decimate

i had understood the word decimate to mean “to select by lot and kill every tenth person of” until fairly recently, when i’ve heard it used to describe a situation in which everyone has been killed or everything has been destroyed.  when i first heard that “the city had been decimated,” i thought to myself, “well, that’s not so bad. only one tenth of it has been destroyed.” but then it occurred to me that the reporter was actually saying that the whole city had been destroyed.  wow, those are two totally different things, one-tenth and ten-tenths!  so i looked it up in the dictionary, and you know what?  it means both!

1. to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
2. to select by lot and kill every tenth person of.

Posted in the grammar doctor checks in | Comments Off on decimate

jotting my way to work

i have an hour-long commute to and from work each day.  the down time in my car is where i do my best thinking, but there’s something magic about the distance between my car and a piece of paper in my office that makes me forget what i intend to write down.  rather than texting while driving (into a ditch) i found a service called jott.  it’s a phone service that i call, say what’s on my mind, and they turn it into a text message and email it to me at work.  i’ve been pleasantly surprised to check my e-mail at work and see a note to myself that i had already forgotten about!  it’s a free service, which works nicely with my librarian salary.  check it out at http://www.jott.com/.

Posted in monkeys/bananas | Comments Off on jotting my way to work

Mickey Smith’s journal photographs

spine of journal
a photographer is doing a series on the spines of bound journals. her statement on this work: “Volume is an ongoing project documenting bound periodicals and professional journals in public libraries. Most of these publications are being replaced by their online counterparts, and in many cases the printed versions are no longer bound. Several titles photographed in the process of this project have been removed from the stacks due to space and budget constraints. Searching endless rows of these utilitarian texts, I am struck by the physical mass of knowledge and tenuousness of printed works as they fade from public consciousness.”

some of the images are engaging, even though they’re of objects i see every day! my favorite is “blood,” with the white print seeming to pop off of the red background.

http://www.mickeysmithart.com/volume.htm

Posted in art, images, library | 1 Comment

one item counted two different ways

we had a meeting today in my department to talk about how we’ve each been counting cataloging statistics.  the meeting was spurred by the e-book cell on our spreadsheet, which had been curiously empty for a whole year though we’ve been gathering e-books like mad.  where were those statistics going?  we found and fixed the problem, but a nagging question has remained: if statistics are reported by two people in two different ways, how meaningful is the end result?

i asked this question before in an article i wrote a couple years back, about arl’s digitization statistics related to preservation.  while writing the article it became clear to me that universities were interpreting the data categories in different ways, meaning that the data could not be compared across universities.  i hope that since that article has been written people have discussed and defined better which information should be supplied for those data categories, with resulting accurate data.

i mentioned in a recent blog post that gathering and interpreting statistics in a large part of my job.  in libraries we put such an emphasis on counting and evaluation based on those numbers.  why is it then, that as a whole we don’t do a better job of deciding what it is we want to count and how best to report it at the outset?

Posted in library, management | Comments Off on one item counted two different ways

2008 arrives!

warhol
dear readers, i hope you are not feeling green or purple today, like the monkeys in this image. enjoy your own altered photo at the warholizer.

Posted in art, monkeys/bananas | Comments Off on 2008 arrives!

photographs as a serial

Five years ago I heard Joel Meyerowitz speak about his photographic project dealing with the destroyed World Trade Center.  When asked what it was like at the site where all of the pieces of the Center were being sorted and stored he said that the pieces had been “cataloged” into piles of like items, with “everything…in its place,” like a “library of images” (1).  The description of the library as a kind of placeholder for like items drew a striking comparison to my own artwork as well as a coincidence because I am a librarian as well as photographer.  His words prompted me to begin thinking of my artwork as a catalog.

Objects in a library are cataloged according to a science, requiring consistency in sorting things so that people can find them later.  My own work would be put into the library category of serial, “…appearing in parts or intervals” (2).   A serial also implies that it is indefinitely continued.  Serials are the wild card of the library, unpredictable and ever changing, as I have always viewed my own artwork.

My artwork began as and has continued to be a visual discussion of my curiosity with things that seem out of place, aberrations in nature, the perfect “serial.”  Leaves that have unnatural curves, flowers that are missing or have gained an extra petal; these are some of the things that draw my attention.  I gather these kinds of objects and then scan them into the computer via flatbed scanner.

After years of working on this series I find that I have amassed quite a number of pieces.  Continuing to mentally catalog my work, I sorted my images according to type.  This process has been astounding, because it has become clear to me that I tend to choose the same kinds of objects even though my intention was to choose them based on their differences.

The cataloging process is something that all photographers do, whether they choose to use the library terminology or not.  It is the nature of a photographer to gather material, whether analog or digital, and organize it in serial form.  It is our human nature to find patterns and repetition.  Choosing to acknowledge our patterns, to be aware of the collection of images we’re making, may not happen until we’re called to it as I was by Mr. Meyerowitz.

I’ve found this process to be immensely helpful in focusing my attentions on the vocabulary of images that I’ve created.  I do see my artwork as a serial; unpredictable, ever changing, and certainly indefinitely continued.

1. National Public Radio, “Joel Meyerowitz.”  Fresh Air.
2. Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary OnLine, < http://www.m-w.com/dictionary>

Posted in art, library | Comments Off on photographs as a serial