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Kathleen Salomon
The Getty Research Institute,
Los Angeles, United States
CV

Michael Rocke
Berenson Library, Villa I Tatti-The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies,
Florència, Itàlia

Rüdiger Hoyer
Library of the Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte, Munic, Germany
CV

Sebastian Hierl
Arthur & Janet C. Ross Library, American Academy in Rome, Italy
CV

Shalimar Fojas White
Fine Arts Library. Harvard University, Cambridge, United States
CV

Sarah Osborne Bender
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, United States
CV

Jan Simane
Libary of the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, Max-Planck-Institut, Florència, Itàlia
CV

Wendy Fish
Trustee of the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain; Independent library consultant.

Jung Soo Bae
CV

Lynda Bunting
CV

Cathryn Copper
CV

Heather Gendron
CV

Ellen Prokop
CV

Saskia Scheltjens
CV

Jan Simane
CV
12:00 Juan Antonio Casado (Both.rocks!, Madrid) Integrating Artificial Intelligence: Transformation and challenges in art libraries
14:45 Heather Gendron (Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library, Yale) Yale Library Learns: An Organizational Learning Program About Generative AI
14:30 Amor Álvarez Pedreira (Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía) The Museum Meets its own Archive: The Digital Reconversion of the Central Archive of a Contemporary Art Museum
The challenge of preserving physical collections in university art libraries
One of the great challenges we face in university libraries is the preservation of physical collections. This proposal aims to identify the main causes and obstacles that prevent the proper preservation of these physical collections.
In this respect, preservation is mainly threatened by a lack of space. In the university context, this situation is exacerbated. In Humanities and Social Sciences disciplines, the situation is more critical than in other fields of knowledge, such as pure or applied sciences, because the rate of publication in electronic formats has been lower. Likewise, the availability of bibliography in electronic format continues to be scarce and limited in diversity.
In the field of art, furthermore, the physical format often carries as much significance as the content of the work. Also, in some cases, such as artist's books, does an electronic format make sense? Additionally, it has been demonstrated that the practice of browsing directly on the shelves is relevant for students in art-related disciplines, with this behaviour forming part of the creative process.
To try to alleviate this situation and ensure the preservation of the important collections amassed, policies for collection management and preservation of common funds for libraries with art collections are needed, whether they are museum, specialized, or university libraries. Also, there is a need for storage and deposit spaces that are nearby, flexible and efficient, so that access to collections is practically transparent to the user. Currently, if we focus on the Catalan context, there is only the cooperative warehouse GEPA (Guarantee of Space for Access Preservation), in the city of Lleida
Jung Soo Bae
An Experiment with ChatGPT to Expedite Subject Cataloging for Electronic Art Publications
This presentation will explore the potential applications of ChatGPT 3.5, a widely accessible generative AI, for subject cataloging of electronic art publications. Subject cataloging is vital for organizing and providing access to library collections. However, the traditional method of generating subject headings for resources can be both time-consuming and resource-intensive. To address this issue, the talk will explore how ChatGPT can be employed to expedite the subject cataloging process for electronic resources related to art and art history.
The session will present an experimental design to assess ChatGPT 3.5's performance in subject cataloging. This involves selecting sample titles from the National Gallery of Art's electronic collections and using ChatGPT to generate Library of Congress Subject Headings based on titles, tables of contents, and summaries. The generated subject headings will be compared to those created by human catalogers, focusing on accuracy, efficiency, and consistency across different factors. Additionally, the talk will highlight the potential benefits of integrating ChatGPT into subject cataloging workflows, such as improved productivity and scalability. Challenges and limitations of AI-driven cataloging, including issues of bias, accuracy, and interpretability, will also be addressed.
The goal of this presentation is to spark discussion within the art library community about the role of AI in metadata management and the future of subject cataloging in the digital era. Attendees will gain insights into the opportunities and challenges of incorporating generative AI into library cataloging processes, particularly for electronic art publications.
Joanne Bloom
Spain at Harvard University: The photographic collections of the Fine Arts Library documenting Spanish art and architecture.
The Fine Arts Library at Harvard University holds over two million 19th- and 20th-century photographs documenting art and architecture. Well over 60,000 of these represent all types of artistic production in Spain including architecture, painting, sculpture, decorative arts, and illuminated manuscripts.
The library’s holdings date back to 1875, when Charles Eliot Norton was appointed the first professor of the History of Art in the United States. Photographs were acquired to facilitate teaching in what was then known as the Fine Arts department. These photographs were first purchased by or gifted to the Fogg Museum at Harvard, established in 1895, then the Fogg Museum Library, established in 1927, which then became the Fine Arts Library in 1962. From the beginning, photographs of Spanish art and architecture were incorporated into the collections.
Two Harvard professors figured prominently in the establishment of the Fine Arts photograph collection as a preeminent resource for documentation of Spain.
Chandler Rathfon Post taught at Harvard from 1909-1950. Post authored the 14 volume survey series, A History of Spanish Painting, and most of the photographs found their way into the Library collection. Post declared that his goal was to create the largest and most comprehensive photo archive of Spanish art and architecture outside of Spain, and during his tenure he acquired new material never before available.
The second faculty member was the Medieval architectural historian Arthur Kingsley Porter, who taught at Harvard from 1920-1923 and then again from 1925 until his death in 1933. Porter and his wife, Lucy Wallace Porter, photographed throughout Spain and France and these expeditions provided the photographs published in his Spanish Romanesque Sculpture and Romanesque Sculpture of the Pilgrimage Roads. Porter provided prints of many of these photographs to the library during his lifetime and his widow Lucy Wallace Porter donated their negatives and prints to the Fine Arts Library before her death.
The Fine Arts Library also holds a large number of photographs purchased between 1900 and 1939 from the Arxiu Mas, now part of the Instituto Amatller de Arte Hispánico. Some were in fact commissioned by the Fogg Museum Library with the advice of Chandler R. Post during the 1930s. The Library continued to acquire Mas photographs through the 1990s on a subscription basis.
Isabel Bordes Cabrera
Speaking data (Hablando en data) is the first data visualization project of the Library and Documentation Centre of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (MNCARS), in collaboration with the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Salamanca. Its aim is to analyse and visualize the presence of women artists, art critics, curators, writers and authors in its bibliographic catalogue, a catalogue specialized in contemporary art. The project seeks to connect and compile the information available on these creators in other databases (Virtual International Authority File, catalogue of authorities of the BNE, Wikidata, Wikipedia) and to offer the visualization of these results through its website in a gallery and a chronological map format. Furthermore, all the information compiled is available for consultation, use or downloading, leaving open the possibility of other approaches and visualizations, on both the project's own website and the datos.gob.es page. Not surprisingly, it has become the first and only dataset that a national contemporary art museum such as the MNCARS has made available to citizens and reusing agents who might be interested.
In short, it is a project of:
- Alliances. Constructed between a national museum of contemporary art and a university research team, combining various information technologies (cataloguing, data refinement, statistics, artificial intelligence...).
- Transparency. It has allowed us to publicly acknowledge the presence (absence) of women in our bibliographic catalogue, not in a static way, but with the firm intention of making changes to our collection development policy. It is a project in which not only pointing out the presence of women is key, but also their absence in resources such as Wikidata or Wikipedia. In fact, these absences have been the key driver for the organization of editing sessions on Wikipedia organized with Wikimedia Spain and the Museum's resident Wikipedian.
