Don't have a lot of time? Join us for some "p'tite vite" (lightning talks) covering a variety of topics in art librarianship.
Artworks as Records: Healing Archival Absences in a Disability Arts Collection through Community Partnership
Speakers: Noa Ryan, Maylyn Iglesias, Kailee Faber
The Organization was a nonprofit active in the New York City area from the late 1960s through the 2010s that provided arts workshops and studio space and resources to people with severe mental illness and/or developmental disability with a history of institutionalization. From the 1970s-2010s, the organization maintained what they referred to as an “archive” of artworks created by members in workshops hosted in mental healthcare institutions or as part of the studio program. The records are mostly artworks on paper created in a variety of mediums, from painting to drawing to collage.
In our presentation, we will provide a brief overview of the collection, grant project, and processing approach before centering our talk on the unique strengths and challenges associated with incorporating community voices in archival processing. We will discuss the research, outreach, and ethics components of working with materials from underrepresented artists in the disability arts community. We’ll also address the challenges related to tackling a large-scale grant project with limited resources. We will close by describing our future goals for building out this collection with oral histories, activating the material with programming, using the artworks as educational tools, and engaging in further community collaboration.
Mapping Post-War Artistic Networks with Semantic Technologies
Speaker: Calista Donohoe
Art librarianship often operates in spaces where information is fragmented, siloed, or restricted. In this context, resistance can take the form of experimentation to create more open, flexible, and interconnected systems of information. This lightning talk will present the Roma/New York, 1948–1964 pilot project, an experimental initiative that demonstrates how knowledge graphs can model complex art historical narratives and serve as a mode of resistance within art librarianship.
This lightning talk will reflect on the process of developing the pilot, from identifying entities in the Celant/Costantini text to modeling relationships with attention to time and place. It will also address challenges encountered in translating narrative accounts into structured data, including issues of granularity, ambiguity, and alignment with other vocabularies.
Most importantly, this presentation will reflect on the broader implications of linked data as a cultural commitment to resistance through openness, collaboration, and connection. By resisting the fragmentation and privatization of information, art librarians can use linked open data to reveal connections across collections, geographies, and histories. The Roma/New York pilot shows that even small-scale, experimental initiatives can model a future where knowledge is more connected, accessible, and resilient.
Overcoming Student Resistance through providing Reference Services through the Writing/Tutoring Center
Speaker: Martha Neth
Academic libraries need to reimagine reference services in response to shifting student needs and changing patterns of campus engagement. One promising model integrates reference support directly into the writing and tutoring center, bringing research assistance to where students already seek academic help. This approach reduces barriers to library use, embeds research skill development into existing support networks, and creates a seamless pathway between tutoring, writing support, and research guidance. Students who resist traditional reference services can be reached more directly. And conversely, students who resist tutoring services may be brought into the fold through reference work.
This lightning talk will share a case study of implementing reference services in a tutoring center environment, highlighting how cross-trained tutors can address both research and writing challenges in a single interaction. Attendees will learn strategies for staff training, workflow integration, and marketing to students. I will explain how this approach fosters collaboration between librarians and tutoring staff, creates more authentic research consultations, and increases students’ confidence in navigating information resources.
Resisting Loss in the Performing Arts: Preserving At-Risk Media
Speaker: Olivia Buck
This lightning talk examines a digital preservation initiative launched in Spring 2025 at the Juilliard School to safeguard more than thirty years of archival performance recordings originally captured on VHS. In partnership with a digitization vendor, the project preserves student and faculty performances alongside masterclasses led by internationally recognized artists. This project positions digital preservation methodologies as a means of resisting the material and structural realities that commonly threaten time-based performing arts media. Attendees will gain practical insight into how art information professionals can apply preservation and descriptive strategies to support access to fragile, ephemeral, and at-risk audiovisual materials.
Mapping Memory: The Digital Lifecycle of the Architectural Postcard
Speakers: Riley Mang, Nilda Sanchez-Rodriguez
This talk presents the digitization, preservation, and exhibition of the Frank Wayde Hall Postcard Collection, a unique archive of over 13,500 postcards documenting architecture and urban life from around the world, with a particular focus on New York City. Acquired by the Architecture Library at The City College of New York in 2016, the collection captures streetscapes, buildings, and skylines that no longer exist, offering rare insights into the evolution of urban environments and the lived experiences of city residents.
The project, led by the Chief Architecture Librarian, combined archival scholarship, technical digitization, and public exhibition to make these ephemeral materials accessible to researchers, students, and the public. In collaboration, the team addressed both curatorial and technical challenges, including metadata creation, digital stewardship using JSTOR and Omeka platforms, and the translation of a complex archival collection into an engaging online exhibit.
The talk will highlight the process of turning this large-scale archival collection into a research-ready and pedagogically valuable resource, emphasizing decision-making in digital curation, collaborative project management, and platform-specific strategies. Attendees will gain practical guidance for similar initiatives, as well as an understanding of the scholarly potential of visual ephemera for architecture, urban history, and cultural studies.
By integrating conceptual research leadership with hands-on technical execution, this presentation demonstrates how digitization projects can transform historical collections into accessible, impactful resources for both academic and public audiences.