Will - I'll take a shot at the nerd challenge too:

The first object:

It is unique and should remain as a separate catalogued object record, with the 
appropriate exhibition history, acquisition information, description (including 
its work-in-process nature), and full links and relationships, etc.

The physical "object" is really just a carrier. You may have backup copies and 
a digital preservation plan, but the disc itself is not the object. You will 
track the location(s) of the carrier(s), but they are not intellectual in 
nature.

The second object:

This is not unique. As you described it, it is part of a limited edition. It is 
also different from the first in that the video work was further edited and 
modified by the artist, sound track added, and has different exhibition 
criteria. You might think of this as a different state (similar to a limited 
edition Picasso print with a different state).

It should be catalogued separately from the first with the appropriate 
exhibition history, special permissions by the artist and anything else that 
can be stored as archival information, acquisition info, etc., and the 
location(s) of the carrier(s) will be tracked. If permitted, it may even be 
interesting to have a video of the video work being exhibited on the building 
fa?ades to record the exhibition/realization of the work in this special 
situation for historical archive purposes.

The records of the first and the second works should be related to each other 
in your collections information system, probably in a sibling relationship 
(e.g. "is state of" or "see also"), as Cathryn suggests, as opposed to a 
parent-child relationship. It sounds like the second work is not so much a 
derivative work as a different state, as mentioned above.

I can't expound much on the FRBR aspect of your question, other than to say 
that maintaining as many links and relationships for discovery and navigation 
would be consistent with this bibliographic standard.

Best,

Jay


Jay Hoffman, CEO
Gallery Systems
261 West 35th Street, 12th Floor
New York, NY 10001

jay at gallerysystems.com
+1.646.733.2733

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Cathryn Goodwin
Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2009 4:18 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Calling all cataloguing nerds

I'll give it a shot - 

Will - did you accession the original piece, or does it remain in your 
collection as a commissioned/unaccessioned work?

I would consider the original piece a 'proof' of the second piece.  Likely to 
be important in understanding the artist's process and the actual work that was 
in your exhibition.  I would link the two records in a 'see also' way.

Then I would obtain whatever evidence possible of the artist's intent in both 
versions of the work - to document the differences between the two.

cathryn



-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Real, Will
Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2009 10:26 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Calling all cataloguing nerds

If any of you are involved in complex cataloguing questions, especially for 
contemporary art, and enjoy puzzling over them for inordinate amounts of time, 
here is a conundrum for you. How would you approach a situation like this?

The artist created a work specifically for a temporary exhibition. The original 
work was projected video imagery on the fa?ades of the museum building. We 
created a full catalogue record in our collections system for this work. 
Subsequently the artist created a derivative version of the piece to be offered 
for sale through the artist's gallery, in an edition of 4. The museum is 
acquiring edition 1/4 this work. It consists of the same imagery as the 
original, but it has been re-edited, has acquired a sound track, and is 
designed primarily as an indoors single-channel video projection. However, in 
our museum's case, the artist is permitting the work to be shown again as an 
outside projection on the museum fa?ades exactly as the original work was, as 
well as indoors as a single-channel projection.

It may also be significant that the original work was created under severe time 
constraints and the artist viewed it more or less as a work in progress. But it 
had to be shown in the exhibition in an "unfinished" state because the artist 
simply ran out of time.

Essentially our options are 1) create a separate catalogue record for the new 
derivative work, or 2) treat both the original projection and the derivative 
piece as two "manifestations" of a single "work" (loosely following FRBR 
concepts).

I suppose a broader question is, do any of you follow FRBR concepts when 
cataloguing works of this nature?

If this is too esoteric for the list, feel free to respond off-list.

Thanks,

Will Real
Carnegie Museum of Art

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