The Getty Research Institute presents the launch of the Getty Research Portal, a free online search platform providing global access to digitized art history texts in the public domain. Accompanying this launch is a colloquium highlighting the Portal's significant contribution to digital art history. Speakers from leading international institutions will discuss the Portal's potential to assist researchers by widening access to publications in the public domain from libraries worldwide as well as the Portal's likely impact on the digital humanities.
(left)
Tango s korovami (Tango with Cows)(Moscow, 1914), n.p., Vasilii Kamenskii, Vladimir Davidovich Burliuk, and David Burliuk. The Getty Research Institute, 2872-062
View in Portal
(right)
Clariss[
imi]
pictoris et geometræ Alberti Dureri . . . (Nuremberg, 1534), n.p., Albrecht Dürer. The Getty Research Institute, 84-B7187
View in Portal
Traditionally, research for art historians has meant expensive travel and long, laborious visits to archives and libraries; a shortage of free, digitized art history books compounds this problem of access. To address this shortage, the Getty Research Institute is spearheading an international collaboration with libraries that are digitizing such books. Contributing institutions pool their digitization efforts and make the results accessible to a larger audience. Initial contributors include the Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library at Columbia University, the Biblioteca de la Universidad de Málaga, the Frick Art Reference Library, the Getty Research Institute, the Heidelberg University Library, the Institut national d'histoire de l'art, and the Thomas J. Watson Library at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Paving the way for a new digital future of art history, the Getty Research Portal will especially benefit students and scholars without access to a major art history library.
(left)
Vite de' più eccellenti pittori, scultori e architetti (Florence, 1550), title page, Giorgio Vasari. The Getty Research Institute, 85-B14829
View in Portal
(right)
Incidents of Travel in Yucatan (New York, 1843), pp. 388–89, John Lloyd Stephens. The Getty Research Institute, 89-B20134
View in Portal
Confirmed speakers:
Johanna Drucker, University of California, Los Angeles
Hubertus Kohle, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Confirmed participants:
Ann Jensen Adams, University of California, Santa Barbara
Murtha Baca, Getty Research Institute
Irina Costache, California State University Channel Islands
James Cuno, J. Paul Getty Trust
Carole Ann Fabian, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library
David Farneth, Getty Research Institute
Thomas W. Gaehtgens, Getty Research Institute
Deborah Kempe, The Frick Collection
Max Marmor, Samuel H. Kress Foundation
Martine Poulain, Institut national d'histoire de l'art
Kathleen Salomon, Getty Research Institute
Joseph Shubitowski, Getty Research Institute
Ken Soehner, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Stephanie Wood, Knight Library, University of Oregon
Admission to this event is free. To attend, please make a reservation by visiting www.getty.edu or calling (310) 440-7300. Note, late arrivals cannot be guaranteed seating. Parking is $15.00.
How to Get Here
The Getty Center is located at 1200 Getty Center Drive in Los Angeles, California, approximately 12 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. See
Hours, Directions, Parking for maps and driving directions.
The Getty Research Institute and the J. Paul Getty Museum are programs of the J. Paul Getty Trust. Other programs of the Trust include the Getty Conservation Institute and the Getty Foundation.