
- “Not all desires lead to freedom, but freedom is the experience of a desire being acknowledged, chosen and pursued. Desire never concerns the mere possession of something but the changing of something. Desire is a wanting. A wanting now. Freedom does not constitute the fulfilment of that wanting, but the acknowledgement of its supremacy.”
- John Berger. “Wanting Now” Hold Everything Dear: Dispatches on Survival and Resistance. New York: Pantheon Books, 2007.
- We live on images, we live in images, we are images
- If this statement has always been true simply thanks to the sense of sight, nowadays, due to the high-tech society in which we live, the proliferation of screens and automated creation, we are perhaps being invaded and even taken hostage by images. Visual communication is powerfully taking over, at the expense of other forms, such as oral communication. One glance is often enough to capture an image’s content. Fast, effective, ephemeral. Often too fast for the image to be truly observed, scrutinized and understood in its layers of meaning; images are rendered disposable, we become accustomed to their disposability, and their value is reduced to the mere act of consuming.
- Faced with this panorama, we turn to art and to images that have been looked at for decades and centuries; images that were created with the intention of conveying meaning, knowledge and beauty at the same time (docere et delectare). Passed down through history, charged with memory and emotions, today, these pieces of art are a priceless heritage, and a resource to be valued; a resource that we should call upon. They stimulate our analytical and critical capacities, our imagination and sense of fantasy. They tell us about themselves, about their era and culture. They confront us with other ways of seeing, living and believing. At the same time, they draw us into a dialogue between the now and then, helping us to interpret the world we live in.
- The purpose of Open Art Images is thus to create a shared space, dedicated to these images and common heritage. Easily accessible to all, the platform showcases images that are of a sufficiently high-quality so as to be effectively observed, explored, and payed attention to. Opening the observer's eyes to images and images to the eye.
- Open Art Images also aims to develop a research platform dedicated to the image as such and to different ways of seeing. The idea is for reflections to be co-constructed, while free to take any possible and potential form of expression and drawing on different areas of knowledge. The image will be examined from the perspective of various disciplines and points of view, which will enable the researcher to discover new ways of observing, looking at and seeing images, and to analyze and integrate them into our history, our way of living and thinking.
Our first source of inspiration
- “Seeing comes before words. The child looks and recognizes before it can speak.
- […]
- Yes this seeing which comes before words, and can never be quite covered by them, is not a question of mechanically reacting to stimuli. […] We only see what we look at. To look is an act of choice. As a result of this act, what we see is brought within our reach - though not necessarily within arm’s reach. To touch something in to situate oneself in relation to it. (Close your eyes, move round the room and notice how the faculty of touch is like static, limited form of sight.) We never look at just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves. Our vision is continually active, continually moving, continually holding things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to us as we are.”
- John Berger. Ways of Seeing. London: Penguin, 1972. (p. 7-9).
- Video of the first episode of the BBC series Ways of Seeing with John Berger - link
The Team
Viviana Paga Founder, concept and designDavide Strudthoff Project manager, business strategyAnna Pirri Valentini Legal advisorOleksandr Moccogni Marketing managerPaola d'Andrea Blog editorNicola Politi Data scientistDavide Colombi Data scientistEmanuele Strudthoff Back end developer
Help us build the future!
- The project is totally self-produced.
- 100% of your donation will directly fund project costs like hosting expenses, technical developments and all the improvements needed to ensure the best possible experience for our visitors.
- Thank you for your help in making art and knowledge more accessible to everyone! donate to the project
What is OAI ?
- OAI is a
search and visualization engine for high-resolution images of artworks - from all around the world and from every period in history - that belong to the public domain or to a type of Creative Commons license which allows their reuse. All images come with detailed information , relevant to the understanding of their historical and cultural context and which informs the user about their current location, source and license.
Mission
- OAI aims to contribute to the
democratization of knowledge and, in particular,to make art accessible to anyone and anywhere in the world . - OAI promotes not only
the discovery of artworks , but alsothe editing of the details relating to those artworks andthe growth of an open-shared database accessible to every user .
Ethics
- OAI
respects the privacy of its users by adopting completely anonymous tracking technologies.
Which technology is behind OAI?
- OAI uses the best standard technology for frontend processing and for dynamic visualization of content.
- OAI aims to be
ecological , it reuses and puts back into circulation resources and data already on the web. In fact, OAI searches and retrieves data from the web, instead of creating another database or duplicating data and resources. - OAI uses
linked open data retrieved from the Wikimedia Commons database and, in particular, from its visual art fund.
GLAMs project
- The
Wikimedia Commons database acts as aggregator on the web, gathering other visual arts databases developed by entities and partner GLAMs of all sizes (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums), by digital communities focused on images and by single users. Moreover, the Wikimedia Commons database isopen, shared and collective , created and improved continuously by the users themselves. - We’d like to thank all the GLAMs involved in open and shared cultures: OAI and many other projects would not be possible without their efforts!
To learn more on that subject, we suggest the excellent: Villaespesa, Elena and Navarrete, Trilce. "Museum Collections on Wikipedia: Opening Up to Open Data Initiatives." MW19: MW 2019. Published January 14, 2019. Consulted March 12, 2019.