I also believe that "sequence" in describing photographs is more commonly used 
to indicate a carefully ordered series of images by the creator, not to 
describe bracketing that often occurs as a result of an attempt to capture the 
best expression in a portrait session, the best grouping of individuals at an 
event, or the best tone using exposure variations. I suppose one might use the 
term "bracket" if the views are identical and only the exposure changes. 
?
Dianne Nilsen
Head of Digital Initiatives and Imaging
Center for Creative Photography
The University of Arizona
P.O. Box 210103
Tucson, AZ? 85721-0103
?
p. 520-307-2829
f. 520-621-9444

http://www.creativephotography.org




-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
David Salovesh
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 2:47 PM
To: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Terminology question

(I have no particular cataloging expertise, but I'm not too bad at searches, 
semantics, and taxonomies.  And I play at photography in my spare time...)

The most appropriate word - and you used it in the question - seems to be 
"sequence":

http://www.getty.edu/vow/AATFullDisplay?find=&logic=AND&note=&subjectid=300192339


In the hierarchy (<object groupings by general context>) there are several 
close words that might also apply, such as "set" and "series", but they seem to 
apply better to diverse works with a unifying theme.  However, sequence implies 
order and if that's not reliably known it might be best to use a less ordered 
word.
 
And the AAT uses "reversal film" for negatives.

Dave Salovesh 
Information Technology Manager
National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund
202.737.8521 (phone) | 202.737.3405 (fax) | www.nleomf.org

Help Build the National Law Enforcement Museum
www.LawEnforcementMuseum.org - 866.446.NLEM (446.6536)

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Real, Will
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 2:47 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Terminology question

On the more esoteric end of things:

We are cataloguing a collection of black and white negatives. In many
cases there are groups of negatives depicting the same subject. In some
of these cases the depictions are very close (for example, multiple
takes of a posed studio portrait, multiple takes of a wedding party) and
in other cases the relationship is more distant (for example, multiple
exposures taken in sequence during the same event). 

We have been using the term "version" to refer to these. We looked in
AAT and found the term "version" under the derivative objects section,
and discovered that it is meant to refer to objects that are based on an
original, which is really not applicable in our situation since no
single negative in these cases can be called the original or primary
negative.

We are wondering if there is another term we should consider using to
describe these relationships and particularly if there are two terms
that would permit us to distinguish between the relationships that are
very close from those that are looser. 

Thanks,

Will Real
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
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