering the fabled true colour Daguerreotype process. David has given several “live, hands on” demonstrations of this procedure at several RPS events.
As he wrote in The Daguerrian annual, “in making Daguerreotypess, I have created many smells and met many new friends”.
David will take participants through the many aspects (some safe, some dangerous), of Daguerreotype imaging, the cameras and actual hands-on production of an actual Daguerreotype image. It will be a very interactive experience.
This is a rare opportunity to see a Daguerreotypist at work.
The cost for the two days will be £400. The workshop will take place at Terry’s studio in Richmond. See www.hands-on-pictures .com and http://www.hands-on-pictures.com/page8/page15/page15.html
The BBC is showing a programme about a major discovery of early colour film made at the National Media Museum by curator of film Michael Harvey. Movies were a wonder of the Edwardian age, but they were only in black and white. With a fortune waiting for whoever could invent moving colour images, a desperate race began to be the first, with back stabbing businessmen, amazing engineering and a tragic death all involved.
Now, researchers at the National Media Museum in Bradford have made a remarkable discovery that rewrites film history. Brighton may have been the Hollywood of the Edwardian age, but the question is: who actually came first in the race for colour?
Broadcaster, journalist and film critic Antonia Quirke follows the National Media Museum's astonishing discovery, and looks back at the history of the colour film industry.
See: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01mw0cl The programme shows on Monday 17 September 2012, 7.30-8.00pm in the South East and Yorkshire regions only and on the BBC iPlayer.
Image: Lee and Turner three-colour projector from the National Media Museum collection.
Cecil Beaton is one of Britain’s most celebrated photographers and designers. His glamorous photographs of royalty and celebrities projected him to fame but his extraordinary work as a wartime photographer is less well-known.
Commissioned by the Ministry of Information in July 1940, Beaton was the longest serving high-profile photographer to cover the Second World War. He travelled throughout Britain, the Middle East, India, China and Burma and captured a world on the brink of lasting change.
In later years, Beaton attributed his war photographs as his single most important body of photographic work. Through his photographs, drawings and books as well as his work in theatre and film, this exhibition tells the story of how the war became a personal turning point in Beaton’s career.
The exhibition runs until 1 January 2013.
Hilary Roberts, Curator of Photographs, and Michael Pritchard, Director-General of The Royal Photographic Society discussed the exhibition live on television today with Alan Titchmarsh (see photo above / courtesy ITV1)
The clip can be seen here (starts at 12m 10s): http://www.itv.com/itvplayer/video/?Filter=324846
More on the exhibition can be found here: http://www.iwm.org.uk/exhibitions/iwm-london/cecil-beaton-theatre-of-war
Bath's Victoria Art Gallery will be showing the work of Roger Mayne from 26 January-7 April 2013. The exhibition: Roger Mayne: aspects of a great photographer will be his first museum show for 22 years. Born in 1929 Roger Mayne photographed London's street life in the 1950s, capturing its vigour and poverty. Later he photographed his own children and people observed on his own travels. His many friendships with artists influenced his approach to photography and resulted in telling portraits plus a photo essay on the Bath Academy of Art. This show surveys his career and includes rare vintage prints for sale.
Details: Victoria Art Gallery, Bridge Street, Bath, Somerset, BA2 4AT. Tel: 01225 477233. E: victoria-enquiries@bathnes.org.uk W: www.victoriagal.org.uk
The Department of Special Collections of the University of St Andrews Library has a new Tumblr blog called “lux”. Marc Boulay, the photographic archivist writes... Its aim is to cater to those who will enjoy receiving a steady stream of images which illustrate the scope of our Photographic Collection and the new discoveries we're making every week. Out of our vast collection of over 700,000 historic photographs, only 10% are currently available online. “lux” will give followers the opportunity to enjoying a sneak peak at some of the previously unseen and rare photos we have on offer.
Our aim is to share weekly selections which illustrate the breadth of our collection and encourage those interested to learn more. Please share our images and forward our posts with others as the more people that use the collection the better. Don’t forget that you’re welcome to come see the originals! Members of the public, students of all ages and disciplines, or those who are just plain curious are all welcome.