- Potentialities. The visualizations offered through the project are offered as a possibility. The publication of the resulting dataset highlights that other uses and representations are possible, stating that most of the best ideas come from outside.
The Project has recently been awarded the council for library cooperation’s quality seal 2023 in the category of specialized libraries.
Lynda Bunting
Indexing AATA Online with Machine Learning: Do the Benefits Outweigh the Pitfalls?
Presents the background, implementation, testing, and outcomes of two tools that use machine learning to automatically generate index terms for AATA Online, an abstracting and indexing database focusing on the conservation and preservation of material culture, published by the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI). AATA's indexing workflow is a time-consuming process that has required intensive manpower. Automating this process for a predetermined set of records could help staff eliminate the backlog and focus their attention on other projects. The two indexing tools that will be discussed were written with Python scripts and trained on large datasets – over 10,000 records in the first case and over 90,000 in the second – extracted from AATA Online, which uses Getty's Art and Architecture Thesaurus (AAT) as its primary subject vocabulary for indexing. The presenter will briefly describe the tools, one of which was generated in-house and the other by the Finnish National Library (Annif), as well as their implementation issues, indexing effectiveness, and potential need for human oversight and corrections.
Juan Antonio Casado
Integrating Artificial Intelligence: Transformation and challenges in art libraries
Artificial intelligence (AI) is redefining the landscape of numerous industries, including the cultural sector. Specifically, art and museum libraries are presented with a unique opportunity to leverage AI to enhance collection management, user accessibility, and public interaction. This presentation will explore the basics of AI, highlighting its main components such as machine learning, natural language processing, and computer vision, and how these can be applied in the context of museum libraries. Practical cases where AI has been implemented for the digitization and automated cataloguing of collections will be examined, significantly improving efficiency and accuracy in data management. Additionally, semantic search tools that offer a better user experience will be discussed, allowing more intuitive and enriched access to vast cultural resources. Personalization of visitor experiences and accessibility options will also be considered. However, the adoption of AI is not without challenges. This talk will also address the technical challenges related to the integration of legacy technology systems and data quality, as well as ethical issues such as energy consumption, information privacy, and algorithmic biases. Strategies to mitigate these issues will be presented, and the importance of adopting an ethical and conscious approach to the use of AI technologies will be discussed. Lastly, the audience will be invited to consider the unexplored potential of AI in collection management and public interaction, and to explore how collaboration between institutions can be a key driver for innovation and continuous improvement in museum libraries. This presentation will seek not only to inform but also to inspire participants to consider how artificial intelligence can be implemented in their own institutions to transform and enrich cultural management and the public experience in the environment of museum libraries. We have also considered the possibility of organizing a practical workshop (unidirectional, a talk with a practical focus) where we would explore the possibilities of knowledge extraction and relation in digitized holdings (such as Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG), graph databases, etc.) and how this can change the way libraries manage and exploit information, for both user service and research. Although this proposal deviates from the topics suggested in the call for papers, we believed it important to propose it due to the interest we see in these techniques.
Anabel de la Paz and Pep Casals
The Teatre Lliure, nestled at the core of Spain's contemporary creative landscape, has recently introduced the Arxiu Lliure (https://arxiu.teatrelliure.com), a digital platform revolutionizing access to its theatrical heritage from 1976 to the present. Essentially, this pioneering project not only grants public access to its extensive archive but it also leads the way in utilizing artificial intelligence tools to revolutionize the cataloguing process of its diverse collection, which comprises over 74,500 heritage objects, making it available to everybody with the aim of continuing to foster creation.
This case study is significant for museum and library professionals, mirroring traditional archiving practices while navigating technological innovation alongside ethical considerations, particularly regarding facial recognition data. Along these lines, central to the Arxiu Lliure success lies the qUIC tool, an AI-driven cataloguing tool developed by Coeli Platform, which utilizes pattern recognition algorithms to streamline archival processes, identifying over 120,000 faces across nearly 60,000 photographs, demonstrating a commitment to responsible data usage within the sector's ethical and legal boundaries. This fusion of human insight with technological innovation emphasizes the importance of integrating Artificial Intelligence (AI) with Natural Intelligence (NI) in archival practices, setting a precedent for cultural institutions while emphasizing the importance of collaboration between departments within the institution.
When addressing the ephemeral nature of theatre, the Arxiu Lliure raises fundamental questions relevant to heritage collections: how to archive a theatrical instant? How to counteract the fleeting nature of the theatre? Why is it important to do so? While the memory of a show may linger, it is also preserved in a wide range of documents. The Arxiu Lliure houses over 74,500 items from more than 2,000 shows and events, including photographs, programmes, posters, press clippings, objects, soundscapes, plans, videos, interviews, music, and anecdotes. Apart from its extensive collection, the Arxiu Lliure serves as a dynamic platform for exploration, akin to the immersive experience of live theatre. That is no say, an archive that is alive, a vivid experience.
EIn this presentation, we will delve into the outcomes of this experimental project and its practical applications across the institution, highlighting the symbiotic relationship between Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Natural Intelligence (NI). With an interdisciplinary approach, we will explore the Teatre Lliure's commitment to preserving its artistic heritage and the role of technology, while simultaneously nurturing creativity and research endeavours fostering the utilization of Arxiu Lliure's rich online heritage.
Cathryn Copper
-- Coming soon --
María Luisa Cuenca
The Digital Library in the context of the Prado Museum Website
The Digital Library will promote the conservation of bibliographic holdings and facilitate free access to 5,600 issues of periodicals and 6,000 books specialized in artistic literature and published from the late 15th century to the early 20th century. Some of these works are even written or illustrated with prints engraved by artists represented in the Museum's galleries, such as Albrecht Dürer or Peter Paul Rubens.
The Prado Museum library holds a collection of 9,000 rare books, mainly treatises on architecture, painting, sculpture, engraving or drawing. There are also books about festivals, emblems, iconography, anatomy, proportion and the physiognomy of the human body, as well as an important set of drawing books. This collection can now be viewed for free through the website.
The Digital Library has been integrated in the Prado Museum website with other digital collections such as the Art Works Collection, the Digital Archive, Ephemeral Prado and Confiscated artifacts. The Prado Museum shares its collections with users from all over the world who can enter the Prado Museum website to satisfy their needs for information and generate new knowledge from the reuse of these digital objects.
Pau Expósito Jufré
Preservation and Access: Integration of the personal library of art critic Maria Lluïsa Borràs in the Library of the University of Girona
This proposal addresses the exhaustive process of integration of the impressive bibliographic collection of art critic Maria Lluïsa Borràs at the Library of the University of Girona. With more than 20,000 documents, including books, exhibition catalogues, newspaper clippings, etc., this collection represents an invaluable treasure for the academic and artistic community, a highly important sample for the Catalan and Spanish contemporary art of the late twentieth century (seventies, eighties and nineties). The collection contains exhibition catalogues of a vast diversity of artists from the country, as well as international artists and art biennials. The University of Girona, thanks to the patronage of the Nando & Elsa Peretti Foundation, has embarked on a multidisciplinary project to safeguard and provide access to this rich cultural heritage.
