Promotes professionalism and cooperation among the Museums of Montana. MAM is an organization for all types of museums-art, history, science, general, and individuals who are interested in improving and strengthening Montana's museums. var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-32805978-1']); _gaq.push(['_setDomainName', 'tumblr.com']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();
The museum’s underground halls are all hung with signs reading “Yield to Art in Transit.” Art moves physically within this warren so it can do a different kind of moving — of souls and minds — when it is in the galleries. And really, we should all yield to art in transit.
In the case of this reversible plough, we drag them out of hedges! Our curators in the 1960s had a tour of a farm in Cornwall and were so taken with this abandoned plough they brought it back to the museum.
Scanners and photocopiers with Automatic Document Feeders (or ADF) permit faster document imaging than the “one page at a time” approach of a flatbed scanner or glass platen would. However, the reputation for documents being damaged in ADF equipment exists. So much that NARA and other cultural institutions are typically prohibit Archival documents from being scanned or copied in ADFs. This photo shows damage that can result when a document is jammed inside an ADF.
{picture one }This photo shows damage that can result when a document is jammed inside an ADF. {picture two} The amount of time it takes to repair such damage far exceeds the time of taking a more careful scanning approach. {picture three} This is an example of repairs to a document damaged in an ADF.
Most document feeders use a high curvature paper path to turn over documents (usually to preserve stacking order or to flip for imaging the back side), and this places tension on already torn, brittle or otherwise fragile documents, especially in high-speed / high-volume operations. Even with originals in perfect condition there always exists the potential for machine malfunctions or human error resulting in damage. Failing to detect staples or tape holding pages together prior to feeding documents will likely result in damage in an ADF. Another general objection to using ADFs (most relevant for intrinsically valuable originals) is that rubber and urethane rollers come into contact with documents, introducing residual chemical compounds that might affect paper condition over time.
Some ADFs are now engineered with the aim of scanning less than perfect paper (such as torn or bent pages). These ADFs minimize risk to documents by reducing the degree of curvature and in some cases employing a straight paper path. If you must use an ADF and can risk some damage, it’s best to use a straight paper path document feeder.
Above is a breakdown of some applied best practices for using Tumblr in the context of libraries, archives, and special collections I’ve learned in as both a longtime Tumblr user and recent MLIS.
Information represented above is based on project overview shared in early 2015, Open.Marginalis: Tumblr as Platform for Digital Scholarship in Libraries, Archives, and Special Collections.
Lesson learned: never leave your boss unsupervised.
Anonymous submitted:
While I (the Exhibitions manager) was out of the office checking on potential loans for a new display, my boss decides to take in a loan without telling or consulting me. It should be mentioned that this boss has NO museum experience whatsoever. None. Zero. Zip. I’m pretty sure they have been to a museum like 4 times in their life.
Anyways, when I return my boss alerts me that I need to place the two pieces in the temporary exhibition as soon as possible because they are from a very important potential donor.
I am given no background information, no verbiage for the pieces, no values for insurance, and no budget to create pedestals to display them.
How temporary is this exhibition to which we are now adding this additional content? It closes in 2 weeks. That’s how temporary.
Oh, we can have nice things. Keeping them that way is a different story.
Anonymous submitted:
Today I watched one of our Trustees write a note to himself on a 100 year old handwritten letter from the founder of a very famous British company to a member of the British royal family.
Here are some still images to follow yesterday’s video of us opening our newest rare book. The bottom image is a folded engraving of Calzolari’s museum or cabinet of curiosity, which he used as a learning tool for local physicians, pharmacists and botanists to observe and experiment with objects first hand.
The book is Musaeum Calceolarianum Veronense, by Benedetto Ceruti and Andrea Chiocco, printed in 1622.
Who wants to pretend they’re shooting people in the face while contributing to real research?
You’re in luck, as we have a beta crowd sourcing project where we need help exploring our amazing collection of countryside photographs! It’s a unique insight into the English countryside’s past, and we need you to tell us whether a photograph has people, churches and sheep.
Our Long Game would be discovering photos in named places but with unidentified people, so we can go to those places and ask residents who they are and collect their stories.
From September 1947 until January 1949, the Declaration of Independence crossed the country in a traveling museum called the Freedom Train.
A group of 27 Marines protected the 133 documents, which came from the US National Archives, the The Library of Congress, and private museums and personal collections.
The Freedom Train stopped in cities in each of the 48 states (Alaska and Hawaii were not yet states), and the documents it carried were seen by more than 3.5 million Americans.
True to its name, the Freedom Train mandated that the admission lines for the exhibit were to be desegregated. Memphis, Tennessee, rejected this condition; in response, the Freedom Train did not stop there as scheduled.
After a successful national tour, the Freedom Train arrived in Washington, DC, for President Truman’s Inauguration Week. At the end of the week, the scrolls of 3.5 million names signed under the Freedom Pledge were donated to the Library of Congress.
Learn more about this amazing traveling museum in our Google Cultural Institute exhibit.
Today is International Archives Day! Did you know that Congress established the National Archives of the United States in 1934 to preserve and care for the records of the U.S. Government?
Previously, Federal records were kept in various basements, attics, and abandoned buildings with little security or concern for storage conditions. This photo shows Shipping Board Bureau records that were being stored in the White House Garage!
In 1935, Archives staff began to survey Federal records and the next year they began transferring records to the new National Archives Building in Washington, DC.
The National Archives now has over 40 facilities nationwide including field archives, Federal Records Centers, Presidential Libraries, the Federal Register, and the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.
Learn more about the National Archives and our many locations on our website http://archives.gov
Museums Association of Montana @montanamuseums - Tumblr Blog | Tumgag