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Taking up the digital challenge: image digitisation projects at the Bibliothèque nationale de France1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Marie Claude Thompson*
Affiliation:
Bibliothèque nationale de France, Direction des collections, Département des Estampes et de la Photographie, 58 rue de Richelieu, 75084 Paris Cedex 02, France
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Abstract

More than 20 million images are to be found at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF), in the form of book and periodical illustrations, manuscript illuminations, maps and plans, prints, drawings and photographs. The editorial context of these images means they are to be found in all fourteen collections departments of the library. However, it is the department of Prints and Photographs that, thanks to legal deposit for published images instituted in the 17th century, possesses one of the richest iconographic collections in the world: prints, posters, drawings, photographs, postcards, etc. These images have to be consulted in the reading rooms of the library’s different collection departments, which are at five different sites (François-Mitterrand (Tolbiac), Richelieu, Arsenal, Opéra, Avignon - Maison Jean Vilar). The introduction of digitisation should bring many changes to this traditional means of research, although we are still only at the beginning, with a programme that started little more than ten years ago.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2002

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References

1. This is an edited version of a paper first given on 17 August 2001 at the satellite meeting held in conjunction with the IFLA 2001 conference in Boston, sponsored by the New England Chapter of ARLIS/NA, IFLA’s Section of Art Libraries and ARLIS/NA.Google Scholar