| 13.45 | Coffee & Tea | 
| 14.00 | Welcome & Introductory remarks by Neil Grindley, Methods Network | 
|  | Presentations | 
| 14.10 | Structuring the indecipherable: Le Corbusier’s diaries (Tim Benton) | 
|  | It seems astonishing that one of the classic problems of research and presentation remains in the stone
age: converting a database that an academic can design and use into something usable online and
presentable on screen. Access (and other database packages) satisfies the former, but it seems that
we have to invest tens of thousands of pounds to turn this into a robust, user friendly and transportable
package for use on the web.
One of my current research topics is to process the personal diaries of Le Corbusier and make them
usable for scholars. I will outline the way I have approached the research and database and ask for
help on the rest! | 
| 14.45 | Questions arising from presentation 1 | 
| 15.00 | Iconology of Anthropomorphic Landscapes in Western Art. A Digital ‘face-lift’ of an old method
(Anna Bentkowska-Kafel) | 
|  | Anthropomorphic landscapes are pictorial representations of nature in human forms. The composition
of such artworks is based on the idea of double-imaging: an artist creates a fantastic landscape and
uses its elements to represent anatomical features, or superimposes human forms onto realistic
landscapes. A considerable number of such images were created in the late 16th and 17th centuries to
illustrate cosmological beliefs. Modern artists might have lost interest in early modern cosmology but
the use of similar compositional devices has persisted. The tools developed by mainstream art history
for classification, analysis and interpretation of pictorial genres are unsatisfactory for the study of
such complex and ambiguous images.
This on-going research uses digital technology to compensate for the shortcomings of traditional
methods and/or seek alternative solutions. First employed in doctorate research in 1994-98 these are
now re-examined. Does this methodology still hold? Computing techniques have advanced dramatically
in the last ten years, but has the use of ICT in art historical studies moved with the same speed? In a
discipline where research success is measured by the number of publications, and where a printed text
and still photography continue as a publication standard, the most obvious benefits of digital
methodologies for art studies, such as the ease of use of images in great numbers and the interactivity
of multimedia, are the very barriers that make publication difficult if not practically impossible. | 
| 15.30 | Questions arising from presentation 2 | 
| 15.45 | Tea & coffee | 
| 15.55 | General discussion (Chair: Tim Benton) | 
|  | Digital tools for art historians: Steps towards the electronic classroom: what do we need to teach effectively using digital images? A
good practice document, better software?
 Robust digital image library systems (standard formats, metadata, copyright, distribution issues,
watermarking); Improvements or alternatives to PowerPoint (zooming and panning images, better techniques
for comparison - layers?- better methods for annotating images); Add-ons to give user friendly methods of demonstrating ‘structure’ and meaning in works of art
(eg perspective systems) or works of architecture (eg quick-time VR interiors or 3D objects with
hotspots, a tool for applying scale to drawings, measuring on the fly and comparing to scale)
• Means by which students and teachers can share the same virtual domain and interact on it. | 
|  | Criteria for assessing technical innovation in art historical research: technology as a criterion of
innovation, as well as a factor contributing to research (products of research) becoming obsolete. | 
|  | The ‘after-life’ of digital projects and in particular the preservation and dissemination of e-research
(products of) – whose responsibility is it? Problems (obsolete media, copyright etc.) | 
| 17.15 | Concluding remarks by Neil Grindley, Methods Network |