Follow us on Tumblr: http://standrewsphotos.tumblr.com/
As well, our wider Department of Special Collections has been doing an ongoing series entitled "52 weeks of Inspiring Illustrations" which represents material from across all our collections (Photographs, Books, Manuscripts) which is featured on "Echoes from the Vault" our departmental WordPress blog. Every 3rd or 4th week there is a post of photographic interest which highlights our collection through an introduction to various photographic processes. It is meant for a generalist audience, but I figured it might be of interest to certain members of your readership. Here's the run of posts which cover photography so far (earliest to latest):
Echoes from the Vault also features other posts about photography, photobooks and developments in our collection.
Main image: Sunset over Mull, 1938. Photograph by Robert Moyes Adam.
Ruth Wilcock, the author of Whitby Photographers, their lives and their photographs from the 1840s, will be giving an illustrated talk on Early Whitby Photographers at Whitby Museum, Pannett Park, Whitby, YO21 1RE, on Wednesday 26 September 2012 at 2.15pm. Non-members are welcome, £1.
For more information see: http://www.whitbymuseum.org.uk/bitsnpieces/talks.htm
For details of the book and stockists see: www.towlard.com
De Montfort University's Photographic History Research Centre has published details of its Autumn research seminars in cultures of photography. Seminars are open to everyone.
Autumn 2012, Tuesdays 4 – 6pm, Edith Murphy Building, De Montfort University, Room number in square brackets.
October 9th [EM 1.07]
Dr Steve Edwards (Open University)
Beard Patentee, Claudet Exception: Photography, Biography and Intellectual Property
November 6th [EM 1.28]
Professor Clare Anderson (University of Leicester)
Representation, photograph-objects and family albums: visualising the Andaman Islands penal colony, 1858-1939
December 4th [EM 1.27]
Kim Timby (Independent Scholar, Paris)
From Mirror to Window: The Promise of Early Lenticular Photography
in conjunction with PHRC’s annual 3-D day]
Any queries, please contact the convener: Professor Elizabeth Edwards, Photographic History Research Centre. E: eedwards@dmu.ac.uk
An AHRC-funded Collaborative Doctoral Award studentship covering stipend and tuition fee costs is offered within the Photographic History Research Centre (PHRC) in the Faculty of Art, Design and Humanities in collaboration with the British Museum.
The project addresses the role of photography and its relationship with other mimetic technologies in field archaeology and the subsequent institutional life of the images in the construction of ‘heritage’. The project also explores the methodological implications for a ‘photographic history’ approach to collections and institutions.
The project will focus on the 1513 magnificent late nineteenth century photographs made of Maya archaeology by Alfred Maudslay, their relationship with other kinds of recording and their subsequent ‘life’ in the Museum. The student will have scope, within the project parameters, to develop an emphasis in photographic history, collections history, history of science, or museum practice in archaeological heritage.
The PhD studentship will be based at PHRC which undertakes leading innovative research on photography and its practices from the early nineteenth century to the present day, and over a wide range of social and cultural processes. It has a dynamic and growing research community and an excellent research library for photographic history. The successful candidate will be expected to contribute to the development of this community and that at the British Museum.
Supervision will be available from Professor Elizabeth Edwards (DMU) and key members of British Museum staff who have active interests in photography, history, archaeology and collections history. The studentship will be based at DMU, Leicester, with extended London-based periods of study at the British Museum and related archives
Candidates might come from a range of possible disciplines: art history, history of photography, museum and heritage studies, science and technology studies, material culture studies, archaeology, visual anthropology, or visual culture studies. A knowledge of Meso-American archaeology is not a requirement.
PHOTOGRAPHS, MUSEUMS AND ARCHAEOLOGY
Alfred Maudslay, Photography and the Mimetic Technologies of Archaeology: A Study in Method, Process and Effect
Photographic History Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester/ British Museum, London
STARTING JANUARY 2013
For a more detailed description of the PHRC please visit our web site or contact
Professor Edwards (eedwards@dmu.ac.uk) who will be happy to discuss the studentship further.
