Bancroft Library - University of California Berkeley
Bancroft Library - University of California Berkeley
Expanding the Community: The Museums and the Online
Archive of California (MOAC) Project
Mary
J.
Elings
The Bancroft Library University of
California
melings@library.berkeley.edu
Eva
Garcelon
1999
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA
ACH/ALLC 1999
editor
encoder
Sara
A.
Schmidt
Introduction
Museums, archives, and special collections hold important and unique primary
source materials which, with the advent of networked computing technologies,
are being made available online to users around the world. Early projects
within the archival and library communities have looked at the feasibility
and technical issues of making these resources available in a networked
environment using open standards for information delivery.
Among the most notable of these early efforts was the development of Encoded Archival Description (EAD), an SGML
encoding and descriptive standard maintained by the Library of Congress and
the Society of American Archivists. The development of EAD has fostered
numerous follow on projects, the aim of which have been to test and expand
the capabilities of this new encoding standard for the description and
delivery of online primary source materials. One of the most significant of
these has been the creation of the California Digital Library's Online Archive of California (OAC), the largest
union database of EAD finding aids in the country, which includes finding
aids for both manuscript and pictorial collections from throughout the
state.
With projects like the OAC and other EAD projects across the country,
archives and libraries have implemented this new standard as the preferred
method for making their content rich materials available on the internet.
With this, interest in using EAD has spread to other communities with
similar holdings, such as museums.
MOAC Project
The Museums and the Online Archive of California
(MOAC) project is a collaborative endeavor between archives and museums
looking at implementing the EAD standard for museum and special collections.
The MOAC project will develop a prototype "virtual museum and special
collections archive" that integrates standardized EAD finding aids for these
collections into a single source, thus providing access to important primary
sources from multiple repositories across California.
The MOAC project is the first large-scale project that will attempt a museum
implementation of EAD. The nine participating partners (the Berkeley Art
Museum/Pacific Film Archive, the Hearst Museum of Anthropology, the Oakland
Museum of California, the Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, the
UCR/California Museum of Photography, The Bancroft Library, the Cantor Arts
Center at Stanford University, the Japanese American National Museum, and
the Fowler Museum of Cultural History) will build a testbed of over 30 EAD
collection finding aids linked to approximately 37,000 images.
The MOAC project will address such issues as interoperability of data, use of
descriptive standards and vocabularies within the EAD format, centralized
and de-centralized models for data creation and delivery (URLs and URNs),
and providing for workflows that can accommodate many different types of
institutions, both those that are economically and technologically rich and
those that are not. By successfully developing its EAD implementation
guidelines within the context of the existing OAC
Guidelines, the project will make it possible for the OAC to
expand to include more museum collections in the future.
Case Study
As part of this project, The Bancroft Library has just completed The Honeyman Collection Digital Archive project, a
one-year project to make The Robert B. Honeyman Jr.
Collection of Early Californian and Western American Pictorial
Material available on the internet. The Honeyman project is a
participant and the first major contributor to the MOAC project.
The Honeyman collection is comprised of over 2300 items dated from ca. 1790
to ca. 1930, including original oil paintings, watercolors, drawings,
prints, ephemera and other materials related to the old West, with emphasis
on the early California and Gold Rush periods. The Honeyman project sought
to obtain full bibliographic control over the collection through creation of
USMARC records; a comprehensive and detailed EAD finding aid; and archival
digital images of all items hyperlinked to descriptions. The project used
descriptive standards from both the archive and museum communities to
structure the project database (developed in Microsoft Access 97) and
followed established cataloging rules and created internal conventions for
data capture.
Based on guidelines agreed upon by the MOAC partners, the Honeyman project
resulted in detailed online description of the collection. Each image is
accompanied by information such as creator name, dates, nationality and
role; title, date and place of publication, call number, materials and
technique, content description, notes and inscriptions, and subject and
genre/format headings. Within the EAD structure the above information is
tagged based on type and therefore allows for content-specific
searching.
The Honeyman Collection Digital Archive is among the first EAD finding aids
to provide this level of access to a pictorial collection, as well as to use
controlled vocabulary within the item-level record, and will serve as a
prototype model for the development of the MOAC project. By demonstrating
the feasibility of providing detailed description using community standards
and controlled terminology to facilitate access, it is hoped that the MOAC
project model will be of significance to the archival and museum
communities, as well as to other cultural heritage communities.
Community and End-User Benefit
This wealth of collections-related cultural knowledge contained in art,
history, and anthropology museums will enrich OAC as a resource for
humanities research and education. Collections like the Honeyman and other
MOAC contributors, could have significance not only to those interested in
the history of California, but also in art history, urban development,
sociology, environmental studies and many other disciplines. By gathering
these resources into a single source union database, the user can search and
retrieve these rich documents without having to go to each institution
separately.
The main goal of the MOAC project is to make these important and unique
primary source materials easily accessible online. In the past, access to
many of these materials has been restricted to those who could come to the
institutions to view them. By making these materials available on the
internet, it is hoped that more users will have an opportunity to explore
the rich and diverse holdings of our shared cultural heritage. But
technology is only part of the equation; without content, community
involvement, and efforts like the MOAC project, our rich resources will
remain inaccessible to all but a few individuals.
References
Development of the Encoded Archival Description
Document Type Definition
: <>
Digital Historical Collections: Types, Elements, And
Construction
: <>
Honeyman Digital Archive
: <>
Museums and the Online Archive of California
(MOAC)
: <>
Online Archives of California (OAC)
: <>
California Heritage Project
: <>
EAD @ UC Berkeley
: <>
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