The integration process has been divided into several phases, starting with an exhaustive inventory of the collection, followed by the detailed cataloguing of each document and, finally, the strategic dissemination of the resources. This proposal analyses the strategies implemented to effectively integrate the collection into the university environment, facing practical and theoretical challenges along the way. Innovative technologies used for long-term preservation and open access to these resources are explored, as well as networked cataloguing practices that have enabled efficient management and easy browsing of the collection.
Through this project, the University of Girona has not only assumed the responsibility of being the custodian of this artistic legacy but has also facilitated its access and use by researchers, students and art lovers. This work offers a reflection on the broader implications of integrating an art critic's personal library into an academic environment, highlighting the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and commitment to the preservation of cultural heritage.
Marc Folia i Marta Riera Sagrera
The METAGLAM project represents a pioneering initiative focused on revolutionizing digital cultural heritage access and exploration through the innovative integration of a 3D browsing interface. In this respect, anchored by a pilot test conducted in collaboration with the Library of Catalonia, METAGLAM endeavours to transcend traditional list browsing paradigms in the cultural sector for libraries, archives, museums, and other entities.
The project presents an approach combining post-OCR correction and content-based indexation to transform multilingual historical archives into information systems. At the heart of this project, METAGLAM strives to enrich content using artificial intelligence while integrating user behaviour to enhance browsing experiences and recommendations. Along these lines, the METAGLAM project investigates how to optimize browsing and searches if these contents are arranged in a three-dimensional virtual space that is not necessarily figurative, in other words, without the need to place a user-avatar in a library and reproduce the movements as if it were a real library. Overall, the evaluation is carried out on a new dataset of multilingual historical documents from the early 20th century, mostly in Catalan, provided by the digital repository ARCA (Archive of Old Catalan Journals), managed by the Library of Catalonia. The dataset, which we make publicly available, represents the first Catalan corpus of OCR documents to ever be released. In essence, our experiments show that the post-OCR corrector effectively improves the quality of the extracted texts, which leads to better embeddings and, consequently, better document clusters.
This presentation would be part of the METAGLAM Project (PLEC2022-009322) funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033) and by the European Union "NextGenerationEU" / PRTR.
Furthermore, integral to the project's success is the collaboration of diverse stakeholders: Coeli Platform, Eurecat Centre Tecnològic de Catalunya, Mobile Media Content, and Library of Catalonia. Their collective expertise in research, data architecture, metadata, and library collections provide crucial insights into structuring the project's framework, emphasizing the importance of collaboration between technological and cultural institutions.
In our presentation, we will share the pioneering METAGLAM project and its outcomes, along with insights into the implications of this research for other institutions. By leveraging cutting-edge technologies and collaborative partnerships, the project does not only promise to enhance browsing experiences, but it also lays the groundwork for future progress in preserving and disseminating our collective cultural legacy.
Heather Gendron
Yale Library Learns: An Organizational Learning Program About Generative AI
In late 2023, generative AI was made a strategic priority at Yale University. In response, a team was formed at Yale University Library to coordinate a yearlong, organization-wide program for its 500+ staff and is chaired by the director of the Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library at Yale. The program will increase library staffs’ understanding of AI tools, methods, outputs, as well as the ethical dimensions to working with AI in LAMs. (A strength of Yale University is its deep cultural heritage resources. In addition to the libraries and archives, including the Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscript Library, our partners include the Yale University Art Gallery, Center for British Art, and the Peabody Museum.) AI applications for LUX, the university’s new cultural heritage discovery platform, will be part of the program. This talk will outline the specific learning outcomes that were defined by the team, the aims and activities planned for the program, and a description of the courses created by library staff for an online learning portal.
Amor Alvarez Pedreira
The Central Archive is responsible for managing the documentation produced by the Museum's departments in their daily activities, with the aim of conserving and disseminating the memory of a national institution of reference in contemporary art.
Its current challenges are threefold:
- Reconnecting the Museum with its archive: resolving the paradox of a contemporary art museum accustomed to perceiving the archive as a research tool and which, in its construction of the future, ran the risk of forgetting that in its present it generates the memory of the institution.
- Digital reconversion: resolving the anachronism that in the 21st century the archive could only receive paper, when the whole museum has been generating, if not digital, then at least mixed files for several years now.
- Reinforcing dissemination: both internally (intranet, training, etc.) and externally (institutional website, conferences, visits, etc.), making itself known as a service not only for research, but also to support the objectives and aims of the museum (according to its regulatory law, Law 34/2011, of 4 October).
The recent health crisis highlighted the archive's difficulties in providing a service beyond the physical, which made it necessary to focus efforts on its digital reconversion. In this context, and thanks to funds from the EU's Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan, the ambitious project "The Museum meets its own Archive" was launched in 2021, with two main axes:
- Migration of the management system to a system that would allow the reception of analogue and digital documentation, as well as providing a gateway to the researcher through a search and dissemination portal.
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Ingesting digital content into the system in order to demonstrate to the management team that the Central
Archive is a key part of the institution. This has been achieved through two projects:
- A document management audit that enabled us to know the activity and documentation produced in each department and which would be susceptible to transfer
- A massive retrospective digitization project of documentation already described by the central archive.
As a result, there are already several web portals with digital content that will optimize the Archive's response to the external and internal researcher. This does not fail to represent an intra-institutional change, by raising awareness of the fact that the documentation produced undoubtedly has undeniable historical and cultural value.
Beatriz Martín Morales
Lessons learned from the physical and digital management of artist and museum archives
In this presentation, I shall present the recent progress made in the management of art archives at the Juan March Foundation Library.
I will begin by exploring the origins of the Library's art collection, which is crucial to understanding the context in which the archives are received. Subsequently, I will describe the processes used for the physical and digital management of various artist and museum archives.
First of all, I will analyse the archive of the artist Fernando Zóbel, received in 2015. There is a detailed description of this archive in the archiving software, a digital repository accessible to the public since 2017, and a large part of the materials have been digitised and preserved.
I will then explore the Archive of Abstract Artists in Spain (AAAeE), a unique resource for researchers that began life as the Dictionary of Abstract Painters, a project by Zóbel, and which now houses more than a thousand records.
Finally, I will discuss the plan for the Exhibition Archive, which contains all the complementary material and ephemera of the exhibitions held by the foundation since the first one in 1973. I will explain how and where these materials are physically preserved, the archival classification table, and future plans for digitisation, preservation and dissemination.
Alberto Medina Morales
The Library and Documentation Centre of the Reina Sofía Museum is a specialized centre that collects and preserves books and documentation on artists and artistic movements from 1881 to the present day. Despite the specific nature of this library and the uniqueness of its holdings, access to its collections is open not only to researchers, but also to the general public, who are sometimes more numerous than the specialist public. Far from feeling this situation as a threat, it was seen as an opportunity and was one of the reasons for the birth of Almost Books.
