Workshop Details
The Maintenance Culture workshop aims to increase small cultural heritage institutions’ capacity to preserve complex, born-digital, creative works. Complex, born-digital, creative works include digital design, time-based media art, software and net art, and virtual / augmented reality. Small cultural heritage institutions include libraries, archives, museums, historical societies, and other memory organizations who collect digital works. The workshops are intended to increase capacity for more complex, born-digital objects at institutions who are already preserving less complex digital objects such as photographs or documents. After completing the workshop, participants will be able to:
Communicate barriers to preserving complex, born-digital, creative works at their institution
Assess complex, born-digital, creative works to determine whether and how the collecting institution can commit to preserving it
Draft a workflow for what to do if your institution acquires a complex, born-digital object
Plan actionable steps towards collecting more complex, born-digital creative works than the institution is currently able to sustain access to
Participants will be asked to complete a virtual, asynchronous, pre-workshop class to learn about concepts that will be built upon in the workshop. The pre-workshop class will take around 3 hours to complete, depending on your prior knowledge of the concepts. The in-person workshop will focus on discussions, small group work, and independent work to accomplish tasks aimed at changing participants’ institutional preservation practices.
If you’re not sure if this workshop is for you, review the Workshop FAQ for more information on expectations around prior digital preservation knowledge.
Who Should Attend
Workers at collecting institutions including museums, archives, libraries, galleries, and other organizations that collect born-digital creative works like digital design, time-based media art, software and net , virtual/augmented reality and are seeking to better preserve and sustain long-term access to those materials. If most of the statements below describe you, the workshop will probably be a good fit. You...
Work at a cultural heritage institution (library, archive, museum)
Work at an institution that is actively collecting complex, born-digital, creative works, OR, is ready to start collecting those works after gaining more in-house expertise
Are comfortable with basic digital preservation concepts
Have a role in decision-making or implementation of digital preservation practices at your institution
Are interested in participating in a local community of practice for sustaining access to born-digital, creative works
Location Information
Impact Hub Baltimore, 10 E. North Ave, Suite 5, Baltimore, MD 21202
Street Parking (Recommended): There is free street parking on St Paul Street, Charles Street and other side streets in the surrounding blocks, but look out for signs for street sweeping days! Pay by meter street parking is also available on E North Avenue directly outside of the Impact Hub between 10am and 4pm.
A note about the North Avenue/Charles Street Lot (directly adjacent to our space): We are having an ongoing conversation with Franklin Parking, who operates the lot at the corner of North Avenue and Charles Street. The cost to park there is $6, and there is a CASH ONLY pay station on the north side of the cement kiosk. They do tow regularly. If your car is towed from this lot and you did in fact pay, you can have the towing company check the video footage of the camera at the kiosk and they will return your car free of charge. Feel free to ask Impact Hub staff if you need help with this.
Impact Hub’s bathrooms are shared with multiple other organizations, and they are gendered. There is a men’s room and a women’s room available. Impact Hub has signs displayed to encourage anyone to use the restroom most aligned with their gender identity.
Application deadline extended to May 12th.