My understanding is that:

If the illustrations are integral to the work, the person who
drew/painted them is a creator, or co-creator, and so the relationship
designator should be "artist".

If the illustrations are complementary to the work, and belong at
expression level (they contribute to the realisation of the work), then
the relationship designator should be "illustrator".

What is more debatable is how one decides whether the art is integral to
the work.  Could another artist could draw new comic strips for the same
story, or new pictures for a juvenile picture book without changing it
to a new work?

Jenny Wright

Development Manager

Bibliographic Data Services Ltd.

 

 

 

 

From: Resource Description and Access / Resource Description and Access
[mailto:RDA-L@LISTSERV.LAC-BAC.GC.CA] On Behalf Of Jack Wu
Sent: 26 November 2012 14:30
To: RDA-L@LISTSERV.LAC-BAC.GC.CA
Subject: Re: [RDA-L] Illustrators as creators, not contributors

 

Then, in MARC, it can sometimes be using $e illustrator, but at other
times $e artist? Or would one be using both terms? It's somewhat
confusing to me.

 

Jack Wu

Franciscan University of Steubenville

j...@franciscan.edu 

>>> JSC Secretary <jscsecret...@rdatoolkit.org> 11/23/2012 8:14 AM >>>
Jenny,

The LC-PCC PS you cite is in chapter 20, the chapter for contributors,
and states the policy requiring an authorized access point for the first
illustrator (someone with responsibility for the expression, not the
work). If the person involved in your resource has responsibility at the
work level as a creator, you would not be consulting chapter 20.

Yes, the only creator-level term in appenidx I is "artist" because
"illustrator" there is the term for a relationship at the expression
level.

Judy Kuhagen
JSC Secretary




On Fri, Nov 23, 2012 at 7:36 AM, Jenny Wright
<jenny.wri...@bibdsl.co.uk> wrote:

Hi All
I am looking at how to deal with children's picture books using RDA
rules, and would like to know what others think.

I think of children's picture books as being co-created by the author
and the illustrator, and I believe it would be a different work if there
were different illustrations, rather than a different expression.

My reading of RDA is that if I believe a person to be a co-creator of a
work, rather than a contributor to an expression, then the only
available relationship designator for the illustrator is "artist".

However, there is an LC-PCC PS stating
"Provide an authorized access point in the bibliographic record for an
illustrator in all cases of resources intended for children. Give the
RDA appendix I designator "illustrator" in MARC 700 subfield $e."

Can anyone help explain this apparent anomaly?
Thank you
Jenny Wright
Development manager
Bibliographic Data Services Ltd.

 

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