Events


Dec
13
to 16 Dec

Protean figures for protean careers in cultural data

Abstract: This research aims to exemplify the value of comparative visual methods that capture the nuanced trajectories of protean careers in the arts. Protean careers, evolving over time, across sectors and cultural practices are characterised by their dynamic and multifaceted nature, and as such, pose unique challenges in data visualisation. While existing literature primarily focuses on data visualisations for the content of GLAM collections, illustrating the intricate career paths of artists remains a notable gap. As part of the Australian Cultural Data Engine (ACD-Engine) project, we collected and analysed multi-disciplinary cultural datasets, encompassing biographies of artists, designers, architects, and performers, along with associated works, events, and recognition factors. Our visual methods, while experimental, effectively summarise an individual artist’s journey into single, multifaceted representations, revealing distinct trajectories concerning cultural diffusion, the influence of recognition on success, and international presence. Figure 1 presents an example of one visual representation that captured the career trajectory of George Gittoes, an Australian artist, as recorded across three streams of open-source cultural datasets, AusStage, DAAO and IMDb. We refer the reader to for a detailed description of each dataset. Through a series of compelling case studies, we highlight variations in how individuals evolve from local artists to global success stories. Notably, some emerge as late bloomers, attaining international acclaim through transition to new artistic mediums, while others, particularly younger artists, leverage social network platforms like Instagram to establish their global impact. Moreover, the process of unification of cultural datasets in ACD-Engine also yields intriguing insights, uncovering previously unknown artist networks, and offering valuable implications for the preservation of protean biographical data. Our work contributes to cultural analytics, computational humanities, and artistic research, enriching our understanding of cultural production and its evolutionary pathways

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Aug
24

Australian Cultural Data Futures

Cultural data collections in Australia are at a critical juncture. While exciting new methods and approaches in cultural analytics have revealed the multifaceted uses and cross-disciplinary value of data about arts and cultural production, many of the collections from which the data are sourced face unprecedented institutional and infrastructural pressures to assert value, sustainability and users. At the same time, industry, government, and the GLAM sector are increasingly reliant on cultural data to tell better stories about how dynamics such as gender, ethnicity, education and investment shape the arts in Australia.  

With these pressing challenges on our doorstep, this one-day symposium showcases the highlights and key outputs of the Australian Cultural Data Engine (ACD-Engine), a the 2-year ARC project, while also asking urgent questions about the future of cultural data in Australia.  

Across a keynote, themed panels, roundtables and networking with colleagues and researchers from across the Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences, Library and Computer Sciences, and GLAM sectors, we invite you to join us as we examine the trends, new perspectives, and potential futures of Australian cultural data.

When: Thursday, 24 August 2023

Where: The Digital Studio, Arts West Level 2, The University of Melbourne Parkville Campus

This is a free in-person event, but bookings are essential. Please click here to register your spot. Catering will be provided. Please let us know when booking if you have a specific dietary or access requirements.

Program

9.00
Welcome

9.15
KEYNOTE

'Where are the humans?: Labour, expertise and interpretation in cultural analytics' (Associate Professor Miguel Escobar Varela, Theatre Studies at the National University of Singapore)

10.15

'Cog, Tool, Machine: Building the Australian Cultural Data Engine' (Professor Rachel Fensham and Dr Tyne Daile Sumner, University of Melbourne)

10.30

Morning tea

11.00

PEOPLE: Identity, Careers, Ontologies

  • 'AusStage by the Numbers: Or, Who the Hell is Robert?' (Professor Chris Hay, Liz Larkin & Caitlin West, Flinders University)

  • 'People, Places and Radical Exchanges: Visualizing Circus Oz Data’' (Dr Kirsten Stevens, University of Melbourne)

  • 'A Person-Oriented Ontologies Analysis of ACD-Engine Datasets' (Rui Liu and Associate Professor George Buchanan, University of Melbourne)

