[NHCOLL-L:2421] Connoisseurship in the Wireless Age - 2004 MCN Blackaby Keynote

MCN 2004 mcn2004 at igs.net
Fri Sep 10 11:11:55 EDT 2004


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Connoisseurship in the Wireless Age: Max Anderson to Deliver the Blackaby
Keynote at the 2004 Museum Computer Network Conference

The spread of wireless technology, high definition television and standards
for delivering digital collections present many new opportunities for
museums.  In the 2004 Blackaby Keynote, Maxwell L. Anderson will offer his
observations about new directions in visual arts research and education
through networked computing, and speculate about the ultimate impact of
long-heralded technological convergence on the care and appreciation of
public art collections.

As Founding Chairman of the Art Museum Image Consortium (AMICO) and
Executive Director of the Art Museum Network, Max Anderson has long sought
to promote the use of high technology in furthering the missions of
cultural institutions.   The author of dozens of articles and monographs on
art and museums, Anderson graduated from Dartmouth in 1977 and received a
Ph.D. in art history from Harvard in 1981. He was subsequently a curatorial
assistant and assistant curator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art for six
years and over the following 16 years, director of Emory University's
Michael C. Carlos Museum, Toronto's Art Gallery of Ontario, and New York's
Whitney Museum of American Art. He has taught on the faculties of Princeton
University and the Università di Roma.  Anderson is serving as a Leadership
Fellow at the Yale School of Management for the 2003-04 academic year.

The 2004 Museum Computer Network Conference: Great Technology for
Collections, Confluence and Community will focus on how museums, libraries,
and archives put great technology into action to build communities around
our collective cultural heritage. Established in 2003, the Blackaby Keynote
honors the memory of Jim Blackaby, MCN Board member and leader of
technology initiatives at the Mystic Seaport Museum, Walker Art Center,
United States Holocaust Museum, and many other cultural institutions
throughout the country. 

The Museum Computer Network (MCN) is a nonprofit organization of
professionals dedicated to fostering the cultural aims of museums through
the use of computer technologies.  MCN serves individuals and institutions
wishing to improve their means of developing, managing, and conveying
museum information through the use of automation.  MCN supports cooperative
efforts that enable museums to be more effective at creating and
disseminating cultural and scientific knowledge as represented by their
collections and related documentation.  For more information please visit
us online at www.mcn.edu.


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