Posts Tagged ‘Library of Virginia’

Forgotten Photos

Posted by striatic in Statistics

Patrick Peccatte of the incredible PhotosNormandie has followed up on his metadata statistics for all Commons institutions by providing statistics on photos in The Commons which have received little attention. If you’re interested in helping to add tags or comments to any of these “forgotten” photos, his new post contains a comprehensive list of links to photos of this kind.

Patrick searched 18,290 photos across all 19 Commons institutions, finding that 5,123 had not received any comments, notes, or tags from Flickr members. That’s fully 28% of the total collection. While that seems like a large percentage, the underlying numbers are more informative. The Commons collection is very large in many respects, but it is still small enough that certain outliers skew the average significantly, as we will soon discover.

Let’s take a look numbers institution by institution, examining how many photos out each collection have not received any tags, comments, or notes. [Data collected on February 11, 2008]

Large Collections

Library of Congress – 44 out of 5,421 (0.8%)
Brooklyn Museum – 167 out of 2,554 (7%)
Smithsonian Institution – 327 out of 1,414 (23%)
Powerhouse Museum Collection– 336 out of 1,101 (30%)
New York Public Library – 561 out of 1,300 (43%)

The Common’s largest and oldest contributor, The Library of Congress, has had tremendous success in attracting attention and metadata from Flickr members. Less than 1% of their collection on Flickr goes without comments or tags from Flickr members. The Brooklyn Museum has had comparable success.  These institutions demonstrate that it is possible to maintain large collections while virtually no photos fall through the cracks. The Smithsonian Institution is also above average, although less obviously so.

The Powerhouse Museum has a primarily regional focus (Australia), which sets it apart from the other large collections, and falls slightly below the average rate of Flickr member contributions. The NYPL is relatively new to The Commons and has uploaded many photos in a short period. It may require time before the Flickr community discovers and interacts with these photos.

Mid-Sized Collections

State Library of New South Wales – 1 out of 250 (0.4%)
George Eastman House – 60 out of 592 (10%)
Nationaal Archief – 141 out of 590 (24%)
Library of Virginia – 93 out of 314 (30%)
Musée McCord Museum – 86 out of 236 (36%)

These collections, between 200 and 1,000 photos in size, show a wide range of activity. The State Library of New South Wales behaves like some of the smaller, more concentrated collections in The Commons. George Eastman House has a broad focus, more like the Library of Congress and Brooklyn Museum, with comment/tag rates to match. The Nationaal Archief is about average, but had Flickr member tagging disabled until very recently.

Like the Powerhouse Museum, two regionally focused collections fall below the average. Musée McCord Museum focuses on Canadian history, and The Library of Virginia focuses on the state of Virginia.

Small Collections

Imperial War Museum – 0 out of 10 (0%)
Australian War Memorial – 1 out of 42 (2.4%)
National Galleries of Scotland – 8 out of 107 (7.4%)
National Media Museum – 16 out of 130 (12 %)
National Library of New Zealand – 36 out of 161 (22%)
National Maritime Museum – 48 out of 191 (25%)
State Library of Queensland – 83 out of 152 (55%)

These institutions are pretty much all above average. The State Library of Queensland provides an exception but is so new to Flickr that it almost shouldn’t be in this list.

Smaller collections concentrate activity, and fewer of their photos are missed by Flickr members.

Non-English Collections

Bibliothèque de Toulouse – 378 out of 652 (58%)
Biblioteca de ArteFundação Calouste Gulbenkian – 2,745 out of 3,073 (89%)

60% of all untagged and uncommented Commons photos are from these two institutions, which are both from non-English-speaking countries. The outlier statistics from Biblioteca de Arte–Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian require a bit of context, however. Unlike most Commons institutions, The Biblioteca uploads photos with a thorough set of tags, applied by library staff. It may be that these photos don’t need as much metadata from Flickr members, and thus receive less.