Almost Books is the Library and Documentation Centre's cultural mediation programme that proposes an approach to its spaces, collections, and services, beyond its nature as a platform for research into contemporary art. The programme, implemented since 2021, approaches the library as a reflective and participatory territory, promoting contact between citizens and its documentary and artistic collections. Its lines of action – some developed inside the Library, others elsewhere – are based on the book and the document as common and dynamic elements, generating different projects such as: Other Books and So, a narrative and essay reading club; Magnetised Needle, a programme of visits to the documentary exhibitions in Space D and to the Library's facilities; Look Closely, a user training programme based on the artistic and documentary collections held by Museo Reina Sofía Library. The innovative and plural nature of this programme has been recognized by the Council for Library Cooperation’s Quality Seal, as a finalist project in the 2022 edition.
The experiences and the results obtained during the development of this library outreach programme have enabled us to identify various strengths and weaknesses that will need to be worked on in the coming years in order to make Almost Books more coherent, solid and cohesive in the future.
Ona Pagès Navarro y Ana Urroz Osés
Web access to art libraries and archives. The importance of interface, the question of interaction design
One of the fundamental aspects to consider in the organization of a library or archive is the access that users will have to that collection of documents and works. Of course, who better than an expert in library science to know how to organize a library. But in the case of the web version of such a collection, specific aspects of graphic design, human-computer interaction (HCI) design, and navigation design must be considered. All these topics require detailed study and personalized attention, depending on the volume of data, the target audience and the institution's brand design, among other aspects.
To ensure a good user experience (UX) in the use of and access to the resources offered online, it is necessary to have a multidisciplinary team that masters each of these aspects. This requires a specific methodology and a set of user tests that allow us to iterate until we refine the most suitable design.
In this conference, we will present the fundamental aspects in the design of online applications that impact UX: usability (laws and heuristics), visual design (colour, perception, and form theory concepts), and interaction design
In short, we aim to offer a review of the other necessary aspects of design that are involved in order to enhance the readability and understanding of libraries and art archives. It is through communication and shared work among different disciplines that a better development of access can be achieved.
Mario Pérez-Montoro
Data visualization as a research strategy in digital humanities
The emergence of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) has revolutionized most aspects of our lives. What have traditionally been academically considered to be the “humanities" have also been impacted by these technological developments. These advances are reflected in the design of museum websites and art libraries’ digital contents. The aim of this contribution is to address some of the references and new advances in the discipline of visualization within the field of digital humanities. To fulfil this purpose, I have organized this contribution into different sections. Additionally, the following two sections aim to identify some proposals that may be considered as references when visually representing textual units and historical events within the realm of digital humanities. The subsequent section addresses a series of visualizations that, while not commonly used as an analytical strategy within humanities disciplines, could represent a methodological innovation for visually analysing information and data addressed in research conducted in those areas of knowledge. Finally, the contribution is completed by offering some of the lessons learned and the conclusions that can be drawn from the analysis and proposals made.
Ellen Prokop
Discovering Spanish Art and Architecture in the Department of Image Collections at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
The Department of Image Collections comprises a photo archive of more than sixteen million reproductions documenting the global history of the fine arts. Highlights from the holdings of Spanish art and architecture include 600 prints from glass plate negatives in the Archivo Ruiz Vernacci of the Spanish Cultural Heritage Institute (IPCE); nineteenth-century albums featuring Spanish architecture such as the Album fototípich de la catedral de Barcelona (1888); and the archive of the North American scholar, Harold Wethey (1902–1984). In addition to surveying these holdings, this brief presentation outlines recent efforts to promote discoverability of and access to these resources with attention to the department’s participation in PHAROS: The International Consortium of Photo Archives. This organization of fifteen European and North American art historical photo archives is committed to producing a digital research platform affording comprehensive consolidated access to the archives’ digitized images and corresponding scholarly documentation.
The platform, which will be launched in fall 2024, currently contains more than 2.8 million images and related metadata. To facilitate navigation and limit duplication, the consortium has developed a tool that relies on machine learning and computer vision technologies: the PHAROS Visual Search database. The database, which includes 91,086 digital files of paintings and drawings from six institutions, allows researchers to search by image rather than text through the comparison of digital files they have uploaded or selected from the provided dataset. Plans are underway to implement this innovation across the entire platform, with the goal to advance new connections and discoveries within the field of art history. By introducing the Department of Image Collection’s research materials related to the study of Spanish art and architecture together with its involvement in PHAROS, the talk touches on both themes of the conference, offering a case study of how artificial intelligence technology is being harnessed to connect researchers to rare materials.
Anna Pujols Grifè
The newspaper archive of the Rafael and María Teresa Santos Torroella Archive and Library
In 2014, the City Council of Girona, along with the acquisition of the artistic collection of Rafael and María Teresa Santos Torroella, received the donation of their Archive and Library from the heirs of Maite Bermejo.
The Santos Torroella Archive and Library includes a newspaper archive with over 1,500 titles. These publications help to explain the history of Rafael Santos Torroella (Portbou, 1914 – Barcelona, 2002), as a journalist and art critic: his early contributions to the press date back to 1928 in his hometown. In 1929, he moved to Huelva and later to Valladolid and Barcelona. Throughout this time, he contributed to publications such as Juliol, Meridià, and Treball. The Spanish Civil War disrupted his career in the written press. Rafael Santos joined a battalion of the republican army and was taken prisoner by Francoists in 1938 and held until 1939.
That year he was able to resume his journalistic activities. Living in Salamanca, he contributed to the local newspaper El Adelanto, was a correspondent for La Estafeta Literaria and, along with Antonio Tovar, founded and participated in academic journals like Lazarillo and Cátedra. He lived for a time in Madrid and in 1947 permanently relocated to Barcelona. His journalistic career includes contributions to magazines such as Proel (Santander), Espadaña (León), Revista de la Ideas Estéticas (Madrid), Ínsula (Madrid), Gaceta de las Artes (Madrid), Lar (San Sebastián), Papeles de Son Armadans (Palma de Mallorca), Destino (Barcelona), El Correo Catalán (Barcelona), Solidaridad Nacional (Barcelona), and El Noticiero Universal (Barcelona), among others.
In addition to Rafael Santos Torroella’s journalistic career, the archive includes some of the best-known titles of Avant-garde art in the 20th century. Rafael was the brother of the painter Ángeles Santos Torroella, who dazzled the intellectual elite of the time in 1929, aged just 18, when she presented her work Un mundo, at the 9th Autumn Salon in Madrid. Ramón Gómez de la Serna, Giménez Caballero, Ricardo Baroja, Jorge Guillen and others frequently visited their home. From then on, Rafael Santos devoted himself to studying and promoting new art. As a result of this fascination, the newspaper archive includes the two issues of Gallo, a Generation of 27 magazine, promoted by Federico García Lorca, L’Amic de les Arts, Pèl&Ploma, Els Quatre Gats, and also leading French publications such as La Révolution Surréaliste or 391, promoted by Francis Picabia.
Se trata de una hemeroteca que ofrece infinitas posibilidades para el estudio y la divulgación de la prensa histórica en Cataluña y en España, además de una ventana para la investigación del arte de vanguardia desde sus inicios.
This newspaper archive offers infinite possibilities for the study and dissemination of the historical press in Catalonia and Spain, as well as a window for the investigation of Avant-garde art from its beginnings.
