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2024 Cultural Heritage Roundtable

 

10.23.24 | New York City, NY | 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM EDT

 

 

Explore the Past, Present, & Future of Digitization

Join us October 23rd at our 2024 Cultural Heritage Roundtable as we bring together esteemed presenters & experts to share the latest in Cultural Heritage digitization news, developments, standards, technology, and techniques, along with a full day of networking with CH peers.

Attend in person in NYC, or online through our virtual live stream, while there are still spots available!

Our venue will be at 787 Seventh.   
Detailed schedule of presentations will be announced soon, so stay tuned!

2024 Speaker Lineup

KEYNOTE SPEAKER
THOMAS RIEGER

Chief, Collections Digitization Division

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Bio

Thomas Rieger is the Chief of the Collections Digitization Division of the Library of Congress, Head of the Federal Agencies Digital Guidelines Initiative Still Image Working Group, and a member of the International Organization for Standards (ISO).  Tom is a 1974 graduate of the Rochester Institute of Technology.  Tom has a 50 year career in analog and digital imaging spanning commercial, non-profit and government..

 

 

Santiago Lyon
Head of Advocacy and Education for the Adobe-led Content Authenticity Initiative 


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Santiago Lyon is the Head of Advocacy and Education for the Adobe-led Content Authenticity Initiative, working to combat misinformation through digital content provenance. 

He has 40 years of experience in photography as an award-winning photojournalist, photo editor, media executive and educator. 

As a photographer for Reuters and the Associated Press for 20 years he won multiple photojournalism awards for his work between 1989-1999 where he photographed 9 wars on 4 continents.

In 2003/2004 he was a Nieman Fellow in journalism at Harvard University before being named VP/Director of Photography at the Associated Press, a position he held until 2016. 

Under his direction the AP won three Pulitzer Prizes for photography as well as multiple other major photojournalism awards around the world. 

In 2012 he was a Sulzberger Fellow at Columbia University and was Chair of the Jury for the 2013 World Press Photo contest. 

Lyon serves on the board of directors of the Eddie Adams Workshop and the advisory board of the VII Foundation. 

He also teaches regularly at the International Center of Photography in New York.

Alice Plutino
University of Amsterdam’s Faculty of Media Studies


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Bios

Alice Plutino

Dr. Alice Plutino earned her Ph.D. in Computer Science from Università degli Studi di Milano in 2021. She currently holds a MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Amsterdam’s Faculty of Media Studies, where she leads the DREAM-Film project (Democratising Research and Restoration of Audiovisual Media and Film). Her research encompasses Color Science, Colorimetry, Image Enhancement, Image Digitization, and Archiving, with a particular focus on Cultural Heritage applications. She is the author of the acclaimed book “Tecniche di Restauro Cinematografico” and has published numerous papers in both national and international journals and conferences. She serves as an Adjunct Professor at both Università degli Studi di Milano and the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, where she teaches digital film restoration and digital preservation. In addition to her academic and research roles, she is vice president of the Italian Color Group (Gruppo del Colore), deputy editor of the Color Culture and Science Journal (CCSJ), vice-coordinator of Division 1, and coordinator of Division 8 of NC CIE Italy.

Visit her personal website: https://aliplu.github.io/

Christina Deane & Stacey Evans
University of Virginia Library


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Christina Deane

Christina Deane has worked in Special Collections and in digital production for nearly 25 years, with a 7-year stint in information technology in between the two, for a total of 32 years at the University of Virginia Library.  Her education is in history, and she has a master’s degrees in both history and library science.  She currently manages a team of 4 full-time staff members and around a dozen student employees.  They digitize both rare and unique materials in the Library’s Special Collection holdings as well as public domain materials from the circulating collections.  They contribute content to Hathi Trust, Digital Public Library of America, and Virginia Chronicle.

Stacey Evans

Stacey Evans is an Imaging Specialist and Project Coordinator at the University of Virginia Library. Her work involves photographing rare and unique materials, training, and assisting a student workforce. Her career in cultural heritage imaging began as the world moved to remote work due to the pandemic. Taking advantage of online resources, she’s connected with colleagues across the CHI community. She was the co-chair of the IS&T online topical meeting series digiTIPS 2024 with Hana Beckerle from the Library of Congress. 

