The Importance of Being Human

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The Importance of Being Human A Case Study of Library, Archives, and Museum Collaboration Heather Fox Archivist for Metadata & Scholarly Communication, University of Louisville, 400 Ekstrom Library, Louisville, Kentucky, 40292; email: heather. fox@louisville.edu Abstract Libraries, Archives, and Museums (LAM) convergence has been a topic of discussion for nearly a decade, with a particular focus on harnessing technological know-how to create efficiencies around managing and providing access to collections cared for by these similar yet distinct professions. This case study examines the interaction amongst the University of Louisville (U of L) Art Library, U of L Archives, and the Speed Art Museum (Speed) as the three separate entities worked together to complete an IMLS-funded grant project focused on streamlining the Speed s library. Although the initial work centered on surveying and weeding the Speed s collection and creating electronic catalog records of the materials, shifts in the grant budget supported the hiring of a Project Archivist to transfer the Speed s institutional archives to the University of Louisville. This formal partnership developed from a history of informal collaboration, impelled by exigencies of impending construction to create a new museum space. The project improved access to Speed Library s collection, enhanced the U of L Art Library s collection and facilitated preservation of and provided access to the institutional records of the Speed Art Museum. In addition, conversations about LAM convergence tend to emphasize technology. This case study draws on the Collaboration Continuum introduced by Zorich, et al in a 2008 report on the topic and examines the power of interpersonal relationships, which ultimately proved to be the important drivers of this collaboration. As early as July 2005, the Research Libraries Group (RLG) convened a member s forum entitled Libraries, Archives, & Museums Three Ring Circus, One Big Show? that explored the subject of LAM convergence. Eleven speakers from the Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals, Volume 10, Number 2, Spring 2014, pp. 183 192. Copyright 2014 AltaMira Press. All rights reserved. 183

184 a case study of library, archives, and museum collaboration O US and Canada discussed real world examples of why and how these three professions should work together. Some made the case for cross-training professionals in an effort to foster collaborative relationships; some speakers addressed the imperative of decreased funding motivating groups to work together. 1 In Beyond the Silos, Zorich et al. reported on a series of workshops conducted by the RLG in late 2007 and early 2008 aimed at identifying and defining ways in which libraries, archives and museums can collaborate. 2 The RLG invited five institutions that had library, archives and museum departments within their organization: the Smithsonian Institution, Yale University, Princeton University, the University of Edinburgh, and the Victoria and Albert Museum. Each of the sites met five criteria developed by the RLG: the organization consisted of multiple units which fall into the LAM categories, people within the organization had some experience collaborating across units, each organization prioritized furthering their collaborative efforts, each site possessed a champion that could liaise between their organization and RLG, and each organization had time during the project timeframe to participate. The organizers led a day-long workshop at each institution to facilitate a broad discussion of LAM cooperation and asked each group to define future collaborative projects. The authors of the report delineated a conceptual framework for the discussion by defining a continuum of cooperation that is divided into five levels of interaction among LAM partners. The first phase, contact, reflects a situation in which stakeholders informally make contact, start to build relationships with one another and begin to think about ways in which they can work together. The next phase, cooperation, maintains a level of informality, but produces tangible, often one-time, outcomes. Zorich et al. provide the example of an art museum loaning artifacts to an archive for an exhibit exemplifies this point in the continuum. The next phase, coordination is distinguished by the need for a framework of communication (e.g., creation of a distribution list and meeting agendas) to achieve a common goal. They provide a cross-institutional working group on metadata creation as an example of this level of collaboration. The fourth point along the continuum, collaboration, requires more concerted efforts among institutions and results in a transformation of processes, such as stakeholders working to create a common trusted digital repository. The continuum culminates in convergence, in which stakeholders have integrated such processes as to render them second nature. It is worth noting that successful collaboration achieved by institutions that participated in Beyond the Silos, was achieved when LAM partners existed under the same roof. In a follow up report, Waibel defines three types of collaborations: local, group, and global. Local collaborations happen within a single institution and facilitate efficient work toward the common goal of supporting the institutional mission. Group collaborations function inter-institutionally and are sparked by working toward a common interest. Global collaborations revolve around working toward common values and are evidenced by the development of standards, policies for

