Friday, June 11, 2010
What are Posters for?
2. Promoting events - Exhibitions, theatre, movies, concerts
3. Politics and propaganda - War, elections, demonstrations
4. News - Newspaper billboards
Poster History
2. Printing press was a boon.
3. Invention of lithography in 1796 (and chromolitholithography later) meant that text based posters were not the only type of poster.
4. 1800s French poster makers like Toulous Lautrec took posters to artistic heights.
5. 1900s Photographic processes
What makes a Poster Record?
2. Fixed fields
Type of Material is "Picture".
Form of Material is " Two-dimensional nonprojectable graphic ".
3. General Material Designation is "Picture".
4. Physical description is "Poster".
5. 520 summary field conveys information about the contents (text and picture).
6. Subject subdivision "Poster".
7. Specific subject headings (e.g. "War posters").
8. Subject based call number has been retained, but the prefix "XV*" has been removed (e.g POSTERS/WORLD WAR, 1914-1918/69). This is for co-location.
Why is our Posters Collection So Good?
1. It's a snap shot of social mores, history and politics of New South Wales (with special reference to the 1970s and 1980s).
2. It contains significant collections of historical interest (e.g. World War I, The Vietnam War and the Australian Bicentennial, 1988).
3. Shows the types of printing and the typographical styles that were used at the time.
4. It contains valuable art posters by famous name poster artists (e.g. Martin Sharp and James Northfield).
5. It gives information not available elsewhere (e.g. photos of cultural identities pre internet, and non mainstream political views).
6. For the cataloguer it visualises how the subject headings work and how marc records provide that leap forward (i.e. every peice of information in the record is searchable, not in one "drawer").
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Historical Snap Shots
Significant Collections
Printing and Typography
Valuable Art Posters
Non Mainstream Information
Student protests (Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Bruce Williams)
Photos of people who have fallen out of celebrity (athlete Rick Mitchell).
Henry Jefferson Bate was the Liberal candidate for Macarthur in New South Wales in the Australian Federal Election of 1969 (Oct 25).