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News: Introducing Open Access at The Met
Introducing Open Access at The Met
February 7, 2017
Loic Tallon, Chief Digital Officer
As of today, all images of public domain works in The Met collection are available under Creative Commons Zero (CC0).
So whether you're an artist or a designer, an educator or a student, a
professional or a hobbyist, you now have more than 375,000 images of
artworks from our collection to use, share, and remix—without
restriction. This policy change to Open Access
is an exciting milestone in The Met's digital evolution, and a strong
statement about increasing access to the collection and how to best
fulfill the Museum's mission in a digital age.
The Met has an incredible encyclopedic collection: 1.5 million
objects spanning 5,000 years of culture from around the globe. Since our
audience is really the three billion internet-connected individuals
around the world, we need to think big about how to reach these viewers,
and increase our focus on those digital tactics that have the greatest
impact. Open Access is one of those tactics.
The images we're making available under a CC0 license relate to
200,000 public domain artworks in our collection that the Museum has
already digitally catalogued.
This represents an incredible body of work by curators, conservators,
photographers, librarians, cataloguers, interns, and technologists over
the past 147 years of the institution's history. This is work that is
always ongoing: just last year we added 21,000 new images to the online
collection, 18,000 of which relate to works in the public domain.
To help find these images on our website, we've added a feature that
allows users to filter searches to only those works that we believe are
public domain; all of these Open Access images are marked with the CC0
logo on their respective object page.
Alongside the images, we're also making available under CC0 each
artwork's key information, otherwise known as tombstone data—title,
maker, date, culture, medium, and dimensions—on all 440,000 artworks
that the Museum has digitized to date; this data is now available as a downloadable file on GitHub. By
making this information available in a clear, machine-readable format,
we are making it easier for the world to search for, play with, and
explore the breadth and depth of the Museum's collection. (We don't yet
have an API, but we're working on it!)
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