Dear colleagues
The International Summer School on Digital Art History (DAHSS), a joint initiative of the University of Málaga and the University of Berkeley, with the collaboration of the Ludwig Maximilian Universität of Munich, will celebrate the fourth edition from July 29 to August 3 (2019) in Málaga (Spain).
The application period has been extended until June 16. Please, visit: http://historiadelartemalaga.uma.es/dahss19/en/applications/ http://historiadelartemalaga.uma.es/dahss19/en/applications/ The course has a theoretical-practical orientation: theoretical exchange and critical discussions will be combined with practical sessions (lab-based sessions) through which participants will work collaboratively in common projects. The results of these projects will be publicly presented the last day of the course.
The course is organized around three tracks.
Track A: Data and the Arts: In Track A, lead by Greg Niemeyer (UC Berkeley), you will explore what role data can play in the arts from the ancient Nilometer to current circulation data and machine vision but also addressing artwork that deals explicitly with the cultural deficit around data and machine learning. You will learn how to collect data with sensors, how to manipulate that data, and how to present it in interactive ways online. No coding experience required, we will teach and use javascript and p5.js for our weeklong projects, and you will go home with a completed project online.
Track B: Experience in data analysis is essential for a data-oriented Art History. Data analysis and visualization also serves to publish research to broad audiences and to engage the public with museums' collections. In this track, led by Harald Klinke (LMU Munich), we will look into open data sources, learn the fundamentals of data analysis in R and go into practice by preparing data and images for a working twitter bot. No prior knowledge is necessary. Please, bring your own laptop.
Track C: 3D Modeling. This track, lead by Justin Underhill (UCB), will explore interactive media using the Unity game engine. We will experiment with different ways of exploring virtual space, and will see how we might use augmented and virtual reality to practice Digital Art History. We will also ask ourselves how to best design visualizations and historical reconstructions for these environments.
Track D: Computer Vision. Track D, lead by Leonardo Impett (Bibliotheca Hertziana), will investigate applications of computer vision to questions in the history of art - and more generally in visual studies. Images are what distinguishes digital art history from ‘digital humanities on art history’, and we will look at the long history of the computer analysis of images from the late 1980s to today. We’ll learn to use some basic image processing tools (scikit-image) and more sophisticated computer vision algorithms (tensorflow) to search within, organize, or learn about big sets of images. With millions of images digitised from Bildindex, Wikimedia, and Pharos (including the Bibliotheca Hertziana), we will build systems that deal with genuinely big image datasets (>10,000). If you have digital images from your own work/research, please bring them! Intended audience: postgraduate students, academic researchers, independent scholars and professionals related to the following disciplines: Art History and Visual Studies, Fine Arts, Graphic Design, Computer Sciences, Media and New Media Studies and Museum Studies.
In addition, the program will include:
a) a specific session to discuss the challenges posed by the publication in the field of Digital Art History, especially in relation to data-oriented projects.
b) a presentation and practice session with Pathfinder, a specific platform for data analysis and visualizations on art catalogs and exhibitions (http://pathfinder-art.es http://pathfinder-art.es/).
For more information, please visit: http://historiadelartemalaga.uma.es/dahss19/ http://historiadelartemalaga.uma.es/dahss19/ Nuria Rodríguez Ortega Professor and Chair, Art History Department University of Málaga (Spain) Facultad de Filosofía y Letras Campus de Teatinos, s/n Málaga, 29071 +34 952132223 / +34 952132222