Information is available at http://chcta.wordpress.com/
The event is 26 and 27 June 2013, at the National Museum of Denmark, in Copenhagen.
Information is available at http://chcta.wordpress.com/
The event is 26 and 27 June 2013, at the National Museum of Denmark, in Copenhagen.
I am sorry I have not had much time to update the site lately, I have been very busy with organizing a workshop in Copenhagen
http://dighumlab.dk/news/single-news/artikel/cfp-cultural-heritage-creative-tools-and-archives-workshop/
The programme will appear soon and I am very happy with it, I think it will be a great event.
However June will probably not see much activity on this site as I will be tidying up loose ends here in Denmark before moving to Curtin University in Western Australia in July to start a new role. I am sorry in many ways to be leaving Europe but this is probably the right time to do so and some wonderful opportunities await.
In particular I am looking forward to working with iVEC, supervising PhD students, facilitating a new masters in visualisation for Curtin, and also help them develop new facilities such as this one for research into Cultural Visualisation (amongst other things).
DIGHUMLAB DK and the DIGITAL CURATION UNIT Athens are pleased to invite you to submit to a 2 day workshop on CULTURAL HERITAGE, CREATIVE TOOLS AND ARCHIVES.
The workshop is open to all but we in particular welcome participants drawn in the first instance from the DARIAH, ARIADNE, CENDARI, NeDiMAH and other EU cultural heritage networks. We envisage it will foster the growth of a community of practice in the field of digital heritage and digital humanities, leading to closer cooperation between participants and helping attendees develop tools and methods that can be used by the wider community.
Workshop themes
Cultural heritage, for the purposes of this workshop, is taken to consist of a broad spectrum of fields of scholarly research and professional practice relating to the study, management and use of the past, including but not limited to: archaeology, material culture studies, public history, intangible heritage, the visual and performing arts, visual culture, museums, and historical archives. We invite presentations of digital heritage tools and infrastructures, established projects and case-studies, state-of the art surveys, and original research contributions on the following themes:
· Cultural heritage information systems, ontologies and knowledge representation for material and visual culture.
· Data analysis, modeling, simulation, and visualization.
· Metadata, interoperability and integration of research data and scholarly resources.
· GIS, 3D graphic reconstruction and high end imaging.
· Digital preservation and curation of cultural heritage data, archives and documentation resources.
· Digital technology in fieldwork (e.g., archaeological data collecting and representation, excavation and survey data management, recording information “at the trowel’s edge”, processing survey and long series datasets, etc.).
· Digital scholarly publishing and public communication of cultural heritage.
· Sharing data and tools across European countries and partners.
· EU policy in digital heritage infrastructures, research, and cultural resource management.
· Any other topic relevant to the innovative application of digital technology to cultural heritage research, management and communication.
Presentation formats
· Project presentation: 20 minutes.
· Demonstration (of a tool, method, or project): 20 minutes.
· Paper presentation: 20 minutes plus 10 minutes of discussion time. Final papers accepted may be published in a journal (to be advised).
· Panel: 40-60 minutes involving 3-5 speakers.
Submission Information
· Format: At the top of the page include your name, your country, your institutional affiliation, your EU infrastructure/project affiliation (if applicable), the title of your paper, and the suggested format of your paper (project presentation, paper presentation, demonstration, or panel presentation). An AV projector will be provided but please indicate any other requirements.
· Submit: Emailyour proposal in RTF format to dighumlab@gmail.com with the title “Cultural Heritage Workshop”. If you wish to present a formal paper, you should submit an abstract of 500-1500 words, including references. For a project presentation, demonstration or panel you should submit a proposal of 300-500 words. If you wish to present on a panel, please indicate the names and affiliations of other participants (if known) on the submission document.
· Submission date: NEW EXTENDED DATE 1 May 2013, 17:00 Central European Time
Other information:
· Notification date: Wednesday, 24 April 2013 (may change).
· Date of Workshop: Wednesday, 26 and Thursday 27 June 2013.
· Cost of Workshop: free tea and coffee will be provided; we will try to find sponsorship for lunch for both days.
· Venue: National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark.
· For more information please contact: Dr Erik Champion, DIGHUMLAB Denmark, echa@adm.au.dk
Co-organisers: Associate Professor Costis Dallas, University of Toronto & Digital Curation Unit, Athens; Dr Agiatis Benardou, Digital Curation Unit, Athens; and Professor Panos Constantopoulos, Athens University of Economics and Business.
We would like to thank the ALLC: The European Association for Digital Humanities for co-funding and the National Museum of Denmark for hosting the workshop. This is a DARIAH associated event. Other associations with organizations are still to be confirmed.
Starts Friday 5th of October @ 13.00
Ends Saturday 6th of October @ 18.00
The Royal Library of Denmark, Den Sorte Diamant – Kulturarvssalen Søren Kierkegaards Plads 1, København
#hack4dk date and venue: The Royal Library, The National Museum and The Danish Agency for Culture invite YOU to participate in Denmark’s first cultural heritage hackathon.
What’s in it for you? A chance to play with open cultural data such as maps, aerial photos, listed buildings, films and artworks and spend some fun hours with fellow developers. There will be free food and drinks and a cool afterparty somewhere in town.
What’s in it for us? We want to show the value of open, free and accessible data with cool prototypes and educate the cultural world about the power of APIs, webservices and mashups.
Developers! hack4dk.tumblr.com
http://ccc.ku.dk/calendar/2012/found_and_made/
Communication on the internet and in other digital media is continuously recording itself – these data are there to be found. They include meta-data – data about data – that carry much information beyond the actual messages that are ‘sent’ and ‘received.’ Meta-data situate these messages in relation to their contexts – the source of information, its connections with other items of information, their trajectories across sites and servers, and the local users of the information, who, perhaps, add their own meta-data. At the same time, various other kinds of data must be made in order to account for the place of digital media in social interaction on a global scale. The resulting challenges to research are as massive as the amounts of data involved – what is referred to in both academia and industry as big data.
This seminar brings key contributors to the first decade of internet research to the Copenhagen Centre for Communication and Computing in order to address these challenges in an interdisciplinary dialogue. Each presentation is followed by Q&A, and the seminar concludes with a panel debate and plenary discussion.
The seminar is open and free – no registration is required. For further information, please contact Kasper Rasmussen <kasper.r>
Time: 2012-10-16 9:45 to 16:30
Place: University of Copenhagen, Southern Campus, Room 24.4.01
Organizer: Centre for Communication and Computing
NODEM 2010 –From Place to Presence. Digital media breaking boundaries between inside, outside and virtual spaces, in heritage institutions. http://www.nodem.dk/
Copenhagen Nov.24.–26. 2010.
2. Call for:
Research papers
Project Presentations
Posters and Exhibition Presentations
One of the most striking features of digital media in museums today is their potential for linking and integrating resources, spaces and users in an multiple and proactive ways. The topics of this year’s NODEM conference – Inside, Outside and Virtual – explores how content can be shared and gain exposure across online and onsite services and exhibitions. Special focus is on how users can contribute to knowledge production on different exhibition platforms.
The theme From Place to Presence devotes special attention towards how digital media can be supporting tools for experiences, reflection and knowledge inside AND outside the museum – as well as to discussing the concept of museums as knowledge arenas.