** Apologies for cross-posting **

Will the art of the digital age last even one lifetime? If cloud computing
fails, where will our documentation be? As the internet pioneer Vint Cerf
recently asserted in conversation with Rhizome’s preservation director,
Dragan Espenschied, “Preservation by accident is not a plan,” begging the
questions, *What is the plan?* and *Do we have one?* If we do not develop
solutions now, we risk losing not only born-digital artwork but artists’
archives as well, effectively erasing the work and memory of this
generation and subsequent generations’ art history.

Today, an artist’s closetful of cardboard boxes is likely stuffed with old
laptops and iPhones along with analog ephemera, handwritten letters,
snapshots, and postcards. Artists’ archives are increasingly hybrid
collections, requiring new, adaptable preservation methods. Even artists
working in traditional media like painting and sculpture rely on
born-digital methods to help create their art, manage records, and promote
their work, while other artists create solely with born-digital materials.
What does this mean for artists and their archives—both presently and in
the future? Will these integral records that constitute the history of an
artist’s practice and oeuvre be available at the end of this decade, let
alone to scholars of later generations?



Hosted by the *Yale Center for British Art*, this *National Digital
Stewardship Residency for Art Information (NDSR Art) *symposium will be
held on *May 11, 2018*. It will explore topics engaging the theme of
born-digital preservation and artists’ archives, including the following:
artists’ use of born-digital methods within their practice as means of
creation as well as documentation; the state of the field for artists and
those who steward their collections and archives; what is being done by
artists, museums, archivists, and librarians to steward and preserve the
born-digital components of artists’ records?; how are born-digital tools
changing artists’ studio practice, and what have we already lost?; and how
are museum archives handling hybrid and born-digital artists’ archives—where
among these bits and bytes is the artist’s hand?



NDSR Art would like to hear about case studies from artists, librarians,
and archivists working with born-digital records, their challenges, and
possible preservation solutions; what tools are being used, adapted, and
developed for the digital preservation of artists’ archives?



This event is co-sponsored by: the Yale Center for British Art, the Robert
B. Haas Family Arts Library, Yale University Library Digital Preservation
Services, Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/ NA), and the
National Digital Stewardship Residency for Art Information (NDSR Art).



*Please submit a proposal of three hundred (300) words* maximum for
consideration *no later than February 15, 2018 *to Cate Peebles, NDSR Art,
Postgraduate Research Associate: [email protected]





Cate Peebles

Postgraduate Associate, Archives

National Digital Stewardship Resident for Art Information

Yale Center for British Art

1080 Chapel Street, PO Box 208280

New Haven, CT  06520-8280

+1 475-202-2390 <(475)%20202-2390> | britishart.yale.edu
-- 
Frances Lloyd-Baynes  |  Content Database Specialist
Minneapolis Institute of Art
2400 Third Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55404

612-870-3189  |  [email protected]  |  www.artsmia.org
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