Applications are invited from UK or eligible EU/overseas students (please check http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/FundingOpportunities/Documents/GuidetoStudentFunding.pdf Annex A for residency requirements) with a good first degree (First, 2:1 or equivalent) and MA in a relevant subject. Applications are welcome from MAs completing 2012. The CDA scholarship is available for three years full-time study starting January 2013, providing a bursary for both maintenance (currently c. £14,500) and fees.
To receive an application pack, please contact the Faculty Research Office via email at ADHresearch&innovation@dmu.ac.uk. Completed applications should be returned together with a full CV, two supporting references, a statement explaining your interest in the project, and an example of your written work of c.3000 words.
Please quote ref: AHRC/CDA/PHRC12/2
CLOSING DATE: September 28th 2012
Interview date: week beginning October 15 2012
The status of photographs in the history of museum collections is a complex one. From the inception of the medium its double capacity as an aesthetic form and as a recording medium created tensions about its place in the hierarchy of museum objects. While museums had been amassing photographs since about 1850, it was, for instance, only in the 1970s that the first senior curators of photographs were appointed in UK museums. On the one hand major collections of ‘art’ photography have grown in status and visibility, while photographs not designated ‘art’ are often invisible in museums. On the other hand almost every museum has photographs as part of its ecosystem, gathered as information, corroboration or documentation, shaping the understanding of other classes of objects. Many of these collections remain uncatalogued and their significance unrecognised. However recent years have seen an increasing interest in the histories of these humble objects, both their role in collections histories and their histories in their own right.
This one-day meeting, a collaboration between MGHG and the Photographic History Research Centre at De Montfort University, Leicester, will explore the substantive and historiographical questions around museum collections of photographs. How do categories of the aesthetic and evidential shape the history of collecting photographs? What are the implications of shifts in these categories? What has been the work of photographs in museums? What does an understanding of photograph collections add to our understanding of collections history more broadly? What are the methodological demands of research on photograph collections?
Abstracts of no more than 250 words, for 25 minute papers, should be sent to Professor Elizabeth Edwards (eedwards@dmu.ac.uk) and Dr Kate Hill (khill@lincoln.ac.uk) by November 10th 2012.
Details of the day will be posted in December 2012.
Between Art and Information: Collecting Photographs
One Day Meeting, Leicester, Saturday March 2nd 2013
A collaboration between: Museums and Galleries History Group/Photographic History Research Centre, De Montfort University
The National Media Museum is looking to engage an architectural designer to work with it to create a new BFI Mediatheque in the museum building. It is looking for an experienced architectural designer to lead on the design, to appoint and manage a graphic designer and to coordinate the overall design scheme. This is an exciting opportunity to create a unique and innovative design which will refresh the museums’ visitor experience. The work is expected to last from October 2012-April 2013.
There are currently five BFI Mediatheque across the UK. The offer visitors the opportunity to access films and television programmes from the BFI National Archive, free of charge. The Mediatheque is a digital jukebox of film and television programmes from the BFI’s unique collections, augmented by content from regional archives. With 85% of its content unavailable to view anywhere else new content is added regularly building a unique collection of titles from the lesser known and newly rediscovered through to well-loved classics. Access to Mediatheque content is provided free to the general public.
Contact: Sharon Goldsbrough, Science Museum Group, Science Museum, Exhibition Road, Property and Project Management (North), London, GB, SW7 2DD . Tel: 0274 203428. e: MPG@sciencemuseum.org.uk
BPH has reported on the decline in visitor numbers at the National Media Museum over recent years (see: http://britishphotohistory.ning.com/profiles/blogs/national-media-museum-visitor-numbers-continue-to-fall) The Museum has just issued a tender document for an audience research exercise to:
1. Review of existing audience research; produce a draft brief for commissioning additional qualitative research and an initial review of the NMeM.
2. Provide oversight of additional qualitative research, providing advice and guidance to process: 2.5 days work.
3. Presentation of initial review to internal stakeholders: 1 day.
4. Produce detailed recommendations for the audience development plan and an outline document.
5. Presentation of final plan to internal stakeholders: 1 day.
6. Provide training and implementation of Audience Plan: 10 days.
For more information or to bid for the contract contact: Heather Mayfield at the Science Museum 020 7942 4000.
