Museum of the Moving Image

Museum of the Moving Image (New York) will use CollectionSpace to manage and provide online access to its collection of over 130,000 film, television, and digital media-related artifacts. The implementation of CollectionSpace will be the culmination of close to ten years of work at Moving Image devoted to expanding open source resources for cultural heritage.

 
The Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology

The Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology (Berkeley) will use CollectionSpace to manage and provide online access to its collection of more than 3.8 million cataloged objects of material culture from around the world. The Hearst will integrate CollectionSpace with the Delphi faceted browser tool.

 
The University and Jepson Herbaria

The University and Jepson Herbaria (Berkeley) will lead the first biodiversity natural history implementation of CollectionSpace. The Herbaria will expand CollectionSpace to support research-driven interoperability, including the aggregation of content for the Consortium of California Herbaria.

 
The Walker Art Center

The Walker Art Center (Minneapolis) will use CollectionSpace to create an online catalog with an emphasis on primary source materials assembled and generated during the acquisition process. CollectionSpace will form the core component of the Walker’s online scholarly catalog, funded by the Getty Foundation Online Scholarly Catalogue Initiative (OSCI).

 
Statens Museum for Kunst

Statens Museum for Kunst (Copenhagen), the National Gallery of Denmark, will use CollectionSpace as their enterprise-wide collections information, management, and access resource. It will serve back-of-the house needs, and integrate seamlessly with SMK digital, their new digital communications and education initiative.

 
Miami-Dade County, Department of Cultural Affairs, Art in Public Places, Digital Collection Initiative

Miami-Dade County, Department of Cultural Affairs, Art in Public Places, Digital Collection Initiative (Miami) will use CollectionSpace as its core management tool to track, maintain, and describe the County’s art collection as well as house reference and interpretation information that will be made publicly available via the Digital Collection Initiative’s new website to be launched in 2011.