O heather fox 185 copyright and data aggregation, the commons and open data movements and the vision of Linked Data. 3 The interest in LAM convergence is not restricted to North America. In 2011, The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) sponsored the first in a series of international conferences devoted to the issue of LAM convergence. 4 Organized under the theme User Empowerment through Digital Technologies the International Conference on the Convergence of Libraries, Archives and Museums (ICLAM) brought together practitioners from the memory institutions to consider LAM convergence. Topics ranged from a gap analysis of the maturity of digitization programs of libraries, archives and museums in India, to the emergence of technologically empowered users. Robert VanderBerg examines the impact of the momentum toward LAM convergence on the professional identities of stakeholders and the collections under their care. He reviews the value of various convergence projects from the perspective of an archivist, and suggests that while some institutional efforts do result in convergence, archivists must consider their role and be wary of the potential subjugation of archival processes and practices in relation to historical records. 5 The following case study shows the potential for a collaborative project to bring archival expertise to bear on a collection that was otherwise being neglected as a result of the lack of such professional expertise in house. The discussion also contextualizes such a collaboration, in this instance between a private art museum and a public university library and archives, within the conversation on LAM convergence. The Speed Art Museum, Kentucky s oldest and largest art museum, had for decades maintained the in-house Speed Library to support curatorial efforts of the institution. As the administrators of the museum developed plans for an expansion of their current building, they recognized an opportunity to collaborate with their neighboring institution, the University of Louisville and received grant funding to complete the The Speed Library streamlining project. By following the momentum of a common interest and working across institutional and departmental lines, the Speed, University of Louisville Archives and University of Louisville Art Library achieved collaboration that positively impacted all three institutions and the people who use their collections. Departments retained their professional identities and collections and users were served and technology facilitated collaboration to an extent, though human relationships proved to be just as important when bringing the collections to a wider public. To understand the outcome, one must first look to the past. History The historic relationship between U of L and the Speed predates the opening of the museum building in 1926. In his unpublished history of the Speed, Louisville historian Samuel Thomas writes that the relationship between U of L and the Speed was

186 a case study of library, archives, and museum collaboration O forged as early as 1907 when James B. Speed joined eleven other prominent citizens in providing funding for a plan of U of L s Board of Trustees to enlarge the work of the University of Louisville, by creating an the College of Liberal Arts and expanding and enhancing the medical school. 6 Following James B. Speed s death in 1912, his widow, Hattie Bishop Speed wanted to memorialize her husband who appreciated and collected fine art. Her vision became reality when in 1920, the Board of Trustees of U of L determined that they would expand the campus on the site of the recently vacant Industrial School of Reform; the chancellor prevailed upon Mrs. Speed to provide a signature building for the campus. The J. B. Speed Memorial Museum was built on the U of L campus and housed a fine art collection that would support art education and would eventually be open to the public. In 1927, the Louisville Times described the museum as a gift to the University of Louisville, but when Mrs. Speed incorporated the museum in 1933, she clearly delineated her wishes that the two institutions remain separate despite their physical proximity and the relationships between boards of governors of both institutions. Her primary reason was to protect the museum s ownership of the art collection. 7 Over the years, the university and the museum grew, both physically and demographically. The Speed added wings in 1954, 1973, and 1984 and had six directors while the university continues to build dormitories, sports facilities, and halls. The relationship between the two institutions has also evolved; the Speed developed a more distinct institutional identity compared to its original close connection to U of L. Impetus for Project and Specifics of Collaboration In late 2007, Charles Venable assumed the directorship of the Speed Musuem. Several months after his arrival, Mary Jane Benedict, the librarian at the Speed for twenty-seven years, retired. At that point, Venable saw an opportunity to evaluate the services provided by the Speed library in conjunction with the development of a master plan for an expansion of the Speed s facilities. 8 Historically, the Speed librarian had provided research support to curatorial staff and docents, answered telephone reference queries from the general public, and maintained the library collection which included 19,000 volumes of standard art reference materials, exhibition catalogs, catalogues raisonees, monographs, and current and bound periodicals. 9 In addition to those resources, the librarian had maintained artists files, dealer catalogs (which had been indexed by artist), and auction catalogs. In the wake of Benedict s retirement, Venable asked a former colleague from the Cleveland Museum of Art, Elizabeth Lantz, to come to Louisville and survey the collection in order to recommend areas in which efficiencies could be found through more formal collaboration with U of L libraries. Lantz found a number of areas where the collections of the two institutions did not overlap. The university held neither auction nor dealer catalogs; its collec-

