Friday, December 21, 2007

Digital Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts

Excerpt from a newsletter on a new resource of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts digitized!

Free Library of Philadelphia's
Digital Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts
http://libwww.library.phila.gov/medievalman/


"Our manuscript collection includes most of the kinds of books used
between 1000 and 1500 A.D.: prayer books and poetry, Bibles and political
propaganda, philosophical works, and fantastic histories. Some manuscripts
are elaborate and beautiful works of art; others are humble
"owner-produced" books, copied out from a borrowed copy by someone who
needed a particular text. Each one tells us something about a
long-vanished age.

The Free Librarys digital manuscript collection includes two different
sorts of objects: complete manuscript books, or "codices," and separate
leaves and cuttings fragments separated from their original contexts. With
the images you will find basic information about the object pictured: when
and where it was made, and what its imagery depicts. When the image is
from an intact book, the accompanying information will tell you about the
book, and will also link to a complete description of it."


Make sure to check out their book of Hours!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Art and Climate Change

Everyone knows that climate change is big in the news now, but did you know that scholars are using art to help determine climate change? Scientists believe that by studying paintings of artists known for their paintings of the skies, such as J. W. Turner, they may be able to predict future models for climate change. Take a look at this article.

What other ways do you use your art outside of so called "traditional" methods, viewing, ads, etc?

In case the article vanishes from Yahoo! I've pasted it below.

By KATE SCHUMAN, Associated Press WriterWed Nov 28, 9:27 PM ET

The vivid sunsets painted by J.M.W. Turner are revered for their use of color and light and for their influence on the Impressionists. But could they also help global warming experts track climate change?

A group of scientists has studied the colors in more than 500 paintings of sunsets, including many of Turner's 19th-century watercolors and oils, in hopes of gaining insights into the cooling effects caused by major volcanic eruptions.

By better understanding past changes in climate, they hope to improve computer models for future climate change.

Christos Zerefos, who led the research at the National Observatory in Athens, said he believed it was the first scientific study of art for clues to climate variations.

The scientists studied works painted around the times of major volcanic eruptions, such as the cataclysmic explosion of Mount Krakatoa in 1883, to measure how much pollution was pumped into the skies. Contemporary accounts describe brilliant sunsets after Krakatoa erupted.

"The initial idea arose from the fact that we saw an increased reddening of colors in sunsets which followed large volcanic eruptions, particularly Krakatoa," Zerefos said.

By measuring the amount of red and green in the paintings, the scientists aimed to calculate the amount of dust in the atmosphere. The greater the pollution, the redder the sunset, Zerefos said.

But Kevin Trenberth, who heads the Climate Analysis Research Center at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., and who is not connected to the study, warned that artists and scientists do not necessarily see sunsets the same way.

"Painters are not scientists trying to do an accurate picture of nature," he said. "They are artists trying to make something look good or dramatic."

And James Hamilton, the curator at the University of Birmingham, who has written books on Turner, said that while Turner claimed to paint what he saw, it's dangerous to put too much weight on an artist's interpretation.

"They (artists) are not making absolutely clear and accurate records of what they can see," he said. "It's very hard to tell when artists are being absolutely accurate and when they're using vivid sky as a platform to more vivid painting."

John Thorne, a professor of atmospheric meteorology at the University of Birmingham, who is not connected to the study, said that while there can be a worry about painters taking artistic license, the study deals with that by using a cross section of artists.

"Some artists are very true to nature, some are very true to making up their own story," Thorne said. "But they've used a huge cross-section. So rather than a specific artist, they're more showing an average across all artists."

Hamilton agreed, noting: "The more artists and more known dates, the better."

The group examined 554 paintings from 181 artists and categorized 54 of them as "volcanic sunset paintings" because they were painted within three years of major volcanic eruptions.

The volcanic group included paintings by 19 artists, including Turner, Claude Lorrain, John Singleton Copley, Friedrich Caspar David, Breton Jules, Edgar Degas, Alexander Cozens and Gustav Klimt.

The scientists measured the color ratio in all the paintings and found that those with the highest red to green ratio were in the volcanic group.

In the study, published in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Zerefos and his researchers wrote that artists "appear to have simulated the colors of nature with a remarkable precise coloration."

That precision could make the paintings useful in tracking environmental pollution over the past few centuries, it said.

"They all may have different ways of painting, but the colors they used were representing the real environment," Zerefos said.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Welcome!

Welcome to the Tarver Library Art blog!

First let me say welcome to exploring a new blog. I'm the Art Subject Librarian at Jack Tarver Library. What does it mean that I'm the Art Subject Librarian? Well for starters if any of you're art classes have instruction in the library I'll be teaching the classes. Other than that I work on ordering new art books for the library, by suggestions made by your professors, significant books coming out that I find, and even suggestions made by you. I also look to starting new services, such as this blog.

This blog is a place for those of us at the library to get to know you, the Mercer students a bit better, and to share some information along the way.

What happens here?

Well this is a spot for me to share information with you. New web resources that I find, books that may be of interest to you, and maybe some new databases that you will have access to as a Mercer student.

What can you do? This is also a place for you to make suggestions. Are there cool new websites that you've discovered that would be useful to others? Post a comment here! Is there a book that your reading or a reference source that you've found that you think others will enjoy? Post a comment and let others know!

There are all sorts of websites out there that may be of use to you and I hope to share some of them. In addition I want you to consider this a virtual bulletin board for shows that you might have. Send the information on to me at: shuping_ad@mercer.edu and I'll add it on to the board. Thanks for looking!