Have you checked out USC Library’s Digital Humanities Research Guide? Beyond its USC-specific opportunities, it lists helpful resources with succinct descriptions – all organized by topic. A favorite section is Digital Visualization. One resource worth exploring: The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy.
This year, the IRC DIL lecture series has focused on Mapping, culminating in a hands-on map-making workshop. However, sometimes we’re looking for historical maps and ways to work with them. A magnificent resource for the study and research about and with historical atlases and maps is David Rumsey’s Map Collection. At his last count, there…
Rome, July 1 – 07, 2019; Deadline: June 7, 2019 Visualizing San Saba: Digital Storytelling in a Medieval Monastery in Rome This one week Summer School is tailored for art history, archaeology, architecture and engineering students, who are keen on exploring Rome’s unique cultural heritage, through the lens of Digital Humanities. The scarcely known area of the…
Yes it’s Tuesday but, given we had Monday off, this post shouldn’t have to wait until next week. The Clark Art Institute has announced a new semester-length residency fellowship for a scholar at any stage of their career involved in a project that is either born-digital or has a substantial component that exists outside the…
Visual Resources: an International Journal on Images and their Uses is a print and online journal published by Routledge/Taylor and Francis. It has just produced a Special Issue (Volume 35, Issue 1-2, March – June 2019): DIGITAL ART HISTORY with Guest Editors Mutha Baca, Anne Helmreich & Melissa Gill. Access to the journal is licensed…
Welcome to Digital Humanities Monday! This will be the first of many Mondays that The Red Dot will devote to Digital Art History and DH in general. Please follow us, pass this on to anyone you know who might be interested, and send us any sites, programs, projects, and/or information related to DH to vrc.ucsb@gmail.com…