12.00

ORGANISATIONS: Histories, Influence, Power Dynamics

  • 'Institutional Landscapes of Culture: An Analysis of Trends in the Design and Art Australia Online (DAAO) Event Data' (Dr Scott East, UNSW, and Joanna Mendelssohn, University of Melbourne)

  • 'Potholes and Promises: Architectural History as Data, the Case of the Digital Archive of Queensland Architecture (DAQA)' (Professor John McArthur and Dr Deborah van der Plaat, University of Queensland)

  • 'Action, Prop, Equipment, Gear?: Circus Data and Challenges for Coding and Description' (Professor Lisa M. Given, Professor David Carlin, Dr Sarah Polkinghorne, and Joann Cattlin)

1.00: Lunch

2.00

RELATIONSHIPS: Code, Infrastructures, Aggregation

  • '3D Digital Heritage as a Scholarly Ecosystem' (Dr David McMeekin and Professor Erik Champion, Curtin University)

  • 'Multi-Layered Analysis in the Time-Layered Cultural Map of Australia ' (Professor Hugh Craig, University of Newcastle)

  • 'Structural Elements and Spheres of Expertise: Creating a Healthy Cultural Data Ecosystem' (Professor Lisa M. Given, Dr Sarah Polkinghorne, and Joann Cattlin, RMIT University)

3.00

Coffee

3.30

CULTURAL DATA IMPACT: Gaps, Needs, Resources (Roundtable)
Professor James Smithies (King's College London), Professor Rachel Fensham (University of Melbourne), Associate Professor Tully Barnett (Flinders University), Josh Nicholas (the Guardian) and Professor Rosalind Smith (Australian National University).

4.30

Closing remarks & wrap up

 

Abstracts

KEYNOTE

 'Where are the humans?: Labour, expertise and interpretation in cultural analytics' (Associate Professor Miguel Escobar Varela, Theatre Studies at the National University of Singapore)

There are many ways to think about the roles that humans play in cultural analytics. Some projects aim to offer reproducible results that are somewhat observer-independent, while others focus on adding new perspectives to previous interpretations. Another way to think about human actions is to ask ourselves: to what extent is automation one of the goals of our projects? Are we designing pipelines that can be fully automated, or are we trying to develop human-in-the-loop systems? Lastly, we can consider the many types of expertise involved in the different stages of a project, from data curation to the communication of the results. The objective of this talk is to offer a conceptual map of human actions that will help us assess existing projects and chart future journeys. I will conclude by looking at the challenges and opportunities brought forth by large language models (LLMs). These technologies offer the possibility of automating many analytical tasks and could be a boon for cultural analytics projects. However, they are notoriously hard to debug. This means we will need new ways to identify and conceptualize human labour, interpretation and expertise. Asking “where are the humans?” is a crucial ethnographic and computational exercise that will only become more important going forward. 

PEOPLE: IDENTITY, CAREERS, ONTOLOGIES

 'AusStage by the Numbers: Or, Who the Hell is Robert?' (Professor Chris Hay, Liz Larkin & Caitlin West, Flinders University)

As part of the Australian Cultural Data Engine (ACD-E) project, we have been working with a list of ‘top contributors’ to AusStage; that is, those who are attached to the most individual production records in the Australian database of live performance. Atop this list, with more than 100 more production records than the second entry, is one Robert Taylor. Working solely with this dataset, then, we might assume Taylor is among the nation’s most significant artists — or at least that he is a key node in multiple theatrical networks. But who is he?  In this presentation, we will use the case of Robert Taylor to reflect on the intersection of disciplinary expertise and data literacy that is required to work effectively with cultural data. This allows us to think through how the collaboration with the ACD-E has prompted us to reconsider elements of AusStage’s data ontology and curatorial practices. This enquiry also reveals the role of data entry and the influence of individual research projects on the construction of databases, and we will offer some further reflections on how this inflects the types of research that can be powered by cultural data in Australia. 

