Abstract

Hilary Ballon and Mariet Westermann, writing about the struggles of publishing in art history noted that “It is a paradox of the digital revolution that it has never been easier to produce and circulate a reproductive image, and never harder to publish one.” If publishing in general is in crisis because of the seismic re-ordering in a digital world, the field of art history is the extreme tail of the spectrum; rights holders are accustomed to licensing image content for limited edition print runs. Given this particularly challenging corner of the publishing work, a project initiated by the Metropolitan Museum offers some hope of a collaborative way forward. What sociological re-engineering enabled progress on this problem? It is possible that there are other lessons here too, that might throw at least streaks of light on other process re-engineering provoked by digital innovation in publishing? This paper reviews how a leading repository of art (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) and a non-profit intermediary (ARTstor) created an alternative pathway to provide primary source content in support of image-intensive publishing. This venture is framed in the context of a publishing system moving toward greater freedom and an aim to bring about ever lower (or no) fees to readers.In general, providing academic content for free requires a re-structuring of a public release process – either of processed content or less processed content. To the extent that processing adds value, it might be worth paying for. This case study argues that there are places where community wide interests align, describes what it takes to keep them aligned, and explores what we did collectively to facilitate re-structuring. The conclusion explores whether there are lessons for open access publishing more generally in the example of cross-subsidization among mission (and not only marketing) driven organizations.

Highlights

  • This paper reviews how a leading repository of art (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) and a non-profit intermediary (ARTstor) created an alternative pathway to provide primary source content in support of image-intensive publishing

  • With a no-holds barred declaration, John Nicoll, called for a restructuring of the publishing infrastructure supporting art history. His argument focused on whether fees should be charged for the use of images of public domain works that resided in tax-subsidized institutions

  • If publishing in general is in crisis because of the seismic re-ordering of a digital world, the field of art history represents the extreme of the topsy-turvy spectrum

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Summary

Introduction

“...a five-hundred-year-old painting, bought for a museum with public funds, or perhaps given to it by a generous benefactor, and with no possible copyright claim from the artist or his heirs, is suddenly claimed to be the copyright of the museum where by a series of historical accidents it has come to be lodged. At a panel on publishing sponsored by METRO (a New York library consortium), Susan Chun and Doralynn Pines of the Met faced challenges from members of the audience about the allowable uses for IAP images – despite the fact that no other museum was systematically providing images for academic work at all. Other museums that have been progressive in sharing their collections on their own are exploring whether it would be helpful to their mission to provide copies to IAP as well This includes the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, which provides over 20,000 images for free on its site, and the Rijksmuseum, which has taken a very significant step among European museums by making over 125,000 images of its works freely available through its website as well as an Application Programming Interface service for making data and images available for reuse to others, with a goal of adding 40,000 images a year

The Image Permissions Problem and Open Access
The Costs of Free
What it Takes to Distribute Free Content
Do Motives Matter in the World of Free?
Free Lunches from Commercial Partners
Sustainability
Lessons Learned
Full Text
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