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Main Authors: Dennis Massie, Chela Scott Weber, Mercy Procaccini, Brian Lavoie
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED630906
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author Dennis Massie
Chela Scott Weber
Mercy Procaccini
Brian Lavoie
author_facet Dennis Massie
Chela Scott Weber
Mercy Procaccini
Brian Lavoie
Dennis Massie
Chela Scott Weber
Mercy Procaccini
Brian Lavoie
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Sustaining Art Research Collections: Case Studies in Collaboration. OCLC Research Report Dennis Massie Chela Scott Weber Mercy Procaccini Brian Lavoie Art Case Studies Cooperation Sustainability Foreign Countries Museums Colleges Academic Libraries Research Special Libraries Art research collections continue to be impacted by the lingering effects of economic uncertainty and the global COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in reduced or stagnant budgets and staffing cuts. These impacts have coincided with a period of institutional reflection and examination of the fundamental role of cultural heritage institutions in society. This report is the second of two documenting the findings from the Operationalizing the Art Research Collective Collection project, which explored collaborative opportunities and models for art research libraries. This report offers qualitative findings from case study research of existing collaborations involving art libraries, while the first report examined how quantitative analysis of library collection and resource sharing data can help identify and inform decisions about collaboration opportunities. Since prospective partnerships can only become reality through the hard work of building and maintaining relationships, it is important to document the practical experiences and lessons learned from real-world collaborations. The selected case studies offer rich perspectives on how art libraries have built and maintained partnerships in a variety of settings to illustrate different partnership models that art libraries could adapt for use in other contexts. [Foreword written by Amelia Nelson. For the first report, "Sustaining Art Research Collections: Using Data to Explore Collaboration. OCLC Research Report," see ED627074. This project was supported through a grant by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.]
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED630906
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2023
record_format eric
spellingShingle Sustaining Art Research Collections: Case Studies in Collaboration. OCLC Research Report
Dennis Massie
Chela Scott Weber
Mercy Procaccini
Brian Lavoie
Art
Case Studies
Cooperation
Sustainability
Foreign Countries
Museums
Colleges
Academic Libraries
Research
Special Libraries
Sustaining Art Research Collections: Case Studies in Collaboration. OCLC Research Report Dennis Massie Chela Scott Weber Mercy Procaccini Brian Lavoie Art Case Studies Cooperation Sustainability Foreign Countries Museums Colleges Academic Libraries Research Special Libraries Art research collections continue to be impacted by the lingering effects of economic uncertainty and the global COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in reduced or stagnant budgets and staffing cuts. These impacts have coincided with a period of institutional reflection and examination of the fundamental role of cultural heritage institutions in society. This report is the second of two documenting the findings from the Operationalizing the Art Research Collective Collection project, which explored collaborative opportunities and models for art research libraries. This report offers qualitative findings from case study research of existing collaborations involving art libraries, while the first report examined how quantitative analysis of library collection and resource sharing data can help identify and inform decisions about collaboration opportunities. Since prospective partnerships can only become reality through the hard work of building and maintaining relationships, it is important to document the practical experiences and lessons learned from real-world collaborations. The selected case studies offer rich perspectives on how art libraries have built and maintained partnerships in a variety of settings to illustrate different partnership models that art libraries could adapt for use in other contexts. [Foreword written by Amelia Nelson. For the first report, "Sustaining Art Research Collections: Using Data to Explore Collaboration. OCLC Research Report," see ED627074. This project was supported through a grant by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.]
title Sustaining Art Research Collections: Case Studies in Collaboration. OCLC Research Report
topic Art
Case Studies
Cooperation
Sustainability
Foreign Countries
Museums
Colleges
Academic Libraries
Research
Special Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED630906