'People, Places and Radical Exchanges: Visualizing Circus Oz Data’' (Dr Kirsten Stevens, University of Melbourne)

How do you imagine a circus? A series of acts, a collection of tours, a variety of shows staged in multiple locations, an assortment of individuals drawn together who make it all possible? As these elements merge, they produce on the one hand the magic of the circus as performance – a spectacle that is a source of memories and wonderment for audiences. But they also produce data. Records of show dates, cast-lists, locations, tour schedules, and more. These data perform the circus in their own way, offering insight into the collaborations, activity, and organisational trends that shape the circus company over time. Presenting findings from the project “Circus Oz: People, Places, Radical Exchanges” (PPRE), part of the ARC-funded AusStage LIEF 7, this paper explores the cultural data produced by Circus Oz over its more than forty-year history. Combining existing Circus Oz datasets with significant new data spanning the company’s history and archives, the PPRE project produced a near-comprehensive dataset of Australia’s oldest contemporary circus company. Focusing on the people and performances that have shaped Circus Oz, this paper interrogates the power of data visualizations to offer meaningful insight into the story of circus in Australia. 

 'A Person-Oriented Ontologies Analysis of ACD-Engine Datasets' (Rui Liu and Associate Professor George Buchanan, University of Melbourne)

Mapping between different representations of similar data is a common challenge in digital humanities (DH). In practical cultural collections, the ‘person’ is an essential and centric unit, and other parts could link to the ‘person’ to form the knowledge base. The same person could have different names for marriage reasons or language changes, and different persons could have the same name, creating ambiguity or errors for database users. However, there is still no general and useful person-oriented ontology in DH community. Many practical DH projects have developed their own ontologies by DH experts, but these ontologies are not interoperable. Therefore, it is important to explore existing biographical ontologies and develop a comprehensive person-oriented ontology for cultural knowledge graphs. Using ontology mapping methodology, such as metadata crosswalk, could provide a foundation for future person-oriented ontology construction to accomplish semantic interoperability between DH collections. 

 

ORGANISATIONS: HISTORIES, INFLUENCE, POWER DYNAMICS

'Institutional Landscapes of Culture: An Analysis of Trends in the Design and Art Australia Online (DAAO) Event Data' (Dr Scott East, UNSW, and Joanna Mendelssohn, University of Melbourne)

 The DAAO is the largest authoritative open data source on Australia’s artists and designers – containing approximately 17000 biographies and data on 22524 events. Analysing event data, key trends in Australia’s cultural landscape can be tracked, including the Museum boom across the 1970s and 80s, trends in language use and key networks of institutions which regularly share exhibitions. Using novel language processing on event data enabled us to cluster institutions in surprising ways, revealing new linkages between institutions by considering their offerings. Working with this data also provided an opportunity to reflect on the DAAO data as a whole, considering its limitation and the challenges of working with cultural data. Finally, we reflect on the importance of cultural data to recording national cultural heritage.    

Potholes and Promises: Architectural History as Data, the Case of the Digital Archive of Queensland Architecture (DAQA)' (Professor John McArthur and Dr Deborah van der Plaat, University of Queensland)

 The Digital Archive of Queensland Architecture (DAQA) is the record of a well-regarded oral history project. As the database developed and has continued to be used the researchers partnered with the Australian Cultural Data Engine, (ACD-E) to understand how the data in the archive could be interpretated as a whole. While DAQA began as a heuristic process of inquiry into particular architects and projects, essentially an index of facts for the use of historians, the scale of the data collected now enables a level of analysis which promises to produce new findings about the breadth and character of activity in a period, such as education levels, women’s participation, and the life of professional firms. It also opens architectural historical data into a common ontology that promises links to cultural datasets beyond architecture. This paper reflects on the promises of opening architectural history into the wider stream of digital humanities and data science, but also the potholes and lumps found in massaging historical findings into a clean data. 

