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From analogue to digital: preserving early computer-generated art in the V&A’s collections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Douglas Dodds*
Affiliation:
Word & Image Department, Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington, London SW7 2RL, UK
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Abstract

The Victoria and Albert Museum holds the UK’s emerging national collection of early computer-generated art and design. Many of the earliest works only survive on paper, but the V&A also holds some born-digital material. The Museum is currently involved in a project to digitise the computer art collections and to make the information available online. Artworks, books and ephemera from the Patric Prince Collection and the archives of the Computer Arts Society are included in a V&A display on the history of computer-generated art, entitled Digital pioneers. In addition, the project is contributing to the development of the Museum’s procedures for dealing with time-based media.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2010

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References

1. Metzger, Gustav, ‘Notes on the crisis in technological art’ (unpublished typescript, 1969).Google Scholar
3. Victoria and Albert Museum, http://www.vam.ac.uk/. The ‘Search the collections’ database is also available directly at http://collections.vam.ac.uk/.Google Scholar
4. The National Art Library catalogue is at http://catalogue.nal.vam.ac.uk/. The books can be identified by searching for the Patric Prince Archive.Google Scholar
5. Computer Art and Technocultures, http://www.technocultures.org.uk/.Google Scholar
6. Beddard, Honor and Dodds, Douglas, Digital pioneers (London: V&A, 2009).Google Scholar
7. ‘The care of collection based time-based media’ (unpublished internal guidelines, V&A, 2009).Google Scholar