Subject: Photo preservation seminar
It's seminar time again. In keeping with IPI's mandate to provide the most current information on timely preservation related topics we have made some rather radical changes to the traditional program. We are fortunate to have Dr. Franziska Frey working with us this year and she will be providing the more technical lectures on digitization. Franziska Frey received her M.S. Degree in Geography (Concentration Remote Sensing) from the University of Zurich, Switzerland in 1988. From 1989 to 1994 she was an assistant in the Group of Photography at the Institute of Physical Chemistry at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. She worked mainly on a project on the digital reconstruction of faded color photographs. In 1994 she received her Ph.D. in Natural Science ( Concentration Imaging Science) from the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. She is now working on a grant as a postdoctoral-fellow at the Image Permanence Institute at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Dr. Frey's research interests include image processing, electronic photography and color photography. Believe me. This brief biography says nothing about her. When I met her, we talked for three or four hours about her work with digital reconstruction. She could talk about the organic chemistry of dye fading, chemical kinetics, the art and artifactual history of objects in old images that she digitized, the matrix mathematics behind the algorithms, programing, hardware, color science and the correlation between natural and accelerated aging on a variety of dye based photographic material types. If you're wondering about the history part, she wanted to be sure that the reconstructed color of images of historic or artistic works (blankets, etc.) accurately matched what the original object probably looked like at the time it was photographed. The reason that the program was changed this year was because we realized that institutions *are* digitizing irregardless of whether it is a good idea or not. People need to understand the objects (photographs) that they are digitizing (process ID, care and display), how the object types will affect selection for and mechanics of digitization, and finally understand the digital objects themselves. This is the press release from Feb. 17, 1995. RIT Seminar Demonstrates the Preservation of Photographs in a Digital World Rochester Institute of Technology's Technical and Education Center of the Graphic Arts and Imaging will present "Preserving Photographs in a Digital World" on August 19-25, 1995, in Rochester, N.Y., at the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film. This program is an updated version of the former "Preservation of Photographs" seminar sponsored by the T&E Center, RIT's Image Permanence Institute, and the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film. Highlights of the new program include hands-on laboratory sessions teaching participants to identify various 19th- and 20th-century photographic processes. Using both visual and microscopic examination, participants will also learn to distinguish an albumen prints from a platinotype, and a Kodachrome from and Autochrome. "Preserving Photographs in a Digital World" will be of special interest to curators, archivists, librarians, conservators, and others responsible for photographic collections. The five-day seminar will include topics such as: * identification of 19th- and 20th-century image-forming processes * storage and display of photo collections * digital imaging for archival applications * the role of digital imaging in collection management * digital reconstruction of faded color images. The addition of digital topics for this year's seminar mirrors trends in the preservation industry. "The traditional and digital components of the seminar are complementary--today's collection managers can't afford to be uninformed in either area," said James Reilly, program co-chairman and director of RIT's Image Permanence Institute. Participants will receive an exclusive tour of the historic George Eastman House and have a unique opportunity to visit the archival storage area. During the week of the seminar, suppliers will exhibit state-of-the-art preservation and storage materials. The program fee for the five day seminar is $950. For additional information or a free brochure, contact Val Johnson at 716-475-2736. To register, call 1-800-724-2536 or send a fax to 716-475-7000. Douglas Nishimura Image Permanence Institute *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:87 Distributed: Wednesday, May 3, 1995 Message Id: cdl-8-87-002 ***Received on Monday, 1 May, 1995