Stacey earned a BFA in photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design. She was a newspaper lab technician at the August Chronicle Newspaper, an imaging specialist for the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety, and the first assistant to architectural photographer Philip Beaurline. In 2000, she started her own business, Stacey Evans Photography, focusing on art, education, and photography service. 

Charles Walbridge
Lead Collections Photographer of Minneapolis Institute of Art


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Charles Walbridge is Lead Collections Photographer at Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia).

With more than 20 years experience documenting varied collections of fine art objects under exacting standards, Charles has been at the leading edge of digital capture, color management and studio workflow processes for cultural heritage. Since 2013, he has played a key role in developing 3D modeling techniques for Mia’s Visual Resources studio, forming cross-discipline collaborations with developers, animators, and maker spaces. He has presented at museum conferences on topics ranging from DAM (digital asset management) to LED lighting. An avid biker, Charles is a leading voice on the museum’s Green Team, a group driving Mia’s commitment toward sustainability.

Rachel Senese Myers & Lisa Vallen
Georgia State University


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Rachel Senese Myers

Rachel Senese Myers is the Digital Projects Coordinator at Georgia State University (GSU) in Atlanta, Georgia and manages the Digital Projects Team within the Library.  Digital Projects is responsible for the digitization of archival and special collections materials, processing of AV assets, metadata creation, and management of GSU’s digital collections platform.  She is also a co-manager for the University Library’s digital preservation platform where she oversees the management and preservation of the digitized collections.  Prior to working at Georgia State University, she was the Cleveland Digital Public Library Coordinator at Cleveland Public Library in Ohio.  She also currently serves as the Co-Coordinator for the Digital Library Federation (DLF)’s Cost Assessment Interest Group.   She received her BA in Anthropology, Classical Humanities, and Italian Studies and her MLIS from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Lisa Vallen

Lisa Vallen is the Southern Labor Archivists and the Instruction Coordinator at Georgia State University Special Collections & Archives.  As the Southern Labor Archivist, Vallen is Responsible for the stewardship and preservation of over 12,000 linear feet of archival material, donor relations, selecting and acquiring collections, managing oral history projects, and securing external funding. Ms. Vallen has nine years of experience in libraries and archives.  She has her Master of Science in Library and Information Sciences from the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign.  Throughout her career Ms. Vallen has raised over $800,000 in grant funds from multiple funders.

Peter Siegel
Digital Transitions


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Peter Siegel is the Director and founder of DT Heritage. Dedicated to the cultural heritage community, he has developed a series of reprographic and book capture benches and a reprographic camera system as well as film scanning solutions and accessories that are purpose-built to meet the specialized needs of cultural institutions. This was a natural fit, as he has served the not-for-profit community for over 25 years.

Before coming to Digital Transitions over 10 years ago, Peter was the Head of Digital Imaging and Photography for Harvard Art Museums and Fine Arts Library. Here he planned and implemented the modernization of the entire imaging lab and photography services department by designing and integrating image capture technologies for image creation, management, and permanence. Peter was also the Director of Digital Imaging at the American Museum of Natural History. Peter was responsible for all aspects of the Digital Imaging program and created an image database containing over 270,000 high-resolution images from collections, catalog ledgers, and archives. He also incorporated and designed digital imaging technologies to integrate other museum collections.

Peter’s history working in the cultural heritage community is why DT Heritage has become the country’s leading provider of high-end digitization solutions. His true understanding of the importance of reliable equipment with a dependable technical support team standing behind their products is why we stand out and have partnered with Phase One, the worldwide leader in digital imaging technology.

 

 

Jeff Evans
Princeton University Art Museum 


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Jeff Evans is the Manager of Visual Resources and Photographer at the Princeton University Art Museum. 
Since joining in 2004 to support an IMLS-funded mass digitization project, Jeff has been instrumental in transitioning the studio from film to digital imaging. The studio is currently leading efforts to create new images of the collection for the Museum’s new building, set to open in Fall 2025, which will feature a state-of-the-art studio. 
The studio also produces advanced imaging products such as photogrammetry, 2 ½ D, and multi-spectral imaging for conservation purposes. With a dedicated team of two, the studio supports ten curatorial departments, a busy conservation department, and various education teams. 
Outside of his work at the Museum, Jeff maintains an active art studio practice in Bordentown, NJ. 

