Title: The digitisation of lantern slides in the Beazley Archive
1The digitisation of lantern slides in the Beazley
Archive
- Claudia Wagner, Oxford University
- Beazley Archive
- Classics Centre 66 St Giles, Oxford OX1
3LU Great Britain - tel. 44 (0)1865 278103 email
claudia.wagner_at_ashmus.ox.ac.uk
2History of the Beazley Archive
- The original archive of Sir John Beazley, Lincoln
Professor of Classical Archaeology and Art from
1925 until 1956, was purchased for the Faculty of
Classics in 1965. On his death in 1970 it was
brought to the Cast Gallery Ashmolean Museum.
Within a few years the personal archive of
material relating to the study of classical
archaeology and art was transformed into a
research resource for students and scholars. It
consisted of photographs, notes, drawings, books
and impressions from engraved gems. The
photographs of Athenian vases are the largest
archive of this class in the world and were the
basis of Beazley's life's work. - The collection now contains
- an estimated 500,000 notes
- 250,000 black and white photographs
- 33,000 negatives
- 7,000 colour prints
- 2000 books and catalogues
- 50,000 gem impressions
- While the original archive was being enlarged and
enhanced, a new electronic archive was being
created. From 1979 computers were used to
document Athenian figure-decorated pottery c.
625-325 BC. Today that database has more than
130,000 records, 150,000 images and 20,000
registered users. The data structure and lists of
terms developed for it have been the foundation
on which other databases have been created since
1992. They have also been made available to other
scholars for comparable databases on a variety of
materials being compiled elsewhere. - In 1998 all the assets of the electronic archive
were put on the world wide web with the intention
of combining resources for advanced scholarship
with programs for the public. The Beazley Archive
website had several thousands of fixed HTML pages
with many thousands more programatically produced
on demand from the various databases (Casts,
Pottery and Gems), an illustrated dictionary of
more than 300 pages and 900 images,
bibliographies for classical architecture,
sculpture, gems, pottery, coins, history of
collections and reception of classical art and
illustrated programs for students about pottery,
sculpture and engraved gems. During 2006/7 the
site was redesigned to be W3C AA compliant.
3The digitisation of the lantern slides is one of
the latest projects of the Archive. We rely on a
host of volunteers to sort through the varied
material of slides, negatives and photographs,
accessible in our Antiquaria section. Lack of
resources mean that we have to make a selection
- the most unique and interesting - are added to
the database at the present moment.
4The formats and subject matter of our slides and
negatives is varied. A great proportion was made
as teaching aids and used in lectures by
successive generations of professors , lecturers
and curators of the Ashmolean Museum. Some
reflect the personal research and interests of
the academics and some are capturing excavations
and travels abroad. Beazley glass negative
12x6cm
5Large format glass slides of a previous era
often called lantern slides have moved into the
collectable phase
- Technological advances in the last two decades of
the 19th century enabled individuals to produce
their own photographs and to mount them on glass
for projection. At the same time commercial
firms began to mass-produce lantern slides on a
variety of subjects, including travel and
archaeology. The slide medium proved to be
versatile it was possible to project
photographic images as well as hand-painted
lantern slides, allowing the production of
diagrams and annotated maps and plans. There is
ample evidence from various amateur scientific
societies in Oxford that Oxy-hydrogen limelight
was used to project lantern slides during
lectures. In addition, these societies were
creating their own lending libraries of lantern
slides Advancements in film technology included
the gelatine dry plate (in general use from 1879)
and slightly later cut film and roll film were
widely available making photography and
development easier. Smaller hand-held,
portable, cameras with instantaneous shutters
produced for these film formats were in mass
production by the 1880s and 1890s. This gave
rise to the amateur photographer (Gernsheim
Gernsheim 1988, 47-9). These developments were
further reflected in the publication of new
popular periodicals such as The Amateur
Photographer (1884-1908 and from 1896 containing
monthly supplements on Lantern Slides) and the
Optical Magic Lantern Journal and Photographic
Enlarger (1889-1903). - In the same way, in the Ashmolean Museum,
individual lecturers were creating and collecting
their own lantern slides. One of the earliest
known collections was that of Professor Percy
Gardner (1846-1937), the Lincoln and Merton
Professor of Classical Archaeology, though it has
not been possible to identify Gardners original
slides within the larger collection. By 1896
Gardner had established a photographic studio in
the new Ashmolean Museum on Beaumont Street.
In 1900 he reported that a considerable
collection of lantern-slides has been formed for
use in lecture, and catalogued. Four years
later, he reported, the collection had been
greatly extended. - Professor Sir John Linton Myres (1869-1954), a
younger colleague of Percy Gardner, also amassed
a large collection of slides. Indeed, many of
the earliest slides in the Institutes archive
carry his negative numbers as listed in his
photographic register. The subject matter of his
collection, like his scholarship, was
wide-ranging, spanning the topics of geography,
texts and scripts, prehistoric archaeology,
classical art, modern comparative crafts and
technologies, and physical anthropology. There
are slides of distribution maps, showing the
diffusion of cultural traits, skulls depicting
racial types, prehistoric Greek and Cypriot
sites, primitive oil presses from North Africa
and classical Greek statuary. Some of these
images were duplicated, printed as photographs,
and are contained in the Arthur Evans and John
Myres archives of the Ashmolean Museum.
6The Lincoln Professors glass slide collection
built up as a teaching aid for the University and
the Ashmolean Museum
7The homepage of the Beazley Archive
www.beazley.ox.ac.uk
www.beazley.ox.ac.uk
8Antiquaria on the website photographs and glass
slides
9Sample record positive glass slideA simple
search is available for users categories can be
chosen on the left hand side
10Negative glass slide
11Photos can be enlarged and added to a personal
photograph album
12Users can create and save several photograph
albums
13Advanced search screen Photography
14Simple search screen
15XML of a resultdatasets are immediately
available (and editable) in XML)
16XDB an extensible databaseall the databases in
the Archive are based in XDB and can be
cross-searched
17XDB database definitionsXDB is a very flexible
database new fields can be added easily and
properties of the fields can be changed in an
instant
18The web-sites universal search fieldevery page
on the site has access to the universal search
field this searches the web-pages and the
databases. In this field an ever expanding
multilingual thesaurus allows synonyms and
German, French, Spanish and Italian terms
19Results page of the universal search fieldweb
pages are listed in the first field, database
results in the second
20Results for the search Lion Gate in Photography
databasemerged database result thumbnails
indicate the records and give access via links to
the full entry
21Other institutions interested in the preservation
of glass slides The Magic Lantern Society
22Other conventions in the digitisation of lantern
slides slide scanned twice (transparent and
reflective) to include information written on
labels
23Contactwww.beazley.ox.ac.uk
- Director of the Beazley Archive
- Professor Donna Kurtz
- donna.kurtz_at_beazley.ox.ac.uk
- Director of the pottery database
- Thomas Mannack
- thomas.mannack_at_ashmus.ox.ac.uk
- Director of the gem programmes
- Claudia Wagner
- claudia.wagner_at_ashmus.ox.ac.uk
- Emeritus Lincoln Professor
- Sir John Boardman
- john.boardman_at_ashmus.ox.ac.uk