O heather fox 187 tion was less robust in terms of decorative arts than the museum s collection. Additionally, an analog, onsite card catalog provided the only access to the Speed library s holdings and the circulation system relied on paper records. 10 Lantz noted in her report that collaboration with U of L would facilitate both a technological upgrade to the access and circulation systems and also winnow down the Speed s library collection. So, the planned museum expansion could proceed without additional costs being incurred for the future version of the Speed library. 11 In 2008, Venable approached Hannelore Rader, then Dean of the U of L Libraries, about collaboration on a project to streamline the Speed Library. He proposed a scenario in which the Speed would donate library materials to U of L in return for U of L Technical Services cataloging resources for both libraries. Together, Venable and Rader presented Lantz s report to Gail Gilbert, Director of the U of L Art Library. She reviewed the report, discussed it with Tyler Goldberg, head of Technical Services, and Mark Paul, then Assistant Director, Office of Libraries Technology, and offered a proposal in response. The Speed and University of Louisville developed a memorandum of agreement (MOA) delineating the aspects of collaboration that Gilbert determined would benefit the U of L Art Library primary users (faculty and students in U of L s BFA and MFA programs as well as art history Master s, Doctoral, and Curatorial Studies Programs). 12 Armed with the agreement, the Speed applied for and received an IMLS Museums for America grant. Entitled Speed Art Museum Library Streamlining Project, the successful narrative focused on potential efficiencies derived from the collaborations between the two institutions, and the increased public access to the Speed Library collection that would result from the process. Among other things, the Speed would retain a core collection of books to support the curators work; the remaining titles would be donated to the U of L Art Library. In exchange, the U of L Technical Services department would catalog books retained by the Speed Library and add a location code directing the user to the Speed Art Museum Reference Center book stacks. The records would then be uploaded to the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC), an arrangement that reflected OCLC s original mission. 13 In 2010, with the IMLS funding, the Speed hired a project librarian, Allison Gillette, to manage the streamlining project. Books remaining in the Speed collection as well as books transferred to U of L needed to be converted from the Dewey Decimal classification system to the Library of Congress classification system to conform to U of L catalog standards. As the project moved forward, Gilbert, who had initially estimated that she would accept a transfer of eight thousand five hundred books weeded from the Speed Collection to the U of L Art Library, completed a thorough assessment of the titles and removed most from her list. The grant timeline had necessitated a blind estimate, and upon closer inspection Gilbert found the titles to be older, more duplicative and less germane than originally expected. The true total of books to be transferred would be closer to two thousand. 14

188 a case study of library, archives, and museum collaboration O Gillette saw an opportunity. The reduction in books transferred from the Speed to the U of L Art Library freed up a substantial portion of the initial budget, which had been based on a per-book cataloging rate. Having worked in an archival setting prior to her work at the Speed, Gillette was attuned to the value of preserving the institutional records of the 82-year-old museum. She advocated for requesting an extension and revising the budget with a view to hire a Project Archivist to work on the records and donate them to the University of Louisville Archives. After some negotiation about whether or not the addition of the archive portion of the project met the Museums for America funding criteria, IMLS granted an extension to the timeline. In fact, they expressed enthusiasm about this aspect of the project as it fulfilled one of their mandates to increase access to collections. The Speed re-adjusted its budget request to include salary for the Project Archivist. IMLS also disallowed purchasing archival supplies, but Gillette proposed raising money through the sale of book shelves, card catalogs, and other unnecessary furniture to cover a significant portion of the archival expenses. As mentioned above, the Speed s then Director, Charles Venable, had approached the then Dean of the U of L Libraries, Hannelore Rader, and also the Director of the University Archives, Carrie Daniels, about transferring the Speed s records to the U of L Archives, but there had not been any funding available from either institution. The readjusted IMLS budget a funded a six-month Project Archivist to manage the archival component of the project. In the spring of 2010, the Speed hired Heather Fox as Project Archivist. In the first two weeks, Fox inventoried the records in the director s storage space under the Speed s parking garage, familiarized herself with the history of the Speed Art Museum, and facilitated the negotiation of the deed of gift of the records to the University of Louisville Archives and Records Center (UARC). She organized the transfer of 118 boxes of records over two days to UARC and subsequently spent time updating the inventory with location information. She created a donor file and discussed the processing plan with the supervising archivist, Kathie Johnson. Although the original transfer comprised 118 boxes, subsequent transfers increased the collection to 130 linear feet. As with any modern collection, materials included paper, 16mm film, photographs and slides in a variety of formats, electronic records, 1 U-Matic tape, DVDs, architectural records, scrapbooks, sketchbooks, books, and other printed material. Several interesting sub-collections required special attention as processing continued. Early in the grant period, chief curator Ruth Cloudman reported that Mrs. Ruth French wished to donate materials her husband had collected while researching a biography of museum founder Hattie B. Speed. The Frenches established the Louisville Academy of Music in the early 1950s and rented a portion of Mrs. Speed s home as their headquarters and residence for nearly twenty years. Fox met with Mrs. French and brought three boxes of materials back to UARC. Fox foldered and arranged the material, wrote a finding aid and transferred a box