Silvia Redondo Iniesta
The social role of museum libraries
Traditionally, the main objective of museum libraries has been to support museum staff and other external researchers. However, in recent years and in within the context of open science, some of these libraries have been reorienting their services, on the one hand to reach other types of users and, on the other, to preserve and disseminate knowledge and research in more accessible and open formats.
Hence, there is a trend towards a more social role and greater accessibility to citizens, which coincides with the new definition of museums, according to which research, citizen participation, accessibility, sustainability and inclusion, among others, should be highlighted.
This trend can be seen in the last BIMUS Museum Libraries Conference 2023, where several presentations focused on activities, services, and projects aimed at the general public. Museums such as, among others, the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, the Sorolla Museum, and the Centro or Agencia Pública Casa Natal Pablo Ruiz Picasso, stood out. The Joaquim Folch i Torres Library of the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya has been working for some years now to promote the social role of the library and bring art closer to the public. Since 2021, and in collaboration with the Public Library Service of the Generalitat de Catalunya, the MNAC library has offered the general public two virtual activities directed by moderators: a reading club called “Apassionart”, and “Art Fanatics”, a virtual art community formed by people interested in art and the museum.
Additionally, the results of a survey conducted in mid-2023 with more than 100 museum libraries confirm this interest in reaching an audience beyond museum staff and researchers, and they reveal a manifest interest in making the library more open and the promotion of its social role.
Museum libraries are therefore experiencing a moment of change and openness, in a context where open science, through citizen science, gives more and more prominence to the public and to the dissemination of knowledge and research in open formats.
Paula Sánchez García
The Library of the Spanish Cultural Heritage Institute: where we come from, where we are going
LThe Library of the Spanish Cultural Heritage Institute is a specialized one which offers a comprehensive document service for the Institute’s different areas of work, and for researchers and external users. The library emerged in 1990, in the second part of the architectural project. It is the first circular library building constructed in Spain but as an institution it is little known. Access to the public is free for the purposes of consultation, study and research of the materials it houses.
Its materials have grown continuously and intensely, and it is now an obligatory bibliographic reference in matters of the conservation and restoration of the Spanish Cultural Heritage. Today it comprises more than 35,000 volumes and almost 1,700 titles of specialist journals in several languages.
The aim of this paper is to explain the evolution of this library (materials, human resources, financial resources) and to show how, in recent years, social networks and library cooperation have been fundamental for increasing its use and its visitors (including film directors and producers who come to this library to record TV series and films).
The library catalogue is included in several projects (like BIMUS network, BIBLESPAGE catalogue) and the intention is to increase connections with other institutions and national and international projects such as ICCROM, Hispana, Dialnet, AENOR or the Collective Catalogue of Bibliographic Heritage.
Carolina Santamaria
LaDigitaldelReina: cross platform research for digital collections of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (MNCARS)
LaDigitaldelReina was conceived with the idea of offering unitary public access to all the digital collections (artistic, documentary, photographic, immaterial) in the museum and which are accessible while respecting intellectual property laws.
Taking advantage of the versatility of new technologies, the aim was to contribute to the construction of a digital humanities that would improve users’ experience by enriching the contextualization of the works and the knowledge of the heritage held in the museum. And of course, enriching the research by offering the full texts of library documents, but also of the audio transcripts of conferences held at the museum or radio programmes.
Above all, it is intended as a research tool that transcends the collections themselves, generating space for relationships between traditionally separate sources. This relational aspect, in which materials from different sources converge, makes it possible to link the exhibitions with the works on display or with reference material, with photographs of the rooms, with the artists' profiles, etc. It also sheds light on materials traditionally hidden from use by museum professionals, not to mention the fact that it makes it possible to virtually unify archives held in different departments. In short, it contributes to the construction, conservation and dissemination of the museum's memory.
Saskia Scheltjens
Cultural AI initiatives in the Netherlands
The Netherlands has a long tradition of intense collaboration between computer scientists and the cultural heritage world. Maybe that is the reason why cultural Al initiatives and research find such fertile ground there for new developments and experiments. Cultural Al can be defined as the study, design and development of socio-technological Al systems that are implicitly or explicitly aware of the subtle and subjective complexity of human culture.
This presentation aims to provide a brief overview of past initiatives in the Netherlands, from early cultural informatics research to semantic web collaborations, to digital humanities projects in tandem with museums, libraries and archives. But most of all, it intends to paint a picture of current projects related to Cultural Al in the Dutch heritage world and beyond, and to conclude with some challenges and recommendations for building constructive partnerships between researchers and institutions based on several of those projects in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
The upcoming 10th International Conference of Art Libraries in Barcelona in October will be dedicated to two main topics:
- The landscape of art and museum libraries in Spain
- Artificial Intelligence in art and museum libraries
We are taking the opportunity to familiarize ourselves with the landscape of art and mu- seum libraries and archives in Spain, to better understand their traditions, structures and future plans and to explore the possibilities of in-depth cooperation with the artdiscov- ery.net network. To this end, representatives of Spanish institutions in particular are in- vited to present their concepts and especially strategies for the future.
Representatives of libraries outside the country who hold important collections on Spanish art and Iberian cultural history are encouraged to contribute as well, both to provide an international perspective and to highlight potentially valuable opportunities for connecting institutions.
In addition, the conference aims to facilitate an exchange of experiences on the topic of art libraries and artificial intelligence, particularly with regard to the networking of library holdings but also, for example to the sharing, using and protection of collection objects in an AI world. Specific applications and ongoing projects are of particular interest here.
There will be a choice of two conference formats:
- Presentations of 20 minutes
- Lightning talks of 5-10 minutes
Presentations can be given both in English (conference language) and Spanish. A simulta- neous translation in both directions will be provided.
The proposals for papers and lightning talks are due on April 30, 2024. Please include the title plus a max. 400-word abstract. A short CV should be added as well. The proposal must be written in English. Speakers will be notified within one month regarding the acceptance of their proposal. Please send your proposal to: [email protected].
Details of the International Art Libraries Conference:
Dates: Thursday – Saturday 3-5 October, 2024
Location: Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, Barcelona (Spain)
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya
How to get to the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya
Metro
Lines L1, L3: Pl. Espanya
Buses
55 (the one that leaves the closest, stop: Museu Nacional
d’Art de Catalunya/Museu Etnològic)
150 (Pl. Espanya-Av. de l’Estadi/Piscines Picornell-Museu Nacional)
13 (Av. Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia/Poble Espanyol) To Pl. Espanya 65, 79, 109, 165, D20, D40, H12, V7
Tourist Bus
Bus Turístic (Museu Nacional) / Barcelona City Tour
(Museu Nacional)
Train
FGC L8, R5, R6, R50, R60, S4, S8, S33 (Station Espanya)
Funicular
Metro Paral·lel (integrated fare) – Funicular de Montjuïc
On foot
Plaça d’Espanya - Avinguda Maria Cristina – Escalators up to the museum
Carrer Lleida - Teatre Mercat de les Flors and Teatre Grec – Stairs to the museum
Anella Olímpica - Escalators to the museum
Car
Paid public car park for cars and coaches with places
for persons with reduced mobility next to the museum
Bicycle
Bicing (carrer França Xica and plaça d’Espanya)


