Thursday, 11 March, 2010
    | home | project | research | publication |
Visualisation in Archaeology: Research: Online Research Showcase

Online Research Showcase
Centred on the visualisation of data in both archaeology and the wider fields of the social sciences, arts, and science and technology studies. Like the bibliography, these summaries aim to link practitioners across disciplines, highlight innovative visual projects, and offer a platform for future planning and discussion of best practices around archaeological visual method and theory.
View research summary thumbnails instead of list.
  Archaeography Photoblogging Collective
  Alfredo Gonzalez-Ruibal, Sam Schillace, Michael Shanks, Timothy Webmoor, Christopher Witmore
Metamedia Lab, Stanford University
  Archaeology and Community Museology: Ancient Egyptian Daily Life Scenes in Museums
  Gemma Tully
University of Southampton
  art+archaeology
  Helen Wickstead, MIfA
Kingston University, London
  Choreographic Morphologies: Interdisciplinary Crossovers in the Use of Digital Visualisation Methods in Dance and Archaeology
  Helen Bailey, Stuart Dunn, James Hewison, Martin Turner
King’s College London
University of Bedfordshire
University of Manchester
  Fractured Media: Challenging the Dimensions of Archaeology’s Typical Visual Modes of Engagement
  Sara Perry
University of Southampton
  Framing Machu Picchu: Science, Photography and the Making of Patrimony
  Amy Cox
University of Florida
  Framing the Archaeological Si[gh]te: Ruins, Archaeologists and Photographic Composition
  Farès Moussa
University of Edinburgh
École normale supérieure, Paris
  High Mountain Archaeology - Visualising the Silvretta
  Thomas Reitmaier, Marcel Cornelissen
University of Zürich, Switzerland
  Imag(in)ing the Other at Dura-Europos
  Jennifer Baird
Birkbeck College, University of London
  Institutionalising Images: Early Visualisation Networks in Aegean Archaeology
  Deborah Harlan
University of Sheffield
  Interactive Panoramas and 3D Modelling Based on Panoramas
  Karol Kwiatek, Martin Woolner, Simon Standing, Jes Martens
University of Plymouth, Institute of Creative and Cultural Industries
University of Oslo, Norway, Museum of Cultural History
  Mata Hari's Glass Eye and Other Tales…
  Martyn Barber
English Heritage, Aerial Survey & Investigation
  OKAPI Island in Second Life
  Ruth Tringham, Noah Wittman, Colleen Morgan
University of California, Berkeley
  Pervasive Gaming, Education, and Cultural Heritage: Emplaced Interpretive Games at the Presidio of San Francisco
  Ruth Tringham, Colleen Morgan
University of California, Berkeley
The Presidio Archaeology Lab
  Pop Arch: Archaeological Appropriations of Contemporary Art
  Vasko Démou
University of Southampton
  Preserving the Forgotten. William Henry Fox Talbot, Photography and the Antique.
  Mirjam Brusius
University of Cambridge
British Library, Department of Manuscripts
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
  Reflexive Representations: The Partibility of Archaeology
  Andrew Cochrane, Ian Russell
Cardiff University
University College Dublin
  Representing Prehistory: The Biographies of the Robenhausen Lake Dwelling Collections at the Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (2008-2009)
  Katherine Cooper
University of Cambridge
  SahulTime: Rethinking Archaeological Representation in the Digital Age
  Matthew Coller
Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
  Scandalous Artefacts
  Alessandro Zambelli
Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London
  ShipShape: Solid Modelling and Visualisation of the Newport Ship from the 3D Digital Record
  Nigel Nayling
University of Wales Lampeter
  Strategies of Visualisation in German Archaeology, 19th-20th C
  Stefanie Klamm
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
Humboldt University, Berlin
  The Archaeological Eye: Visualisation and the Disciplinary Foundations of British Archaeology
  Sara Perry
University of Southampton
  The Creation of a Visual History of the Ouendat Huron Nation; Nineteenth-Century Archaeological Imaging of Huronia
  Catherine Sutton
York University, Toronto, Canada
  The Gateway to Sarup
  Niels H. Andersen, Maria Isenbecker, Camilla Bjarnø, Jan Solheim
Moesgård Museum, DenmarkSamsøgades Skole, Denmark
Supported by the Danish Ministry of Culture and the Danish Ministry of Education
  The Past in your Pocket: Mobile Media & Interactive Interpretation
  Jennie Anderson
Swindon College, Wiltshire, UK
  The Remediated Places Project
  Ruth Tringham, Michael Ashley, Steve Mills, Eric Blind, Jason Quinlan, Colleen Morgan
University of California, Berkeley
  Visual Narratives in Waterton Lakes National Park
  Trudi Lynn Smith
University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada
Related Links
 
VIA Academic Resource Call for Contributions poster
Call for Contributions to the Visualisation in Archaeology Academic Resource.
A critical element to VIA’s vision of constructing a critical intellectual framework for visualisation in archaeology, the Academic Resource has been established as a one-stop, web-based forum for the circulation of research details and bibliographic information on vision and visuality-related studies. The Resource is intended as a community-building tool whose components work together to foster conceptual reflection within archaeology, as well as to create a network of dialogue and informationsharing across disciplines.

Download, print and display this poster.
Download (4,712kb)
Flash Paper 2009 VIA Workshop
Flash Paper 2008 VIA Workshop
Flash Paper Strategic Report
Flash Paper Case Studies
Flash Paper Online Searchable Bibliography
Flash Paper VIA International Conference
VIA News

NEW - 2009 VIA Workshop Report
Visualisation in Context: An Interplay of Practice and Theory - now online

VIA Events
Third VIA Workshop
21-22 October 2010
University of Southampton
Details forthcoming
Quick Links
Project Team
Online Searchable Bibliography
Print this page | site map | links | copyright statement | privacy policy | terms & conditions | contact us |