Connecting the Dots: How Digital Methods Become the Glue that Binds Cultural Heritage to...

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CONNECTING THE DOTSHow Digital Methods Become the Glue that

Binds Cultural Heritage to Contemporary

Society

Robert Stein

Deputy Director

Dallas Museum of Art

Flickr Credit ~fab05

70% OF THE GLOBAL

POPULATION WILL

LIVE

IN ONE BY 2050

CITIES

Source: Guardian Cities, Jan 2014http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2014/jan/27/guardian-cities-site-urban-future-

dwell-human-history-welcome

Photo by Jason Hawkes

Flickr Credit ~Artisticbokeh

Flickr Credit ~X_ray_delta_one

Flickr Credit ~indiamos

Photo by Jason Hawkes

SMART CITIES

HAVE A PROBLEM

INFORMATION IS

PROLIFERATING,

BUT HUMANS ARE

POORLY EQUIPPED

TO DEAL

WITH IT

Flickr Credit ~X_ray_delta_one

Source: Has the Ideas Machine Broken Down, The Economist. Jan, 2013.

Image Credit ~Scobleizer

TECHNOLOGY IS ACCELERATING

THE PACE OF LIVING.

Negotiating the circumstances of everyday life in any true city tends over time to create a

broad-minded, feisty, opinionated personality type we'd have no problem recognizing,

wherever and whenever it appears in human history. City people may well be tolerant of

diversity not out of any personal commitment to a utopian politics, but because that's just

what the daily necessity of living cheek-by-jowl with people who are different imposes

upon you.

And yet it's just this set of characteristics that so many smart-city provisions seem hell-bent

on undermining, or even eradicating. The ability to search the space of the city for the

perfectly congenial set of circumstances, to tune the environment until we never have to

leave the contours of our own comfort: where the making of city-dwellers and citizens is

concerned, that's a bug, not a feature. It erodes the development of savoir faire; it eliminates

the risk, but also everything wonderful, that arises in the confrontation with difference.

Adam Greenfield, The Dark Side of the “Smart City”

Interview by Annalee Newitz on IO9. January 30, 2014

http://io9.com/the-dark-side-of-the-smart-city-1512608758

THE DARK SIDE OF SMART CITIES

Why is this a place I want to live?

Flickr Credit ~choimakko

SO, WHAT MAKES A CITY SMART?

CITIES NEED SMART PEOPLE

CITIES NEED CREATIVE PEOPLEcited by 1500 CEO’s as the single most

crucial factor for future success

IBM, 2010 http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/31670.wss)

Flickr Credit ~choimakko

THE FUTURE OF KNOWLEDGE

The future [of knowledge] is to let ‘the machines’

do the heavy lifting and for us humans to focus on

connecting the dots, discovering context, meaning

and relevance, and to make human sense of it all.

Gerd Leonhard. The Future of Knowledge. Jan 7, 2014https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/creativektn/article-view/-/blogs/the-future-of-knowledge

Flickr Credit ~choimakko

THE FUTURE OF KNOWLEDGE

… right-brain thinking becomes extremely

valuable, once again, as empathy, improvisation

and interdependent thinking become the new

standard. Knowledge, becomes not an asset used

for control or dominance, but for contribution and

co-creation.

Gerd Leonhard. The Future of Knowledge. Jan 7, 2014https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/creativektn/article-view/-/blogs/the-future-of-knowledge

Almost all Nobel laureates in the sciences actively engage

in arts as adults. They are twenty-five times as likely as the

average scientist to sing, dance, or act; seventeen times

as likely to be a visual artist; twelve times more likely to

write poetry and literature; eight times more likely to do

woodworking or some other craft; four times as likely to be

a musician; and twice as likely to be a photographer.

Michele and Robert Root-Bernstein

Psychology Today February, 2009

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/imagine/200902/missing-piece-in-the-

economic-stimulus-hobbling-arts-hobbles-innovation

Flickr Credit ~candylei

Georges Seurat

A Sunday on La Grande Jatte – 1884

Art Institute of Chicago

James Clerk Maxwell (physicist),

Ogden Rood (physicist), and Michele

Chevreul (chemist) significantly

influenced Seurat and the Neo-

Impressionsts

ARTISTS ARE ADAPTING

Armory Show – Chicago, 1913

ARE MUSEUMS ADAPTING?

The work of organizing

museums has not kept pace

with the times. The United

States is far behind the spirit of

its own people…

This can not long continue. The

museum of the past must be

set aside, reconstructed,

transformed from a cemetery of

bric-a-brac into a nursery of

living thoughts.

A NURSERY

OF LIVING

THOUGHTS

Goode, G. Brown. 1891. The

Museums of the Future. Washington,

DC: Government Printing Office.

Flickr Credit ~5tons

The Largest Art Museum in the Region

110 Years Old

Supported by the City of Dallas

NOT a Tourist Destination

The 2010 U.S. census reports that only 14.5% of US

Adults visited museums in the prior 12 months (Census,

2012).

Dallas = 6.5M People - 500k Annual Attendance

ENGAGEMENT?

ENGAGEMENT?

ENGAGEMENT?

GETTING BEYOND

ANECDOTAL EVIDENCE

HOW DO YOU MEASURE

WHAT YOU CAN’T SEE?

Flickr Credit ~liquoredonlife

CAN DATA HELP CREATE

A MUSEUM THAT IS

AGILE AND RESPONSIVE?

FREE ADMISSION

FREE MEMBERSHIP

INTRODUCING

DMAfriends

METRICS WE CARE ABOUT

1. Repeat visits

2. Diverse participation

3. Increased affinity

4. Ability to motivate action

LAUNCH DAY - 1/21/2013

DOES IT WORK?

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

http://dma.org/friends/by-the-numbers

Bobby

What Might a National Engagement

Network Look Like?

What Might a National Engagement

Network Look Like?

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GET THE CODE

http://badgeos.org

http://github.com/DallasMuseumArt/DMA-Friends

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE

PHONE IS A CLOUD IN YOUR

POCKET

WE’VE BEEN FOCUSED ON

STORYTELLING…

HOW ABOUT MOBILE FOR

MEASUREMENT?

PRESENCE

LOCATION

IDENTITY

DURATION

MOBILE DATA FUSION

WITH EXISTING

SENSORS

LOOKING

AND SEEINGFlickr Credit ~rocketjim54

EXPERIMENTS IN

TRACKING GAZE

Utagawa Hirōshige (Japanese, 1797-1858) - Nihonbashi in the Snow

Utagawa Hirōshige (Japanese, 1797-1858) - Nihonbashi in the Snow

Not everything that matters can be

counted and not everything that

can be counted matters

Albert Einstein

THANK YOU!