New display of Renaissance and Baroque Art Collection
Next Wednesday, January 24, we will inaugurate the new presentation of the Renaissance and Baroque collection. With this remodeling, we will discover under a new perspective about 210 artworks from the XVI to XIX centuries (paintings, prints and drawings, sculptures and decorative arts, as well...
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The imprint of women artists in post-war Barcelona
With this sample of small catalogues, we want to give visibility to the artistic activity of the women who exhibited in the city of Barcelona during the post-war period (1939-1952). The exhibition can be visited in person in the lobby of the Joaquim Folch i Torres Library of the Museum from 2nd March to 31st May.
In 1934 she moved to Madrid to attend the Francisco Alcántara School of Ceramics. After a stay in Italy, she moved back to Madrid, in a studio in the Calle de Fuenclara.
In 1947 she exhibited at the Galerías Pallarés in Barcelona and in 1949 at the Sala Rovira. In 1956 she decided to emigrate to Venezuela, where she created the so-called Escuela del Bosque with Francisco San José.
In 1972 she returned to Spain, exhibited at the Galería S'Art in Huesca and moved back to Madrid. She spent long periods in the municipality of Olmeda de las Fuentes.
Exhibitions
- Galería Pallarés, from 18th to 31st January 1947
- Sala Rovira, from 2nd to 13th April 1948
Painter. She specialised in religious subjects, still lifes and flowers.
She participated in several individual and group exhibitions held in Barcelona, Mataró and Madrid. She had individual exhibitions in 1942, 1943 and 1944 at the Galerías Pallarés and in 1952 at the Sala Busquets in Barcelona.
In 1954 she held an exhibition at the Casa del Libro, in 1963 at the Galerías Españolas and in 1966 at the Sala Jaimes.
Exhibitions
- Pallarés, from 4th to 17th April 1942
- Pallarés, from 6th to19th March 1943
- Pallarés, from 18th to 31st March 1944
- Busquets, from 5th to 18th April 1954
Illustrator and painter. Specialising in ballet themes. Her first individual exhibition took place at the Galerías Costa in Barcelona in 1942. She also exhibited individually at the Galerías Augusta (1943 and 1951), Sala Rovira (1943), Galerías Argos (1948) and recurrently at the Galerías Augusta (1948, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1973 and 1975) and the Galerías Españolas (1962, 1964, 1965 and 1966)
Exhibitions
- Costa, from 21st February to 6th March 1942
- Sala Rovira, from 30th January to 12th February 1943
- Sala Rovira, from 18th to 31st December 1943
- Argos, from 13th to 26 November 1948
- Augusta, from 1st to 14th December 1951
Painter of landscapes and flowers. She studied at the Llotja School in Barcelona. She was a co-founder of the Art Association formed by students of the Llotja, founded in 1926. In the same year, she held an individual exhibition at the Galerías Layetanas. She also took part in various group exhibitions held in these galleries in 1927, 1928 and 1930. During the 1940s she held several monographic exhibitions in Barcelona, mainly at the Galería Argos (1942, 1944 and 1946). In 1951 she exhibited individually at Syra, Galerías de Arte. In 1967 she exhibited at the Art Studio of the Barcelona Radio Club, at the Terraza Martini in Barcelona in 1967, at the Galerías Syra in 1971 and 1973 and at the Galería Ramón Casas in 1977. From the thirties she lived and worked in Tossa de Mar, where she died. Her connection with the local population was very close and she was one of the people who led the creation of the Municipal Museum of Tossa de Mar in 1935.
Exhibitions
- Barcino, from 23rd November to 6th December 1940
- Argos, from 17th to 30th October1942
- Argos, from 14th to 27th October 1944
- Argos, from 19th October to 1st November 1946
- Syra, from 13th to 26th January 1951
Painter. Specialising in landscapes and seascapes. She attended the School of Fine Arts in Sabadell. She later took three courses at the Barcelona School of Fine Arts. In 1930 she exhibited at the School of Fine Arts in Sabadell with drawings and paintings where the landscapes of Sabadell predominated. In 1931 she settled in Blanes, which meant that her paintings dealt with traditional seafaring subjects. Throughout the 1940s, she held several individual exhibitions in the city of Barcelona: at the Galerías Augusta (1941), Pictoria (1942), Galerías Syra (1943 and 1945 and Argos (1946, 1947 and 1949). She exhibited at Quint Galerías de Arte in Sabadell in 1951. In 1954 she exhibited individually at the Galerías de Arte Syra and in 1960 she exhibited at La Pinacoteca, in 1980 at Foga-2 in Barcelona and in 1983 at the Intel·lecte Gallery in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Augusta, from 10th to 25th May 1941
- Pictoria, from 25th April to 8th May 1942
- Syra, from 17th to 30th April 1943
- Syra, from 7th to 20th January 1945
- Argos, 23th March 1946
- Argos, 8th March 1947
- Agos, 23rd April 1949
Painter. She specialised in landscape, sea and mural painting. She took part in the 2nd School Exhibition of Fine Arts which took place in 1929 at the Sala Dalmau. In 1943 she exhibited individually at the Sala Vinçon in Barcelona. In 1953, 1955 and 1958 she held individual exhibitions at the Galerías Syra.
Exhibitions
- Sala Vinçon, from 27th November to 10th December 1948
Painter. Specialising in landscape and seascapes. She took part in the 1934, 1935 and 1936 editions of the Barcelona Spring Exhibition. She also took part in the editions of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts held in Barcelona in 1942 and 1945. In 1945 she held an individual exhibition at the Sala Vinçon and in 1951 at the Sala Caralt in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Sala Vinçon, from 7th to 20th April 1945
- Sala Caralt, from 17th February to 2nd March 1951
Painter and illustrator. She trained in the studio of the painter Julio Moisés. In 1943 she had an individual exhibition at the Galerías Urquinaona in Barcelona. She participated in the 1943, 1948 and 1950 editions of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts.
Exhibitions
- Galerías Urquinaona, from 6th December 1941 to 2nd January 1943
Painter and illustrator. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1932 at Galerías Syra. In 1933 she took part in an exhibition commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Sala Parés. In 1933, 1935 and 1940 she exhibited again at the Galerías Syra. In 1943 she exhibited in the Sala Rovira and the Sala Vinçon in 1944, 1946 and 1948. In 1953 she exhibited her works at the Galerías de Arte San Jorge. She participated in the 1933, 1934, 1935 and 1936 editions of the Spring Exhibition and in the 1942 and 1960 editions of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts.
Exhibitions
- Syra, from 20th April to 3rd May 1940
- Rovira, from 13th to 26th February 1943
- Sala Vinçon, from 19th February to 3rd March 1944
- Sala Vinçon, from 18th to 31st May 1946
- Sala Vinçon, from 7th to 20th February 1948
Painter and illustrator, mainly of portrait, still lifes and flowers. She studied at the Municipal School of Arts and Crafts in Reus. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1931 at the Centre de Lectura de Reus. The following year she exhibited in Figueres. After the end of the civil war, she moved to Barcelona where, in the 1940s, she held several individual exhibitions at the Galerías Barcino (1942 and 1943), Augusta (1945 and 1948) and the Sala Rovira (1947 and 1949). ). In 1952 she exhibited again at Galerías Syra, where she repeated in 1956, 1959 and 1973. In 1957 she exhibited at the Sala Rovira. She exhibited at the Anquin’s Art Gallery in Reus in 1975 and 1979.
Exhibitions
- Barcino, from 17th to 30th October 1942
- Barcino, from 11th to 30th December 1943
- Augusta, from 21st April to 4th May 1945
- Sala Rovira, from 8th to 21st February 1947
- Augusta, from 7th to 20th February 1948
- Rovira, from 3rd to 16th December 1949
- Syra, from 17th to 30th May 1952
Sculptor. She also did drawings, literary illustration, engraving and decoration. In 1942 she held her first individual exhibition at the Galería Argos in Barcelona. She also exhibited in these galleries in 1943 and 1945. She participated, together with J. Fin, Javier Vilató and Albert Fabra, in an exhibition of engravings at the Galerías Pictoria in Barcelona that took place in 1945.
Exhibitions
- Argos, from 3rd to 9th January 1942
- Argos, from 2nd to 8th January 1943
- Argos, from 23rd December 1944 to 12th January 1945
Painter. Specialising in still lifes and vases. In 1907 she took part in the 1st Exhibition of Fine Arts by Independent Artists at the Círcol de Propietaris in Gràcia, Barcelona, and in the 5th International Exhibition of Fine Arts and Artistic Industries at the Palau de Belles Arts in Barcelona. From 1925 to 1936 she took part in various group exhibitions of the Agrupació d’Aquarel·listes de Catalunya (The Watercolour Painters’ Group of Catalonia). In the late 1920s she presented her work individually at the Sala Parés (1928, 1929, 1930 and 1931) and in the Galerías Layetanas in 1933, 1935 and 1940. In 1942 she had an individual exhibition at the Galleries Urquinaona.
Exhibitions
- Layetanas, from 17th February to 1st March 1940
- Urquinaona, from 1st to 14th November 1943
