Paul Eisloeffel wrote:
>
> Colleagues,
>
> Marni Welsch of the Judah L. Magnes Museum, Berkeley, CA, inquired about
> integrating the registration and cataloging functions of archival and
> artifact collections. I've had the fortune of having done some work along
> those lines. Take a look at AASLH Technical Leaflet #179, "Archival
> Materials in the History Museum: A Strategy for Their Management" (1992), by
> Lisa Gavin and me. Lisa and I experimented with an integrated collections
> managment system at the Kansas City Museum (Kansas City, MO) with great
> success. We later found that other institutions were struggling with the
> same dilemma. And so they should: The traditional rift between archives
> and museum collections management techniques is based on a mutual
> misunderstanding of the others' needs. True, there ARE differences --
> archival collections DO require arrangement and desciption, weeding,
> preservation copying, etc., that museum artifacts do not. But all the
> differences kick in AFTER the basic collections management functions of
> accessioning and cataloging (and here I'm using the museum definition of
> "cataloging") take place. After all, archival materials and artifacts are
> collected from the same sources, according to the same mission statement,
> are often interrelated, are stored and managed under the same conditions,
> and are used by the collecting institution for its common outreach and
> interpretive programs -- why shouldn't they come into the institution
> through the same procedural door? The traditional rift has no relevance any
> longer, especially with automation at our disposal and the material
> culturists telling us that objects can be "read" just like documents can.
>
> Can you tell I'm a bit passionate about this?! I'd welcome the chance to
> kick ideas around with anyone. And, Happy New Year!
>
> Paul Eisloeffel
> Curator of Manuscripts and Audio-Visual Collections
> Nebraska State Historical Society
> P.O. Box 82554
> Lincoln, NE 68501
> (402) 471-4750
> [log in to unmask]
Paul,
My staff are struggling with this same dilemma although I happen to
share your perception that the differences are more imagined than real.
We will next month begin transferring our archival and artefact
collections to a single database which, as you can well imagine, has
generated much discussion about language and classification.
How can I get a copy of that article which you co-authored?
Mark Clayton
Executive Director
Hawke's Bay Cultural Trust
Box 248
Napier
New Zealand
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