Action, Prop, Equipment, Gear?: Circus Data and Challenges for Coding and Description' (Professor Lisa M. Given, Professor David Carlin, Dr Sarah Polkinghorne, and Joann Cattlin)

Cultural datasets must be searchable if they are to fulfil their potential for research and everyday exploration. In this regard, the importance of high-quality metadata is widely recognised, but cultural data teams often do not have the resources, expertise, and time to focus extensively on this process. Additionally, most approaches to metadata development and schema standardisation do not account for the distinctive qualities of many cultural datasets, and certainly those containing recordings of live performances outside the context of music concerts. Working through multiple levels of coding on Circus Oz Memory Booth data has led to insights into the specific challenges of describing circus performances. Circus, perhaps more than any other art form, challenges categorical separations between performers’ bodies and actions, the “gear” they use, the skills they embody, and the influences they reflect. This makes circus a context with unique potential to inform the creation of more sophisticated approaches to metadata creation for performing arts datasets. 

 

RELATIONSHIPS: CODE, INFRASTRUCTURES, AGGREGATION

'3D Digital Heritage as a Scholarly Ecosystem' (Dr David McMeekin and Professor Erik Champion, Curtin University)

 This short presentation will argue Digital Humanities has not focused on 3D data projects, but that this is changing. I will describe some important but difficult components required for cultural heritage data of the 3D persuasion and the potential interfaces and solutions that could be of use to architects, art historians and archaeologists. 

'Multi-Layered Analysis in the Time-Layered Cultural Map of Australia ' (Professor Hugh Craig, University of Newcastle)

The TLCMap platform (the Time Layered Cultural Map of Australia at tlcmap.org) is a partner in the ACD-Engine project. In early days of ACDE, in the course of discussions within the ACDE group, colleagues suggested a new function in TLCMap to combine map layers in a single map while preserving the structure of the components. The funding allowed us to build that capability. Now TLCMap users can create a ‘Multilayer’ and see how patterns in a new layer fit with patterns in existing layers, or can divide a new layer into multiple components to see how categories interact.

Structural Elements and Spheres of Expertise: Creating a Healthy Cultural Data Ecosystem' (Professor Lisa M. Given, Dr Sarah Polkinghorne, and Joann Cattlin, RMIT University)

 Many cultural datasets exist in a precarious ecosystem, where erratic funding, fragmented support, and disconnected expertise threatens their continued existence. This exploratory study interviewed cultural data experts in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom in order to map the broad cultural data ecosystem and identify opportunities for it to grow healthier. We find that the development and maintenance of cultural data collections requires integration across spheres of expertise, foundational structural components, and key elements including clarity of purpose, user-focused design, sustainability, allied coproduction, and reciprocal interconnection. As the cultural data ecosystem grows healthier, more collections and initiatives will have positive impacts for research, knowledge, and diverse communities. 

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Digital modernity: Continuity and change in the history of technology, 1994 - 2024
Aug
17

Digital modernity: Continuity and change in the history of technology, 1994 - 2024

2023 Miegunyah Distinguished Visiting Fellow Lecture, presented by Professor James Smithies.

Abstract: The digital turn that accompanied the release of the Netscape Navigator browser in 1994 has had obvious and well-documented socio-economic and cultural effects, impacting society and personal identity in myriad ways. This lecture suggests it is time to pause and consider the effect this ‘digital turn’ has had on our relationship to the past, and whether some older intellectual frameworks might help us grasp the momentous changes occurring around us. Digital tools will remain important for the foreseeable future, of course, but in the context of an ever-evolving relationship between self and world. It is inevitable they will withdraw to the background of consciousness to join the cars, planes, power stations, and myriad complex systems that shape everyday life. Silicon Valley marketing will sound increasingly hollow, political manipulation increasingly outrageous, technical inadequacies increasingly tiresome.

The denouement of our fascination with digital technologies will occur naturally as intellectual assimilation proceeds, just as previous eras assimilated mechanical, industrial, and electrical technologies. Many perspectives will be needed for this to occur, but a reconsideration of our relationship to modernity is one of the most important. For decades, modernity was viewed by scholars as the driving force behind not only scientific and technological advance, but the violent incursions of colonialism and the miseries of child labour and environmental despoliation. The issues we face today seem clearly connected to those processes, and yet we continue to prioritise exploration of ‘the digital’, as if we have somehow exited modernity and entered a cyberutopian end game that can only be resolved by the deus ex machina of artificial intelligence.