Painter. She specialised in set design and theatres. She held a couple of individual exhibitions in her studio.
Exhibitions
- The Artist’s Studio, 1st March 1947
- The Artist’s Studio, 27th December 1947
- Círculo Artístico, 20th Arpil 1948
Miniaturist painter on ivory and oil. In the 1940s she had several individual exhibitions in Barcelona: at the Fayans Catalan (1944, 1946 and 1947), at the Casa del Libro (1945) and at the Galerías Pons Llobet (1948) in Barcelona. In 1953 and 1957 she exhibited at the Galerías Pons and in 1956 at the Casa del Libro. During the sixties she gained fame and continued to exhibit in various galleries in Barcelona, mainly in the Sala Jaimes (1961, 1964, 1965) and La Pinacoteca (1968 and 1970). In 1985 she exhibited at the Galerie l’Oeil in Brussels and in 2005 she exhibited again in Barcelona, at the Mayte Muñoz Galería de Arte.
Exhibitions
- Faianç Català, from 11th to 24th March 1944
- Casa del Libro, from 13th to 26th January 1945
- Faianç Català, from 16th to 29th March1946
- Faianç Català, from 15th to 28th March 1947
- Pons Llobet, from 4th to 17th December 1948
- Argos, from 15th to 28th April 1950
Painter. Specialised in landscape, portrait, still lifes and flowers. She trained in Paris where she participated in the Paris Salons. In 1932 she won the National Watercolour Prize. She had several individual exhibitions, including the one that took place at the Galerías Augusta in Barcelona in 1940. She was a member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Santa Isabel de Hungría in Seville.
Exhibitions
- Augusta, from 31st October to 15th November 1940
She studied at the School of Fine Arts of San Carlos in Valencia. The theme of her works focused on still lifes and landscaping. In 1942 she exhibited at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts in Barcelona. During the 1940s, she had several individual exhibitions at the Fayans Català (1943 and 1944) and in 1945 she took part in the group exhibition “Pintores valencianes” organised by the Rat Penat. She taught drawing classes.
Exhibitions
- Fayans, from 13th to 26th February 1943
- Fayans, from 26 February to 10th March 1944
Painter. She did portraits, still lifes and landscapes. She was born in Valencia and spent her youth in Barcelona where she studied at the School of Arts and Crafts of Vilanova i la Geltrú. In 1945 she had her first individual exhibition at the Galeria Pons Llobet in Barcelona, where she also exhibited in 1947. She took part in various group exhibitions in Spain, Monaco and Japan. In 1979 she worked on a series of Japanese ex-libris for the Nippon Ex-libris Association
Exhibitions
- Pons Llobet, from 27th October to 9th November 1945
- Pons Llobet, from 12th to 25th April 1947
Painter. Specialising in figure painting, still lifes and flowers. Born in Menorca, she moved to Barcelona and began her studies at the School of Arts and Crafts and later at the Sant Jordi School of Fine Arts. She took part in the National Exhibition of Fine Arts held in Barcelona in 1944. She was also part of the 11th and 12th Salón de Otoño organised by the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Palma de Mallorca. In 1949 and 1957 she exhibited at the Sala Busquets in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Busquets, from 1st to 15th October 1949
Painter. She specialised in landscape, still lifes and floral themes. In 1931 and 1934 she exhibited at the Galerías Layetanas. She exhibited at the Sala Gaspar in 1935. In the 1940s she held several individual exhibitions in Barcelona: at the Fayans Catalan (1940s and 1942), at the Galerías Pallarés (1941) and at the Casa del Libro (1944). In 1966, a posthumous exhibition was held in homage to the Art Studio of the Barcelona Radio Club.
Exhibitions
- Fayans, from 16th to 29th March 1940
- Pallarés, from 15th to 28th March 1941
- Fayans, from 5th to 18th December 1942
- Casa del Libro, from 11th to 24th November 1944
Painter. Specialising in landscapes, and still lifes. Trained at the Cercle Artístic de Sant Lluc in Barcelona: She was part of the Spring Exhibition held in 1932 and the edition held in 1934. She also participated in the first and third editions of the Hispano-American Biennial de Arte held in 1951 in Barcelona.
Her first individual exhibition took place at the Galeries Syra in 1934. She exhibited individually at Galerías Syra (1941, 1952 and 1961), Galerías Pictoria (1944 and 1947), Argos (1948), Sala Rovira (1956) and Sala de Arte Moderno (1966)
Exhibitions
- Syra, from 3rd to 16th May 1941
- Pictoria, from 16th to 29th December 1944
- Pictoria, from 28th December 1946 to 10th January 1947
- Argos, from 18th September to 1st October 1948
- Syra, from 4th to 17th October1952
Painter. She studied at the School of Fine Arts. In 1931 she took part in the Montserrat competition seen by Catalan painters. In the 1940s she was very active and exhibited at the Casa del Greco (1941), the Galerías de Arte Domingo (1942), the Galerías Reig (1944), the Sala Rovira (1945 and 1946) and the Sala Busquets (1947) in Barcelona and the Galería Buchhlz in Madrid (1949). In 1961 she exhibited at the Sala Neblí in Madrid (where she exhibited again in 1963) and at Syra Galerías de Arte in Barcelona. In 1975 she exhibited in the Concert Hall of the "Camarote Granados", in 1975 in Dau al Set Galeria d’art, in 1981 in the Pedrera Galeria d'Art and in 1995 in the Pia Almoina.
Exhibitions
- Casa del Greco, from 26th April to 13th Mai 1941
- Galerías de Arte Domingo, from 30th April to 13th Mai 1942
- Reig, from 11th to 24th March1944
- Sala Rovira, from 30th December 1944 to 12th January 1945
- Sala Rovira, from 28th December 1945 to 11th January 1946
- Busquets, from 29 th November to 12th December 1947
Painter. Specialising in still lifes and figure painting. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1927 at the Galeries Laietanes, where she exhibited again in 1928 and 1933. In 1942 she exhibited at the Galerías Pallarés.
Exhibitions
- Galerías Pallarés, from 30 th Mai to 12th June 1942
Painter. She cultivated still life, portraits and figure painting. Her first individual exhibition took place in the Sala Gaspar in 1942. In 1944 she exhibited at the Galerías Atenea in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Atenea, from 6th to 19th Mai 1944
Painter. She graduated from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in San Fernando. She was awarded the Third Medal at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts in 1948 and the second Medal at the 1950 edition of the same exhibition. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1946 at the Sala Rovira in Barcelona, where she also exhibited in 1947 and 1955.
Exhibitions
- Sala Rovira, from 20th April to 3rd Mai 1946
- Sala Rovira, from 18th to 31st October 1947
Painter. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1948 in the Sala Vinçon. In 1949 she exhibited at Stvdio in Bilbao. Later, in the Sala Gaspar (1952), Galerías Layetanas (1955) and in the Galerías Syra (1960 and 1965). She exhibited at the Galeria Jaimes in Barcelona in 1962, at the Sala del Prado in Madrid in 1964, at the Mitre Gallery in Barcelona in 1974 and at the Sala Gaudí in 1979. She participated in several editions of the Salón de Octubre, as well as the Salón de Mayo and the 3rd Hispano-American Biennial of Art held in 1955 in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Sala Vinçon, from 10th to 23rd April 1948
- Sala Gaspar, from 12th to 25th April 1952
Painter. Born in Huesca. She studied at the Royal Catalan Academy of Fine Arts in Sant Jordi. She took part in several individual exhibitions, the first of which took place in Barcelona in 1945. In 1948 and 1952 she exhibited at the Sala Rovira. In 1953 she exhibited at the Galerías Argos, in 1961 and 1967 at the Sala de Exposiciones of the Ateneo Barcelonés, in 1963 at Syra Galerías de Arte in Barcelona and in 1981 at Dama Galeria d’Art in Calafell. She was a founding member of Grupo Lais and belonged to the Asociación de Artistas Actuales (The Association of Current Artists) of Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Sala Rovira, from 13th to 26 th November 1948
- Sala Rovira, 1952
Painter. She participated in the 1922, 1932, 1934, 1936 and 1941 editions of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts. She exhibited individually at the Casa del Libro in Barcelona in 1940, at the Galerías Augusta in 1941 and at the Galerías Argos in 1947 and at the Sala Gaspar in 1955. In 1951 she participated in the 1st Hispano-American Biennial of Arte and in 1962 at the First Salón Femenino de Arte Actual. She also exhibited in 1971 at Syra Galerías de Arte, in 1977 at the Sala Parés and in 1983 at El Cau de la Carreta in Sitges.
Exhibitions
- Casa del Libro, from 24th January to 6th February 1940
- Augusta, from 29th December 1940 to 10th January 1941
- Argos, from 26th April to 9th Mai 1947
Painter and engraver. She trained at the School of Fine Arts. Her first individual exhibition took place in 1949 at the Sala Rovira in Barcelona. In 1950 she travelled to Paris. In 1954 she exhibited at the Sala Busquets, in 1957 at the Galerías Layetanas and in 1960 at the Galería Mirador in Barcelona.
Exhibitions
- Sala Rovira, from 22th January to 4th February 1949
Art and devotion

