The handbook of art and design librarianship

cover image

Where to find it

Art Library — Reserve

Call Number
Z675.A85 H36 2010
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

While much attention has been paid to art librarianship as it exists in museum settings, comparatively less notice has been taken of academic and art-and-design-school art librarianship as a distinct focus. However, the skills of subject specialists in the arts and their advocacy on behalf of their users are fundamental elements in vital art libraries that fully support and anticipate the needs of artists, designers, architects, and the historians who study these disciplines. 
Put together by an international team of contributors, this essential handbook examines methods of innovative librarianship in academic and art school libraries throughout the world. With a focus on the intersection of best practice and best opportunities, the book brings together the philosophies and realities of the most creative librarians working in the field of art librarianship today and serves as a field guide to academic art libraries in the twenty-first century.
Key discussions include: the role of liaison to the visual arts visual literacy for highly literate viewers art history pedagogy and special collections technology in an art and design library collection management, renewal, and de-accession new forms of scholarly communication and their impact on art librarianship the making of the 21st century art library.   Readership : This timely book is essential reading for all information professionals working in art and design environments. It will also be of interest to students of librarianship interested in the challenges currently facing professionals working in this specialized area.

Contents

  • Contributors p. vii
  • Foreword p. xi Thomas F. Schutte
  • Introduction p. xiii Amanda Gluibizzi
  • Part I Roles and responsibilities p. 1
  • 1 Governance and administration of the art and design library p. 3 Paul Glassman
  • 2 Surveying trends in art librarianship: evolving roles p. 19 Cathy Carpenter and Catherine Essinger and Laurel Bliss and Alyssa Resnick
  • 3 Liaison for the visual arts: responding to the needs of diverse demands p. 29 Alessia Zanin-Yost
  • 4 Accreditation and visual arts libraries p. 39 Judy Dyki
  • Part II Materials and collection management p. 49
  • 5 Teaching by the book: art history pedagogy and special collections p. 51 Sandra Ludig Brooke
  • 6 Currency and continuity: collection management, renewal and de-accession p. 61 Lindsay King
  • 7 Swimming with the tides of technology in an art and design library: from AMICO to Delicious to YouTube p. 75 Sonja Staum
  • 8 Beyond the monograph? Transformations in scholarly communication and their impact on art librarianship p. 91 Patrick Tomlin
  • 9 Cataloguing and classification for art and design school libraries: challenges and considerations p. 113 Rachel Clarke
  • Part III Teaching and learning p. 131
  • 10 Visual literacy for highly literate viewers p. 133 Amanda Gluibizzi
  • 11 Embedding information literacy into a studio art course p. 145 Jennifer Mayer
  • 12 Incorporating image databases into teaching and learning p. 159 Rose V. Roberto and Rachel Robinson
  • 13 Cultural differences and information literacy competencies p. 173 Nancy Fawley
  • 14 Touch, see, find: serving multiple literacies in the art and design library p. 183 Holly Wilson and Laena McCarthy
  • 15 The art of evidence: a method for instructing students in art history research p. 197 Catherine Haras
  • Part IV Learning spaces, promotion and sustainability p. 213
  • 16 Why is that column in the middle of the room? Success in creating classrooms for library instruction p. 215 Paul Glassman
  • 17 Beyond the ivied walls: outreach to the art community p. 229 Patricia Eaves-Brown and Judith Wanner and Linda Graburn
  • 18 Contemplation, conservation, and community: challenges of the small art library space p. 245 Kathleen O'Neill
  • 19 The academic art library in the age of interdisciplinary discourse p. 265 Ruth Wallach
  • 20 Creative space p. 277 Daniel Payne
  • 21 The making of the 21st-century art library: cultivating vision, collaboration and support p. 295 Carol Terry
  • Appendix: Library profiles p. 305 Sarah E. McCleskey
  • Index p. 325

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