This exhibition consists of almost 100 years of photography starting with Clarence Taylor's 1862 work in Nepal and finishing with the great expeditions to Everest and Kanchenjunga in the 1950s. It also introduces the impressive collections from the Society of historic maps, over half million photographs dating from 1850 to the present, rare boos etc.
The exhibition will also provide a rare opportunity to see and purchase Limited Edition prints of original material held in one of the country's foremost collections. Details of the exhibition can be found here.
Photo:
Shive Dagon: the Pilgrim's Rest
A group of Victorian travellers gaze out across the tranquil landscape from the Pilgrim’s Rest, at the foot of the Schwedagon pagoda, near Rangoon in Burma (Myanmar). The pagoda is one of the most revered in Burma, possibly in the whole of Southeast Asia, and is surrounded by rest-houses for pilgrims and numerous smaller pagodas.
Picture: Vincent Clarence Scott O'Conner, c.1910
Ron Callender has published a small illustrated booklet Mr Driffield and Dr Hurter. Their lives & times in pictures. The booklet provides a useful summary of their lives and work. The booklet is available from Ron Callender for £4.50 including postage. Email: finlaggan@hotmail.com
The Royal Photographic Society is holding the next in its Hurter & Driffield Memorial Lecture series on 10 September in London. The series started in 1918. See: www.rps.org/sasson
Here's another offering from the new Media Space in London - good luck!
Fixed term part time contract until 31st March 2013
The ScienceMuseum is world renowned for its historic collections, awe-inspiring galleries and inspirational exhibitions. Media Space is a major new gallery space development which will house a series of temporary exhibitions featuring the collections of NationalMediaMuseum and the ScienceMuseum.
You’ll be based at the Science Museum and will be working to process the national and international loans for the first Media Space exhibition, Revelations. You will need to deliver collections registration and collections documentation work for the exhibition, creating records to a good standard in the object database (MIMSY XG) working as part of the team to ensure the objects are fully documented and ScienceMuseum policies are adhered to.
During the project you will arrange delivery of objects to the museum from lenders. You will be required to work with Media Space project staff and other museum staff including those in the Collections Information and Conservation and Collections Care teams. Experience in collections registration and dealing with insurance, indemnity and transportation of objects is essential.
Interviews will be held on 21st September. Full details can be found here.
Job Details
Job Title: Collections Information Officer, Loans, Media Space Project
Department: Corporate and Collections Information, SMG
Location: ScienceMuseum
Reports to: Collections Information Manager, SMG
Part Time 18 hours per week
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The Media Museum collection consists of over 100,000 objects including an important collection of 19th and 20th century photographs. Classification of these objects consist of early daguerreotypes and salt prints, albums and photographically illustrated books to contemporary colour photographs.
Qatar Museums Authority (QMA) has acquired masterpieces through the years, which QMA is committed to preserve and showcase to the world. QMA is dedicated to accomplish the vision of His Highness The Emir of Qatar through education and cultural interaction with communities in and outside of Qatar.
QMA’s mission is to unite and focus the efforts of all museums in the State of Qatar for the acquisition, preservation and interpretation of collections and monuments held in trust for the Qatari people, to be shared with national and tourist audiences. In addition QMA will travel exhibitions or loan to other institutions to promote QMA’s mission abroad.
Job Title: Head Photograph Conservator
Organization Name: Qatar Museums Authority, Media Museum Collection
Location: Doha, Qatar
Brief Description/ Purpose of Job:
As the first full-time conservator to be hired for the Media Museum project you will be responsible for the long term preservation of the collections. You will be responsible for managing the conservation laboratory and advising on a new laboratory design, plus treatment projects on rare photographs and planning an efficient workflow.
Detailed Description/Job Responsibilities:
Ability to perform comprehensive treatments on a wide variety of photographic materials, advising on the conservation aspects of any existing and new stores or display areas, advising on the display and use of the collections, carrying out condition surveys and preservation needs assessments, preparing written reports on survey findings, re-housing the collection as needed, advising the curatorial staff on conservation matters, ordering of conservation supplies, keeping up to date with developments in conservation and helping to organize an international conference & workshop on photographic conservation in the Middle East to take place in 2012.
