Comments on: Visual Art and DH http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/ The Humanities And Technology Camp Sat, 04 Jun 2011 13:00:14 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 By: ghbrett http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/#comment-392 Fri, 26 Jun 2009 00:49:50 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=222#comment-392 Oops I meant to mention Donna created the concept of “Renaissance Teams” at NCSA to help scientists to do their research better. This page explains it a bit: bit.ly/17CrUL

]]>
By: ghbrett http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/#comment-391 Fri, 26 Jun 2009 00:42:52 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=222#comment-391 What a great topic! I’d like to participate too. Much to share and more to learn.

BTW Donna Cox is a fantastic interdisciplinary catalyst as well as artist, scientist and nifty person.

Oh, some art from my first computer on Flickr. bit.ly/jyEzT

]]>
By: Musebrarian http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/#comment-390 Thu, 25 Jun 2009 17:06:29 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=222#comment-390 Ooops, here’s a link to Donna Cox’s homepage… www.ncsa.illinois.edu/~cox/

]]>
By: Musebrarian http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/#comment-389 Thu, 25 Jun 2009 17:06:10 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=222#comment-389 Karin,

You might be interested in the work of Donna Cox, who is sort of an “artist in residence” at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) here in Illinois. Her work is particular focused on the role of artists in scientific visualization, but I could see how to extend the argument to the humanities.

I’m also interested in this with regard to the collection dashboard (is.gd/1dfXw).

]]>
By: David Staley http://chnm2009.thatcamp.org/06/25/visual-art-and-dh/#comment-388 Thu, 25 Jun 2009 13:50:39 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=222#comment-388 Karin,

I was hoping to have exactly this conversation; thank you for articulating so much better than me! I decided to use the term “humanities-based imagist” because I don’t feel I have the qualifications to be called an “artist” (I do not have an MFA, for example), although I have been called an artist by a colleague here in the Art Department. Also, as one other blogger noted, “artist” has all sorts of other baggage tied to it. But at the very least, I was hoping that the installation would spark a conversation about the place for the visual in the (digital) humanities, especially since we have such a long and intractable tradition of being “people of the book.”

]]>