Staff from the Archives of American Art have been working with the Wikimedia community as part of WikiProject GLAM since 2010. From June - September 2011 Sarah Stierch served as the Archives' Wikipedian-in-Residence. Current inquiries about the partnership should be directed to the Archives' webmaster Sara Snyder or posted to the project's talk page.
How can you earn the Archives of American Art Barnstar?
Write or edit a start or higher article relating to the history of the visual arts in America, citing at least one source from the Archives of American Art's Research Collections. See the List of Archives of American Art-related articles to get started.
Translate an Archives of American Art-related article into another language Wikipedia, with appropriate links and content related to the Archives of American Art.
Transcribe a document from the Archives of American Art into WikiSource.
Have you created or expanded an article related to the Archives of American Art? Add Category:Archives of American Art related to your article!
Contributions to Wikimedia Commons
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Archives of American Art.
See the Archives of American Art's WPA image donation on Wikimedia Commons!
Employment and Activities poster for the WPA's Federal Art Project
A life class for adults at the Brooklyn Museum
A free Federal Art Project art class in Brooklyn
Arshile Gorky
Augusta Savage
Georgette Seabrook
J. Scott Williams
See entire WPA image donation on Wikimedia Commons
Project scope and purpose
This project aims to coordinate the sharing of resources between Archives of American Art and the Wikimedia community in a relationship of mutual benefit. The Archives collects, preserves, describes, and provides access to documentary evidence on the history of the visual arts in America; a mission that aligns with Wikipedia’s goal to provide “free access to the sum of all human knowledge.”
Expansion of coverage and access to authoritative sources
Expand coverage on Wikipedia about people and topics relevant to the Archives of American Art’s collections. This includes providing access to sources for citations on existing pages, and creating new pages on notable people and topics.
Media contribution to Wikimedia Commons
Ongoing content donations to Wikimedia Commons featuring public domain documents and images from the Archives, allowing for these images to be utilized by educators and researchers worldwide without restrictions.
A learning experience
Collaborate with students and lifelong learners to help them grow their knowledge of art history while researching and contributing to Wikipedia articles. Empower Smithsonian staff and volunteers to grow their skills as confidence as Wikipedia contributors. Provide opportunities for new relationships and connections within the libraries, archives, and museum communities.
Requests
Archives of American Art is the world's largest and most widely used resource documenting the history of the visual arts in America. Our collections include:
Manuscripts of critics and scholars
Photographs of people and events within the art world
Sketches and sketchbooks
Diaries, letters and scrapbooks of artists, dealers, and collectors
Rare printed materials
Film, audio and video
Oral history interviews
If you are seeking something specific, please post on the requests page, and we will do our best to meet your needs.
Categories, Templates, and Userboxes
Articles about people, organizations, movements, or events heavily documented in the Archives of American Art's collections should have a hidden category on the main page, and a Wikiproject template on their talk page. Userboxes are for volunteers to place on their user pages.
Hidden category: [[Category:Archives of American Art related]]
Talk page template: {{WikiProject Archives of American Art|class=C|importance=top}}
Userboxes: {{User WP GLAM AAA}} (Archives of American Art) and {{User WPGLAM/SI}} (Smithsonian Institution)
Media, blogs, & presentations
2013
July 26, 2013 - New York Times, Museum Welcomes Wikipedia Editors
February 28, 2013 - The Torch -The Wisdom of Crowds, Secretary G. Wayne Clough
2012
October 24, 2012 - Smithsonian Libraries Blog -Editing Wikipedia: Better with friends, and best with librarians!
November 12, 2012 - Wikimedia Blog - Bring on the Chicks with Glasses!: Why Wiki Loves Libraries & GLAM-Wiki can help address the Wikipedia gender gap
2012 Fall CNI meeting - Archives of American Art Case Study for "Wikipedia and Libraries: What's the Connection?"
2012 Society of American Archivists Annual Meeting - The Archives of American Art on Wikipedia & Wikimedia
2012 Wikimania International conference - 5 Reasons Archives are an Untapped Goldmine for Wikipedians and Wikimedians
2011
"Archives of American Art Contributes Photo Collection to Wikimedia Commons" - Smithsonian Newsdesk, October 5, 2011
Backstage Pass Video from the Chronicle of Philanthropy
Reaching the public via Wikipedia by Michael Douma
"Wikipedian-in-Residence’ Helps Share Smithsonian Archives", The Chronicle of Philanthropy, July 28, 2011, Cody Switzer
Location! Location! Location! by Marvin Heiferman from the Visual Archives and the Smithsonian blog
A Very Wiki Summer: First Wikipedian-in-Residence for the Smithsonian Institution to Join the Archives of American Art in June written by SarahStierch for the Archives of American Art Blog.
First Wikipedian-in-Residence at Smithsonian Institution from The Signpost
Wikimedian in residence at #ArchivesAmerArt from Words and What Not.
Wikimedia + Archives of American Art = #wikilove from Your Favorite Museum Intern.
"In Residence" around the world from the Wikimedia Foundation.
Metrics/Statistical Data
Examine statistical data related to traffic from Wikimedia websites to the Archives’ website, as well as usage statistics of images, data and other related materials with the invaluable tools provided by Wikimedia developers.
Analysis is based on the importance of the topic and the connection it has in regards to the Archives of American Art. This analysis is being completed by art historians and staff, articles are rated based on the amount of content or quality of content within the Archives and its relevance to what is owned by the Archives. Collections that are restricted, entirely on microfilm, or not owned by the Archives are not being included. This chart is still under development and is only a selected portion of the Archives holdings.
Low = Only available on microfilm and/or only small amount of images possibly not for release.
Mid = Light biographical information in page description, minor details related to subject.
High = Oral history, partially digitized or primarily images.
Top = Fully digitized
Archives of American Art-related articles by quality and importance