Job Requirements:
MA or Accreditation with ICON in photographic conservation, qualifications in paper or photograph conservation completed recognized programs. 10 years professional work experience, a portfolio of conservation treatments & professional activities plus competence references.
Additional Details:
Salary range depending on qualifications. Position includes accommodation.
For further information or questions please contact Nicholas Couts at ncouts@qma.org.qa
Deadline for applications is September 15, 2012.
The Head Librarian, International Media Museum (IMM), is responsible for providing library and research services for the organization and maintenance of the photographic research library and its collections and establishing a public reference library.
SCOPE
The Head Librarian reports directly to the Museum Director and provides librarian and research services. Providing adequate services will ensure that materials are current and accessible, and available to library users when required.
RESPONSIBILITIES
1. Manage the planning, administrative and budgetary functions of library and information services
Main Activities
- Establish and implement library and information policies and procedures
- Develop and manage convenient, accessible library and information services
- Establish and manage the budget for library and information services, technology and media
- Develop and manage cost-effective library and information services, technology and media
- Order materials and maintain records for payment of invoices
- Analyze and evaluate library and information services, technology and media service requirements
- Prepare reports related to library and information services, technology and media services, resources and activities
2. Provide effective access to library collections and resources
Main Activities
- Develop and maintain collections management policies and procedures
- Perform original cataloguing and classification of print, audio-visual and electronic resources
- Develop and maintain special indexing systems and files for special collections
Librarian
3. Maintain the organization of library materials
Main Activities
- Ensure an accurate inventory of resources
- Ensure efficient retrieval by users
- Search external database programs for the availability of cataloguing copy
- Maintain inventories, compile statistics and generate reports as required
- Develop and maintain cataloguing procedures
- Distribute materials for cataloguing
- Determine the type of cataloguing required
- Enter cataloguing data into the library's automated system
- Process resources for placement on shelf
- File cards in shelf list
- Complete cataloguing records where only partial copy is available
- Index materials for the pamphlet collection
4. Provide library services in response to the information needs of library users
Main Activities
- Respond to daily on-site requests for information
- Train library users to effectively search the Library catalogue, Internet and other electronic resources
- Provide an interlibrary loan service for both book and audiovisual materials and maintain records
- Maintain records for the interlibrary loan service
- Maintain circulation files, records and statistics
5. Perform other related duties
KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES
Knowledge
Must have proficient knowledge in the following areas:
- library policies, procedures, methods, ethics and professional standards
- library programming standards
- research and information gathering systems and methods
- a variety of information database systems
- conducting Internet searches
- organization and structure of the library
- other information and library resources
- computerized information database systems
- library systems for cataloguing,
- acquisitions and searching, on-line bibliographic utilities
- capabilities and information resources of the Internet and other electronic databases
Skills
Must demonstrate the following skills:
- ability to manage a library and its collection
- team building skills
- research skills
- organizational skills
- analytical and problem solving skills
- decision making skills
- effective verbal, presentation and listening skills
- effective written communications skills
- computer skills including the ability to
- operate computerized library, spreadsheet,
- word-processing, spreadsheets, email,
- development programs at a highly proficient level
- computer skills including the ability to
- operate email and conduct Internet research
- stress management skills
- time management skills
- familiarity with Symphony systems
Personal Attributes
Must maintain strict confidentiality in performing the duties of the Librarian.
Must also demonstrate the following personal attributes:
- be honest and trustworthy
- be respectful
- possess cultural awareness and sensitivity
- be flexible
- demonstrate sound work ethics
WORKING CONDITIONS
Physical Demands
Environmental Conditions
The Head Librarian is usually the first point of contact for library users.
The head Librarian will spend a considerable amount of time in the library where there are constant interruptions and distractions.
Sensory Demands
Must be especially adept at listening to and understanding
- others from a variety of cultural backgrounds.
Mental Demands
Accuracy and attention to detail are essential when
classifying and organizing resources to ensure accessibility to library users.
Job is for a full-time position based in Qatar.
Salary is competitive and accommodation is provided.
Interested candidates should send CV to Dr. Marcia De Franceschi Neto mneto@qma.org.qa
Consideration of candidates close on the 14 September