Conference paper “Making Use of Pre-existing Street Art Object Metadata” published
Posted: May 13, 2023 | Author: Martin de la Iglesia | Filed under: street art | Tags: conference, graffiti, metadata, publication, street art | Leave a comment
Last year I presented a paper at the goINDIGO symposium in Vienna, and the proceedings of that conference have now been published as an Open Access volume titled document | archive | disseminate graffiti-scapes. Proceedings of the goINDIGO 2022 International Graffiti Symposium, which you can find here: https://journals.ap2.pt/index.php/indigo/issue/view/48.
I enjoyed catching up with that field of study once more after a long hiatus, both in preparation of my paper and during the event. You can access my contribution directly at https://journals.ap2.pt/index.php/indigo/article/view/708/434. Here’s the abstract:
In graffiti and street art studies, we are currently facing a paradoxical situation: vast numbers of publications relevant to our field—some of them academic, most of them not; from journal papers to coffee-table books—are continuously being published, but even the scholarly-oriented among them typically provide only sparse data about individual graffiti pieces and street art objects. It is rare to find complete metadata records containing information about the artist, the precise location, measurements, and the date of completion. Efforts are being made by individual projects and researchers to gather comprehensive and structured metadata, but those efforts take time and yield only small amounts of data. While it is important that these efforts are continued, a different, complementary approach is proposed here that aims to ‘quickly and dirtily’ gather ‘messy’ data. The idea is to make use of work that has already been carried out instead of trying to describe the same artworks in better ways time and again. This requires us to learn how to deal with incomplete data from vastly different sources. Effectively, such an approach lowers the threshold for data sources to become useful for street art researchers. Almost anything can become a valuable resource, even amateur websites (including abandoned ones) and print publications about local and obscure street art. This paper demonstrates how to extract object metadata from street art websites and digitised printed books, and how to feed it into a database that can be a potential treasure trove of street art object data.
There are many more interesting papers in that volume, though, and I encourage you to check them out. In fact, there is another contribution which lists me as an author: a transcript of a roundtable discussion cheekily named “Creators vs Academics” in which I wasn’t even a panelist, I merely chimed in once! Listing all who participated in the discussion as authors is a bold move – or perhaps simply diligent and transparent.
New article “Towards the scholarly documentation of street art” published
Posted: December 30, 2015 | Author: Martin de la Iglesia | Filed under: street art | Tags: disciplinarity, documentation, graffiti, metadata, methodology, object-based research, publication, referencing, standardization, stencil graffiti, street art | Leave a commentAs regular readers of this weblog will know, one of my research interests besides comics is street art, and stencil graffiti in particular. Now my first journal article in this field has been published. It is titled “Towards the scholarly documentation of street art” and is contained in the first issue of Street Art & Urban Creativity, a new Open Access journal. You can get the PDF of the issue at http://www.urbancreativity.org/uploads/1/0/7/2/10727553/journal2015_v1_n1_web_final.pdf (my article is on pp. 40-49).
Here’s the abstract:
It is generally acknowledged that street art is a particularly ephemeral art. For instance, graffiti are usually actively removed, thus existing for sometimes only a few days. Otherwise, they deteriorate gradually due to the effects of the weather, or are eventually ‘crossed’ by other graffiti, so that they are visible for a few years at best. Therefore, the documentation of street art should be of paramount importance to researchers. In fact, a lot of photography is being carried out ostensibly to document street art, for both image databases on the Internet as well as printed books and magazines. However, for the most part, this kind of street art photography is not done by (or for) scholars but rather by (and for) the general public. In any case, this practice usually does not fulfill even the lowest scholarly standards of documentation. One can be considered lucky to find any metadata for such pictures – for example, the artist’s name, an approximate location (usually on a city or district level), or the date on which the picture was taken, if at all. Furthermore, the selection of photographed works is highly biased due to the personal tastes of the photographers or the accessibility of the work. In order for street art documentation to be useful for research, providing further data is necessary, such as a more precise location, references to other instances of the same work, and the dimensions of the work. In this article, the current inadequate state of documentation in street art research is surveyed, and a model for the online documentation of stencil graffiti is presented that demonstrates the feasibility of some of these requirements.