Conclusions

The analysis presented here is very simplistic, and reaches for only the most simplistic conclusions.

Smaller collections become easily saturated with tags and comments, but very large collections are also capable of similar saturation. Regionally focused institutions have challenges drawing activity through the entirety of their collections if they grow beyond a certain size, and institutions from non-English-speaking nations seem to have even greater challenges in this regard.

Commons Metadata Statistics

Posted by striatic in Statistics

Patrick Peccatte of the incredible PhotosNormandie has just published an article that provides metadata statistics for all Commons institutions. The article also includes detailed information regarding how each institution uses machine tags and photo descriptions, so if you want all the details, be sure to check out the Google translation of the original article.

Here are the statistics relating to comments, tags, and notes. The institutions are displayed in the order in which they joined The Commons. Links are also provided to the photo at the top of each category within an institution. These are useful for discovering photos that have received a lot of attention. [data collected between February 7 and 8, 2009]

Library of Congress, Washington, DC, United States

Launched on 16 January 2008, currently has 5,421 photos in 5 sets.
11,675 comments, for an average of 2.15 per photo. Max = 133
75,143 tags, for an average of 13.86 per photo. Max = 72
2712 notes, for an average of 0.50 per photo. max = 33

Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, Australia

Launched on 7 April 2008, currently has 1,101 photos in 27 sets.
1,464 comments,for an average of 1.33 per photo. Max = 97
4,619 tags, for an average of 4.20 per photo. Max = 34
305 notes, for an average of 0.28 per photo. Max = 19

Brooklyn Museum, New York, United States

Launched on 28 May 2008, currently has 677 Commons images in 6 sets.
[Following are statistics re-collected today Feb, 21]
1,508 comments, for an average of 2.23 per photo. Max = 107
4,875 tags for an average of 7.2 per photo. Max = 65
373 notes or an average 0.55 per photo. Max = 20

Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, United States

Launched on 16 June 2008, currently has 1,403 photos in 12 sets.
1,468 comments, for an average of 1.05 per photo. Max = 68
5,687 tags, for an average of 4.05 per photo. Max = 43
238 notes, for an average of 0.17 per photo. Max = 19
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Carnival of the Commons- Black History Month

Posted by zyrcster in Carnival of The Commons

US/Canada Black History Month

February is Black History Month in the United States and Canada, and various institutions are featuring events and exhibitions:

  • Programs and artwork from the Brooklyn Museum include the Black List Project, an exhibition of twenty-five portraits by internationally renowned photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders that explores being Black in America.
  • The George Eastman House has a discovery kit, African Americans: Black History through Photography.
  • African-American history month is also celebrated at the Library of Congress.
  • See the African-American Trailblazers exhibit from the Library of Virginia — including an essay contest!
  • The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at the New York Public Library has a variety of exhibits and events.
  • At the Smithsonian Institution:
    > Black history teaching resources
    > Black history heritage month
  • Go Visit!

    11 Feb.: It’s a Flickr meetup at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England! Join people from Flickr and the NMM for a meet and greet. Meet this Wednesday at 15:30 at the ROG cafe — that’s downstairs from the Astronomy Galleries, in the ROG’s south building. Here’s more info on how to get there if you haven’t been before. See this discussion for more details.

    11 Feb.: The National Media Museum, UK, In collaboration with University of Bradford, presents From the Vault, a very special selection of “forgotten” films, carefully chosen from their store of limited prints. First up this Wednesday is My Name Is Nobody at 18:00.

    11 Feb.: Noon–1 PM at the Library of Virginia, Law Touched Our Hearts: A Generation Remembers Brown v. Board of Education. Editors Mildred W. Robinson and Richard J. Bonnie will offer an overview of the moving stories of those who attended public school soon after the Brown v. The Board of Education decision and saw the course of their lives and their society change.

    Ending 11 Feb is the Advancing to victory, 1918 exhibition at the Australian War Memorial, featuring maps, photographs, art, medals plus an 18-pounder field gun and an exposed portion of a British Mark IV tank from the final days of the Great War.

