Digital images of 40,000 objects, including ancient artifacts, made available to the public for noncommercial use.
Effective January 1, 2014, the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, both a part of the massive Smithsonian museum complex in Washington, D.C., have released their entire collections of art and artifacts for online viewing. The release provides "unprecedented access to one of the world’s most important holdings of Asian and American art," announced gallery officials in a press release. "The free public resource—called “Open F|S”—will launch at open.asia.si.edu, allowing anyone to explore and create with the collections, from anywhere in the world."
Most of these objects have never been seen by the public, with over 90 percent of them available in high-resolution format and without copyright restrictions, as long as they are used for non-commercial purposes, say museum officials.
This makes the Freer and Sackler galleries the first and only Asian art museums to digitize and release their entire collections to the public, joining only a few museums in the U.S. that have done similarly with other types of collections. "The public is encouraged to use the images for educational, scholarly, artistic and personal projects that will not be marketed, promoted or sold," say museum oficials. "Enthusiasts are encouraged to provide feedback for “Open F|S” by signing up to become a beta tester for the Freer|Sackler. Beta testers who sign up will receive exclusive hackathon invitations and closed test versions of future “Open F|S” iterations."
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/winter-01012015/article/smiths...
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Nice - I am soaking in this one ;)
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