Doug Peterson
Digital Transitions


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Doug Peterson is Co-Owner and Head of R+D and Product Management at Digital Transitions. He holds a BS in Commercial Photography from Ohio University. He is the lead author of a series of technical guidelines and recommendations for cultural heritage digitization, including the Phase One Color Reproduction Guide, Imaging for the Future: Digitization Program Planning, and the DT Digitization Guides for Reflective and Transmissive Workflows. He oversees the DT Digitization Certification training series, and has presented multiple Short Courses at the IS&T Archiving imaging conference. He is a member of the International Standards Organization where he sits on Technical Committee 42 which works on digitization standards.

Ottar A.B. Anderson
Intermunicipal archives of Møre og Romsdal (IKAMR) 


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Ottar A.B. Anderson
Particularly interested in the technical part of photography, metadata and new technology developments within cultural heritage imaging. Anderson did get his photography background from the Royal Norwegian Air Force. From his years as a photo lab technician for professional photographers, he achieved hands-on extended understanding of the photographic print- and film development processes.
Successfully running his own commercial photography business since 1999, complemented by his passion in fine art photography, finalized his awakening in the cultural heritage imaging community back in 2013. From then on as Head of Photography at IKAMR. Member of the expert working group ISO/TC 42 JWG 26 – “Imaging system capability qualification for archival recording and approval”.
Project leader in the ongoing project “Method development on digitization of photographic collections” founded by the National Archives of Norway. A national level project carried out in cooperation with Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) adapting the use of new technology and a new proposed framework of technical metadata.

 

 

DT Annual Roundtable Background

Our Cultural Heritage Roundtables began as small, one-off gatherings between Digital Transitions and our valued customers and partners as a formal way to gather the community’s collective experience, share the latest knowledge and solutions, and foster a discussion on how to push our efforts forward.

Since its inception, the event has grown from a single day at our office to two annual conferences—both in-person and online—across the United States. Attendees come from a variety of countries, disciplines, and institutions to see the latest digitization technology, learn best practices from experts, discuss workflow tips, and network with other cultural heritage professionals. Whether you work in galleries, libraries, archives, museums, corporations, media, entertainment, or sports, if you have an interest in preserving culture and history through digitization, this event is for you!

Watch Last Year’s Presentations Here

Why Attend?

Learn from industry-leading institutions and network with Cultural Heritage professionals.

INSPIRING
PROJECTS

GREAT
NETWORKING

NEW
TECHNOLOGY

Have any questions? Contact us at [email protected] and we will happily assist.

Can’t wait for the event? We get it.

Explore our available trainings, free resources, and hours of content.

 

DT Knowledge Resources

We aren’t just a commercial entity, we pride ourselves on leading the Cultural Heritage community with resources to learn effective and viable approaches to preserve our history. This is why we have developed free resources for you to learn about the latest in the industry.

Film Scanning Knowledge Center

Digitizing transmissive materials at the highest possible quality can be an intimidating task, so we built this resource to guide you through it. Whether you’re aiming to meet image quality standards like FADGI or just looking to get the most detail out of your personal collection, you’re in the right place. Dive in for hardware and software solutions, project planning tips, handling considerations, video resources, and much more!

Click here to browse our resource center

Recorded Live Events

Explore our YouTube channel for knowledge resources on medium format photography and digital imaging technology. Discover more about the best digital imaging systems in the world, learn why medium format makes all the difference, all from the industry’s leading experts.

Click here for more

Upcoming Events & Trainings

We have a variety of trainings available to suit your needs for digitization. Whether you are looking to improve your post-processing skills in Capture One, learn invaluable techniques for film scanning, or seeking certification as a digitization operator.

DT Digitization Certification Program

One of our core missions at DT Heritage is to be a knowledge resource for the Cultural Heritage digitization community; helping to foster the spread of information and best practices in an industry that too often relies on individuals figuring out techniques and workflows on their own. As part of that ongoing initiative, earlier this year we launched our DT Digitization Certification Training Program to help educate the Cultural Heritage community on the equipmentsoftwareworkflows, and best practices associated with modern digitization.

Click here to learn more

Celebrating 20 Years of Digitization Excellence - 2003-2023

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