Why did we stop conceiving of ourselves as inhabiting modernity? Why have ‘industrial modernity’ and ‘post-industrial modernity’ not been followed by ‘digital modernity’? And, more importantly, what would an intellectually robust and ethically sound description of digital modernity entail?

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Jan
31
to 1 Feb

Embedding the Human in Cultural Data: Research Software Engineering (RSE)

Cultural data collections are intended to document, archive, and share information and materials gathered from across the arts and humanities, broadly defined. While these collections reflect and instantiate many “human” endeavours, it can be easy to overlook human needs and experiences in their design, management, and execution. People searching, using, and contributing content to these collections have specific needs and requirements that must be reflected in systems architecture, interfaces, and management practices to ensure long-term sustainability and relevance of these collections.

This event will present details on current projects from the Australian Cultural Data Engine, positioned alongside broader discussions of theory, policy, and practices influencing our collections ecosystems. The day will be of interest to digital humanities and arts scholars, information scientists, software engineers, and GLAM sector practitioners.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/embedding-the-human-in-cultural-data-research-software-engineering-rse-tickets-459981967447

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Jan
30

Data Optics: Recognition, Events, Crises

Gaps in data and the decolonising of the historical record, queer data, data and memory, data performativity, and data ecologies are all under scrutiny. Can data deliver an alternative optics? Can data optics enable ways of seeing that are generative for new praxes and forms of recognition? This half-day symposium aims to think more about what narratives and events are recorded or created by the accumulation and manipulation of data, and to consider if and how data might facilitate responses to crises, when all else fails.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/data-optics-recognition-events-crises-tickets-459973040747

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Nov
23

Data Futures for Architectural History and Cultural Heritage

How can new techniques in the digital humanities help us manage our cultural heritage?

The Australian Cultural Data Engine in collaboration with the Digital Archive of Queensland Architecture (DAQA) and Curtin University Library presents a collaborative workshop on storing, analysing and visualising the history of the built environment. We aim to bring together academics and professionals in cultural heritage to explore new possibilities for putting architectural history in a wider frame of cultural history and new ways of interpreting and presenting the cultural heritage significance of the built environment.

The workshop will discuss work in progress on new ways to:

• record architectural data so that it is visible alongside other cultural data

• use data analytics on relatively small data sets such as DAQA

• tag models and images with information on cultural heritage significance

• use Open Linked Data in architectural history.

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/data-futures-for-architectural-history-and-cultural-heritage-in-person-tickets-451462856557

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Nov
17
to 18 Nov

Mapping Culture and History Workshop

Join us for an event celebrating the possibilities of digital mapping for the humanities, hosted by the Time-Layered Cultural Map of Australia (based in Newcastle) and the Australian Cultural Data Engine (led by the University of Melbourne).

We are bringing together instructors, presenters, and anyone interested in learning about mapping in a series of workshop sessions and plenary talks. We are targeting honours and postgraduate students, humanities researchers, gallery, library and museum staff, and local historians, in particular, but all are welcome. The face to face events will take place at the University of Newcastle's NUSpace building in the city campus, with some hybrid sessions and some via Zoom only.

Please review the workshop program in order to select workshops. Session descriptions can be found here. Zoom details for Zoom sessions will be circulated closer to the event.

We have bursaries available for Indigenous researchers and Early and Mid Career researchers, sponsored by ARDC and the College of Human and Social Futures at Newcastle – see the website here

https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/mapping-culture-and-history-workshop-tickets-428326354657

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Oct
19

Cultural Data Imaginaries: GLAM, Research and Policy

The Australian Cultural Data Engine (ACD-Engine), in collaboration with Design & Art Australia Online (DAAO), the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and The Powerhouse museum presents a collaborative workshop at the Powerhouse museum in Sydney to consider these questions in relation to the creative and visual arts.