    Through 14 Mar. at the National Library of New Zealand, Welcome Sweet Peace, which brings together an array of material from the collections of the Alexander Turnbull Library that commemorate and celebrate the end of hostilities, and chart the dramatic transformation of the New Zealand home front during and after the Great World War.

    New Flickr sets from The Commons

    ArtisNationaal Archief
    Kittens Kittens Kittens!

    Artis
    Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) – Library of Congress
    Curator of photography Carol Johnson has selected images that let you see how Lincoln looked over 20 years—from the earliest known photographic likeness in 1846, through the U.S. presidential campaign of 1860, and the pressures of the Civil War years. Views from Lincoln’s funeral in 1865 and portraits of his immediate family are also included.

    Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)

    A Commons Bibliography

    Posted by Stephanie Fysh in News

    Adolph B. Rice Studio
    City, public library, Belmont Branch construction, September 4, 1956
    Library of Virginia: Rice Collection 1182A

    Today marks the launch of Indicommons’ bibliography of research and reports on The Commons. Today it contains a handful of articles and conference papers on The Commons, alongside reports by Commons institutions. We look forward to expanding that list as we learn of more monographs, articles, conference papers, and reports, and as new ones are published and presented, and we hope that this bibliography will prove to be of use to research and scholarly communities.

    The bibliography also has the potential to include a broader range of material — perhaps including broader research on Flickr; on the online presence of museums, libraries, and archives; and on the notion of The Commons both now and historically.

    We welcome your contributions both to the current list and to possible new bibliography categories. Please send suggestions to editor@indicommons.org. And happy reading!

    Clean Up Yer Mess

    Posted by Rob Ketcherside in Across The Commons

    This is not a reprimand for sloppy tagging, but rather a careful collection of photos that reminds us that cleanliness is next to godliness, and has been for a considerable time now.

    Not all library work is glamorous. In this scene, one man operates the flowbee, another risks his lower back by lifting heavy books, and a third scolds them for sloppy work.
    New York Public Library
    Here are two more gentlemen in danger of throwing their backs out. One’s pumping water, the other’s scrubbin’ on the washboard. I think we got enough water there, Pappy.
    Nationaal Archief

    (more…)

    Just Plane Trouble

    Posted by striatic in Across The Commons

    Meandering through The Commons often means discovering trends. Not only does The Commons have an interesting collection of early aviation photographs, but once I started sorting through that collection I noticed a rather disturbing trend.

    Crashes!

    That’s Hugh Robinson, pioneer of early aviation, about to take a bath in the English Channel, some time in the 1910s.

    According to Wikipedia, Robinson survived no less than 15 crashes in his lifetime, dying in 1963 of natural causes


    Library of Congres

    Here are some captured World War I German planes being paraded around London in 1918. Not exactly gracious victors.

    Maybe this isn’t technically a crash, but it does illustrate our historical fascination with broken up airframes.


    National Library of NZ

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    Carnival of the Commons

    Posted by zyrcster in Carnival of The Commons

    Welcome to the first Carnival of the Commons! This series explores various happenings at the Commons’ institutions, be they online or at their facilities, and collects intriguing posts from their blogs. This first carnival has everything but the kitchen sink in it, while in coming weeks we will feature more thematic selections. This is your at-a-glance report of happenings around the Commons.

    Institutions’ Workflow

    Blog Blog Blog!

    • A wonderful post from the Australian War Memorial’s blog about Minnie Augusta Rattigan, who helped feed and entertain soldiers on leave in London during the First World War. A terrific adjunct to their currently running exhibit, Advancing to Victory, 1918.
    • At Face to Face, the Smithsonian celebrates the 250th wedding anniversary of U.S. President George Washington and the first First Lady, Martha Washington.

    Go Visit!

    See below the fold for events at the institutions.
    (more…)