O heather fox 189 of books to the University of Louisville Music Library. The French collection contained, among other things, a diary kept by Mrs. Speed during the time she studied music in Germany in the late nineteenth century and a small collection of cabinet cards and cartes-de-visite of Mrs. Speed and her family. After processing the French materials, the archivist processed a collection of materials associated with a major donor to the Speed museum, Frederick Weygold (1870 1941). An artist and ethnographer, Weygold lived on an Oglala Sioux reservation for a period of time in 1909 where he learned the Sioux language, gathered artifacts and stories, and shot photographs. Along with his donation of artifacts, the Speed received field notes, a small photo album, correspondence and printed materials he had collected. These materials had been stored haphazardly; Fox arranged and re-housed them and created a finding aid and returned the processed collection to the museum so that they could be used in preparation of a future exhibit. In mid-may, Richard Diehlmann, Manager of Building Services and longtime employee of the Speed, brought the archives a collection of thirty-one 16 mm films the Speed had acquired in 1996 from the step grand-daughter of the founder, and major donor to the museum, Mrs. Alice Speed Stoll. Diehlmann reported that sometime in the late 1990s a conservator had visited the Speed and suggested that the films be preserved but no action was taken at that time. The films had been kept, presumably, since 1996 in the Speed storage under their parking garage. Upon receipt of the collection, the archivist completed a basic inventory of the Stoll films and removed them from the original box where they were improperly stored. Films were numbered (1 31) and inspected for vinegar syndrome and shrinkage. The archivist called on a local film archivist to consult with her about the films condition. In addition to the consultation, the film archivist projected three films and Speed archivist did a quick and dirty digitization, shooting footage from screen with a digital point and shoot video camera. The two edited footage down to several minutes which they burned to DVDs to be used as a fundraising tool for future preservation of the collection. Another sub-collection that required special attention was a group of architectural plans housed in less than optimal storage in the building services area in the basement of the museum. The Librarian and Archivist moved 158 rolls of plans stacked above flat files to the Speed library and organized a meeting with an archivist from the Filson Historical Society who specialized in architectural records, and a library intern tasked with cataloging, to determine essential metadata requirements for cataloging and practical advice regarding storage of rolls. Based on the limited timeframe, the group decided to forgo flattening the plans and instead followed the practice at Filson Historical Society of maintaining the rolls intact, labeling them using a piece of acid-free paper tied with a piece of string and then storing them in large acid-free artifact boxes. In addition to the 158 rolls, the intern transferred and cataloged 120 original plans for the original Speed building that had been stored in the flat files in building services. The building services supervisor

