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Publishing The Art Bulletin

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Looking Back to See Ahead

How do we envision the digital future for The Art Bulletin? 
In celebration of the centennial year of the first issue in 1913, and building upon the foundations of the “Centennial Anthology” compiled in 2011, we feature three articles in two different formats toward your consideration of The Art Bulletin’s digital future. You may look back at developments of the print journal through an interactive timeline in which all Table of Contents are grouped by decade; changes in format and content are noted by year. Scalar, the publishing platform used here, allows further exploration of this information through links, much like a web site, and by tags, which, more than links and key words, allow the reader to select alternate paths through this information. Is this the kind of publishing option The Art Bulletin should consider taking advantage of in its digital future? We ask you to explore this site, imagine the possibilities, and let us know your thoughts.


This web publication marks the second Centennial celebration of The Art Bulletin, which may rightly claim several beginnings. The first centennial celebration in 2011 marked the occasion of the foundation of the College Art Association in 1911, for which Natalie Boymel Kampen, then Chair of the Editorial Board, compiled a “Centennial Anthology” of board members’ favorite articles for the College Art Association website. Many of these articles mark key moments in the intellectual development of the discipline of art history; all reflect the social, structural, and infrastructural development of the journal.  Explicit, directed involvement with the formation of the discipline is evident from the very first issues as has been noted recently in several venues. The Centennial Session, “Celebrating The Art Bulletin,” held during the 2011 annual conference looked back to articles published during the early decades of the journal’s existence.  In addition, Susan Ball, executive director emerita, edited a volume of essays on the history of CAA, The Eye, the Hand, the Mind: 100 Years of the College Art Association, in which Craig Houser considered the history of The Art Bulletin along with the full slate of CAA’s scholarly publications. Following those activities, it seemed appropriate to explore new possibilities for scholarly publication on the occasion of the journal’s centennial.

In celebration of the centennial year of the first issue in 1913, and building upon the foundations of the “Centennial Anthology” compiled in 2011, we feature three articles in two different formats toward your consideration of The Art Bulletin’s digital future. “Publishing The Art Bulletin: Past, Present, and Future,” presents these articles as they may be found in the journal current online format, as pdf documents presented through Jstor, and as they might be read in the tablet format that is popular now. We take a further step with one article to imagine how it might look if published with technologies presently in development. You may look back at the development of the print journal through an interactive timeline in which all Table of Contents are grouped by decade; changes in format and content, usually introduced through editorial statements, are noted by year.

To a great extent, this is an exercise in form and function, tracing some of the ways by which the journal came to take its present form to serve the purposes it serves now, to ask what forms the journal might take to serve the future needs of the discipline.  Intersections with content are inevitable, however content is considered here mainly as it reflects the stated concerns of the Editors-in-Chief and their Editorial Boards.  Scalar, the publishing platform used here, allows further exploration of this information through links, much like a web site, and by tags, which, more than key words, allow the reader to strike alternate paths. Although arranged in the separate sections for timeline and featured articles, you may decide how to order your reading. You might, for example, decide to explore tags for editorial statements, or other tagged themes noted in timeline entries. Cost, for example, has always been a concern, so changes and events associated with cost (subventions, for example, and cost increases for subscriptions) have been tagged, as have illustrations and other aspects of format, and content.  Moreover, tag visualization provides impressionistic and dynamic rendering of information. (For instruction in how to use Scalar’s navigation possibilities, see this video.) Charting your own paths through this information will sketch alternate histories of intellectual concerns as well as the more mundane restrictions and that have mitigated the aspirations of the journal's Editors and readership. 

Is this the kind of publishing option The Art Bulletin should consider taking advantage of in its digital future? As the journal of record for the discipline in America, The Art Bulletin provides essential services for art historical scholarship across all fields (presenting a compendious view of ongoing research and emerging areas of common interest, as well as a platform for the peer reviewed publications so essential to tenure and promotion in the academy) with the goal of sustaining the discipline. How do you imagine the journal might exploit online opportunities while continuing to serve the discipline? No step into the future should be undertaken without concerted consideration by the readership of The Art Bulletin of past developments and current essential services. We ask you to explore this site, imagine the possibilities, and let us know your thoughts. 

Thelma K. Thomas, Chair, Editorial Board

Interactive Timeline



Featured Articles (from the Centennial Anthology)



Ornament


Ananda K. Coomaraswamy


Vol. 21, No. 4 (December 1939) 375-382






About a Type of Islamic Incense Burner

Mehmet Aga-Oglu


Vol. 27, no. 1 (March 1945) 28–45






Imagining Otherness in Ivory: 
African Portrayals of the Portuguese ca. 1492


Suzanne Preston Blier


Vol. 75, no. 3 (September 1993) 375–96




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