Create access! More responsibility for the cultural heritage

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Paul Klimpel and Börries von Notz in conversation at the 2012 conference

Create access! More responsibility for the cultural heritage (the first time under the title Gone on the Net - New Paths to Cultural Heritage ) is an international conference series that has been held annually since 2011.

Shaping access as part of the conference series ! Issues of digitization in relation to cultural and memorial institutions are being addressed with greater responsibility for cultural heritage . The series aims to "contribute to the discourse on the opportunities, obstacles, challenges and changes associated with digitization in libraries, archives and museums and their relationship to other institutions, initiatives and business enterprises". The conference series is headed by Paul Klimpel .

The conference will be organized in 2020 and 2021 by the Munich City Library , the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation , the Federal Archives , the German Digital Library , the German Film Institute & Film Museum , the German National Library , the German National Committee for Monument Protection , the Frankfurt Jewish Museum , the Research and Competence Center Digitization Berlin (Digis), iRights eV , the Foundation for Historical Museums Hamburg , Wikimedia Germany and the ZKM Karlsruhe . The patronage was taken over by the German UNESCO Commission . As far as possible, these organizers have been the sponsors since the beginning. Other previous co-organizers were Arsenal - Institute for Film and Video Art (2016), Internet & Gesellschaft Co: llaboratory (2016), Institut Français Deutschland (2015), Jewish Museum Berlin (until 2015), Open Knowledge Foundation Germany (2015) and the Foundation House of the History of the Federal Republic of Germany .

year place Venue Attendees thematic focus
2011, November 17th to 18th Berlin Deutsche Kinemathek Foundation At this conference, the focus was on whether. Should memory institutions go online and what is the relationship between public institutions, civil society initiatives and commercial enterprises when they go online?
2012, October 22nd to 23rd Berlin Jewish Museum Berlin Shaping access - but how? The various options and strategies for designing access to cultural heritage were discussed at the second conference. One of the focal points was the question of the marketing and commercialization of publicly financed archive holdings.
2013, November 28-29 Berlin Jewish Museum Berlin 200+ Shaping access - but why actually. The main focus of the third conference was a return to the self-image of cultural institutions and the expectations that are placed on them. To what extent is access to cultural heritage a recognized public task?
2014, November 13-14 Berlin Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum of the Present 400+ Shaping access - what actually happened? In an interim assessment, it was examined which digitization projects existed and exist nationally and internationally and how they have changed access to cultural heritage. Which concepts have worked, where has there been progress, where has setbacks or stagnation?
2015, November 5th to 6th Hamburg Altona Museum 330 Shaping access - where are we going? This conference focused on future strategies for access to cultural heritage in the future. In which direction did production and distribution structures develop? What concepts were there for participation in the future? How did the legal framework develop? The conference was accompanied by the call for the signing of the Hamburg Note by the conference leader and initiator of the Note, Paul Klimpel.
2016, November 17th to 18th Berlin Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum of the Present 360 Shaping access - but how long? In view of the rapid technological development of electronic media, the project orientation of cultural funding and the volatility of digital communication, questions about sustainability are gaining in importance. So the topic was what strategies are there to strengthen durability?
2017, October 19-20 Frankfurt am Main German National Library 300 Shaping access - working together. What forms of cooperation across institutional and national borders does digital technology enable, what are borders, what are the prerequisites, what are the opportunities for cooperation when it comes to enabling access to cultural heritage?
2018, October 25-26 Berlin Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum of the Present (and Martin-Gropius-Bau ) 300 Europe! On the occasion of the European Cultural Heritage Year under the motto “Sharing Heritage”, the focus in 2018 was on Europe's cultural heritage. Questions were, for example, how Europe's tangible and intangible cultural heritage can be protected, made accessible and conveyed and what legal framework conditions exist for this.
2019, October 30th to November 1st Frankfurt am Main German National Library around 200 Pragmatism. In order that the opportunities of digitization to facilitate access to cultural heritage can also be used, pragmatic solutions are required to overcome legal, technical and institutional obstacles. While up until then mostly conceptual questions were in the foreground, in this edition concrete solutions were to be discussed, which enable and secure the access and the communication of the cultural heritage.
2020, October 28th to 30th on-line on-line As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic as an online conference: Reflection on the new paths many institutions and initiatives had to take in 2020, since contact with others was mostly only possible online. Review of how sustainable and future-oriented formats and working methods were developed within a short period of time, how the crisis triggered a surge in innovation that accelerated transformation processes. On the other hand, there is observation where there are (still infrastructural) difficulties and where the communication of cultural heritage via the Internet has reached its limits.
2021, autumn Munich Munich City Library Focus on "Difficult legacy" - postponed from 2020 to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic

literature

  • Diana Finke and Mathis Leibetseder: Shaping access! More responsibility for the cultural heritage. 4th International Conference. - 13./14. November 2014 in the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum für Gegenwart Berlin. In: ABI Technik , Volume 35/1 (2015), pp. 43–47.
  • André Wendler: Shaping Access 2019 - More responsibility for the cultural heritage. In: Dialogue with Libraries , Volume 29/1 (2017), pp. 44–49.
  • André Wendler: Curating, sharing, experimenting. An annotated report from the conference “Shaping Access!” On November 17th and 18th, 2016 in Berlin. In: Zeitschrift für Bibliothekswesen und Bibliographie , Volume 64/2 (2017), pp. 90–93.
  • Lisa Eyrich: Shaping Access 2019 - More Responsibility for Cultural Heritage. In: Dialogue with Libraries , Volume 32/1 (2020), pp. 52–56.

Web links

Commons : Designing access  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Concept of the conference series. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  2. Documentation 2011. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  3. Documentation 2012. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  4. Documentation 2013. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  5. Documentation 2014. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  6. Documentation 2015. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  7. Documentation 2016. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  8. Documentation 2017. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  9. Documentation 2018. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved July 4, 2020 .
  10. ↑ Shaping Access 2019 - More Responsibility for Cultural Heritage. (PDF) p. 52 , accessed on July 28, 2020 .
  11. Use opportunities, take positions. November 6, 2019, accessed July 28, 2020 .
  12. Documentation 2019. In: Shaping Access! Retrieved on July 4, 2020 (German).
  13. Use opportunities, take positions. Retrieved July 4, 2020 .