The Mother of God, one of the paradigm emblems of the militantly doctrinaire spirit of the Catholic Church in the wake of the Council of Trent, assumed great importance in the religious art of the period. The fervent promulgation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception reveals the commitment of the Catholic hierarchy to asserting the intercessionary role allotted to Mary. The iconographic repertoire contains a large number of variants. One of these is the Sagrada Conversazione, the Sacred Conversation, in which the Mother of God occupies the central space, surrounded by saints who engage in a visual dialogue with her and bear witness to the revealed truth. There are other compositions, more conventional and austere, which centre on the Mother and Son, and, far from the hieratic attitude of earlier periods, these seek to emphasize Mary’s condition as a mother and the affective bond she forges with the infant Jesus.
Sacra conversazione
The Enthroned Virgin, or Sedes Sapientiae, symbolizes the Church’s universal power and wisdom. This idea is reinforced with the presence of Saint Peter with the keys to Paradise and the Gospel, and Saint Paul with the sword of martyrdom: the former as the institution’s founder and the latter as its guarantor. The iconography reproduces the model of the sacred conversations between the Apostles and the Virgin. The compositional scheme of this panel by Vincenzo Frediani (Lucca, recorded 1476 – died 1505) refers to the scene that the Florentine painter Domenico Ghirlandaio (1448/49 – 1494) had painted in the Cathedral of Saint Martin, and shows the expansion of the Florentine style beyond the city of the Medici family.
Peter Paulus Rubens, Virgin and Child with Saint Elizabeth and the Young Saint John, circa 1618 |
Vincenzo Frediani, Virgin and Child between Saint Peter and Saint Paul, circa 1490 |
Few symbols have achieved the universal iconic dimension of the cross. Regarded as the supreme emblem of the Christian community, the cross is a primary referent in its devotional iconography and a passionate symbol of sacrifice. Thanks in large measure to its capacity to transcend and attract, the cross is one of the motifs most frequently used by the artists of the period, and one that has endured beyond the historical and cultural context in which it emerged and was developed. In keeping with the example of the Martyrdom and Passion of Christ, Baroque iconography transforms the depiction of scenes of martyrdom – in which the protagonists are subjected to the most terrible tortures and the most unimaginable suffering – into images of worship and devotion in which the faithful see themselves reflected in these virtuous models, and imitate and establish empathic relationships with them.
Luis de Morales (El Divino), Ecce Homo, between 1570-1580 |
Marcellus Coffermans, Descent from the Cross, Third quarter of the16th century |
The Counter-Reformation elevated the figure of the saint to the status of an important mediator between man and God. The saint’s example, of meditation, prayer and renunciation of material things and the ideal of the contemplative life were to encourage the faithful to intensify their experience of Christian faith and facilitate communion with the divine. Rapture or mystical ecstasy, visionary illumination of a prophetic nature and an attitude of abnegation and unconditional dedication to the faith are among the external signs of the ideal of the Christian life, and many seventeenth-century paintings set out to exalt the kinds of supernatural experiences that inspire a state of religious plenitude in the subject. Far from provoking incredulity, this type of experience awakens in the believer an emotional response, a pious agitation of the mind and senses.
Doménikos Theotokópoulos (El Greco), Saint Peter and Saint Pau, 1590-1600 |
Josep de Ribera, Saint Jerome, 1618-1625 |
In Christian culture, the principle of decorum obliged believers to clearly distinguish between sacred and mundane or secular spaces, in accordance with a principle of hierarchical separation. However, in some depictions of saints, the verisimilitude of the account required that elements from both spheres should appear in the same space.
With the use of striking mise-en-scène effects derived from the theatre, Baroque iconography depicted episodes from the lives of the saints in a geographical imaginary shared by earthly and heavenly beings, a hybrid or composite of the two realities. This geography became a metaphor for the power of intercession of sacred images as objects of veneration, as well as being a clear allusion to the higher faculties attributed to saints.
Pictorial cycles
Painted religious series or cycles developed iconographical programmes based on hagiographical episodes. The figures most commonly used were the monastic orders. The appearance of this artistic type, indebted largely to devotional narrative forms, is framed in the context of the spread of a new Catholic culture that regarded the use of images for doctrinal purposes very positively. Following the precepts of the Counter-Reformation, commissioners sought more familiar realistic models that would help to spread the faith, and they used both literary and engraved sources, which artists often imitated.
Paolo De Matteis, King Wenceslaus IV Sentences Saint John of Nepomuk, 1710 |
Andrea Vaccaro, The Healing of Tobit, 1667 |