190 a case study of library, archives, and museum collaboration O confirmed that originals were not needed on-site and that they were, in fact, being damaged and should be moved. The Archivist worked with the Speed s project librarian and the U of L archivists and records manager to develop guidelines for staff to use to help them with an institution-wide storage space clean out. Information about what types of records should be retained for their permanent value, the percentage of records that actually have permanent value and what records clearly have no permanent value was included. In addition, the Archivist and librarian met three times with the museum staff to discuss the guidelines. The Speed administration initially had requested that the Project Archivist develop records retention schedules for the various museum departments, but exigencies of time and money made this impossible. Conclusion Several lessons were learned during this process. Interpersonal relationships proved important not only in organizing and conducting this collaborative project, but also to bringing collections to light. Involving key personnel, department heads and directors proved useful in crafting efficient workflows for cataloging library materials, updating databases and library hardware, and also in gaining hands-on assistance with processing the archives. Although the curators at the Speed and the Art Librarian at U of L were previously well-acquainted, communication with other staff at U of L opened doors of communication between different departments. It is of the utmost importance to involve these key players in most aspects of the project for continued problem solving but also to take advantage of professional specialties as the project evolves. In this instance, a librarian with archival experience recognized and advocated for an opportunity to extend the goals of the grant-funded project that initially focused solely on library materials. Furthermore, a number of archival collections were identified and preserved thanks to personal connections, like the nineteenth-century photographs and diary of the Speed s founder, or the archival films that the head of maintenance knew were stored somewhere under the parking garage. The second lesson is not to be afraid to re-adjust grant requests. The grant officers were happy to work with the Speed to redefine project goals and were excited to extend the reach of the grant money to both preserve and expose two previously hidden collections. The Speed Library is now accessible through the U of L online catalog and the Speed Museum Archives are findable through a collection-level catalog record and a soon to be finished online finding aid. In the discussion of LAM convergence some authors offer excitement about efficiencies brought about by collaboration through technology, some warn that professional distinctions and their associated methods of collection preservation and access are either incompatible or will be lost in the process. Library, archive,

O heather fox 191 and museum professionals have different goals and agendas, different practices and processes. However, this case study shows that collections and users can be served through collaboration even if the goal is not total convergence. Thanks to the initial library streamlining project, technological expertise of the U of L technical services department was brought to bear on transforming an all analog access and circulation system into electronic records in an automated catalog. The Speed library now serves curators, U of L faculty, and students. The U of L Art Library collection was enhanced through the donation of 2000 titles and a regular arrangement for the deposit of expensive gift catalogs from the Speed to the U of L Art Library increases their collection without increasing their costs. The institutional records of the Speed Museum are accessible to researchers worldwide through the U of L library catalog and also accessible to museum administrators for use in promotional and curatorial projects. The LAM convergence conversation will and should continue, but this case study demonstrates that one must not lose sight of the importance of human connections when pursuing the power of technological ones. Acknowledgments I would like to thank Allison Gillette, Speed Project Librarian, for her thoughts and contributions to this article. Also, thanks go to Delinda Buie, Carrie Daniels, Gail Gilbert, and Adam Robinson for their comments. Notes 1. Libraries, Archives & Museums-Three Ring Circus, One Big Show? RLG Members Forum. St. Paul Minnesota (July 12, 2005) and New York (July 14, 2005). Most presentations available via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine at http://web.archive.org/web/20050922172934/http:// www.rlg.org/en/page.php?page_id=20521&printable=1 (15 October 2013). 2. Diane Zorich, Gunter Waibel, and Ricky Erway, Beyond the Silos of the LAMs: Collaboration Among Libraries, Archives and Museums, Report produced by OCLC Research. Published online at: http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/publications/library/2008/2008-05. pdf?urlm=162914 (15 October 2013). 3. Gunter Waibel, Collaboration Contexts: Framing Local, Group and Global Solutions, Report produced by OCLC Research. Published online at: http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/ publications/library/2010/2010-09.pdf (15 October 2013) 4. Stephen Parker, Convergence of libraries, archives and museums, IFLA Journal, October 2011, 37: 187 188, doi:10.1177/0340035211419319 (15 October 2013). 5. Robert VanderBerg, Converging Libraries, Archives and Museums: Overcoming Distinctions, But for What Gain?, Archives and Manuscripts, November 2012, 40:3, 136 146, doi: 10.1080/01576895.2012.735826 6. Sam Thomas, The J. B. Speed Art Museum: A Retrospective of Seven Decades, Unpublished manuscript, Speed Museum Collection, University of Louisville Archives and Special Collections.

192 a case study of library, archives, and museum collaboration O 7. Ibid. 8. Interview conducted by Heather Fox with Kim Spence, May 5, 2013. 9. Elizabeth Lantz, Proposed Options for the Speed Art Museum Library, Unpublished report, April 8, 2008. 10. Ibid. 11. Ibid. 12. Interview conducted by Heather Fox with Gail Gilbert, April 25, 2013. 13. See: http://www.oclc.org/about/cooperation.en.html. On the about page, the OCLC website describes the impetus for founding the group in 1967: They began with the idea of combining computer technology with library cooperation to reduce costs and improve services through shared, online cataloging. 14. Gilbert interview.