We aim to bring together researchers, GLAM sector participants, and industry partners to explore the future analytics, creative potential and engagement possibilities of Australian cultural data across GLAM research, the arts industry, and government.

Building on the data-driven work of the ACD-Engine, this one-day workshop aims to share ideas around new approaches to cultural data for shaping and informing arts and cultural narratives as well as developing frameworks for robust data-sharing and utilisation in the cultural sector in Australia.

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Small Data is Beautiful: Analytics, Art and Narrative
Feb
18
to 19 Feb

Small Data is Beautiful: Analytics, Art and Narrative

Taking inspiration from the ‘small is beautiful’ mantra of the 1970s which provoked counter-cultural economic and scientific expertise in the name of planetary survival, this symposium invites scholars working on computational methods in the arts, humanities and social sciences to discuss their research with ‘small data’.

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Putting Open Social Scholarship Into Practice
Dec
9
to 10 Dec

Putting Open Social Scholarship Into Practice

Putting Open Social Scholarship into Practice seeks to highlight open social scholarship activities, infrastructure, research, dissemination, and policies. The INKE Partnership has described open social scholarship as creating and disseminating research and research technologies to a broad, interdisciplinary audience of specialists and non-specialists in ways that are both accessible and significant. At Putting Open Social Scholarship into Practice we will consider how to model open social scholarship practices and behaviour, as well as pursue themes of Community, Training, Connection, and Policy.

Lightning Talk from Tyne Daile Sumner, 9 December.

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Nov
24

The Australian Cultural Data Engine: Connecting Research, Industry and Government

This paper will cover some of the aims, key research questions, and early exploratory work of a new Australian Research Council-funded project: The Australian Cultural Data Engine for Research, Industry and Government (ACD-Engine), based at the University of Melbourne with collaborators across Australia and the UK. The ACD-Engine is a collaborative open software engineering project designed to interact with leading existing cultural databases in architecture, visual and performing arts, humanities, and heritage to bridge to information and social sciences. The paper will consider the ways in which the coordinated extraction and analysis of information from arts databases within Australia has the potential to contribute to policy debates, cultural reform, and new ways of understanding and influencing mainstream forms of consumption. It will also briefly consider the role of cultural data in better understanding the geographic diffusion of Arts in Australia, the vibrancy and social impact of local scenes, and the crucial relationship between data, performance, memory and storytelling in the contemporary Australian arts and cultural scene.

Presentation by Tyne Daile Sumner at Ka Renarena Te Taukaea/Creating Communities, Australasian Association for Digital Humanities Conference, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha/University of Canterbury, Aotearoa New Zealand, 22-25 November 2021

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Nov
23

More Than a Lab: Infra-structuring the Humanities in the Digital Studio

This presentation canvasses three interrelated components of Humanities research practice that (re)define infrastructure in the context of the Digital Studio at the University of Melbourne: a practice-based epistemology manifested through critical assemblages of resources, architecturally inflected interdisciplinarity organised around transparency and fluidity, and a connected intelligence approach to empowering sustainable inter-institutional knowledge creation. It considers the role of experimentation, and the alliances that are formed in the process of proto-typing as the epistemic conditions for research in the twenty-first century humanities. It also considers an ethics of durability and flexibility of digital research labs over the past 18 months, in which Universities have experienced what might be called ‘the infrastructural swerve.’ In this unprecedented reformulation of many labs, researchers, teachers, and students have been dispersed and disconnected, throwing into question our reliance on physical space and resources. Finally, the presentation considers the philosophy of place as a constitutive element of the future digital humanities lab. Specifically, place as unique to the human perspective and the values, meaning and diverse cognitive systems that researchers bring to place.

Presentation by Tyne Daile Sumner as part of the Digital Humanities Laboratories: Communities of/in practice Roundtable at Ka Renarena Te Taukaea/Creating Communities, Australasian Association for Digital Humanities Conference, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha/University of Canterbury, Aotearoa New Zealand, 22-25 November 2021

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