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NINCH >> NINCH Programs
>> Copyright >> 2001
Town Meeting
COPYRIGHT
TOWN MEETING: Chicago, March 3,
2001
Speaker Biographical Sketches
Thomas W. Bower
Thomas W. Bower is Deputy Registrar at the
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. Among
other duties, he has responsibility for oversight of the museum's
copyright issues and has been Co-Chair of the SI Rights and Reproductions
Committee since 1992. During that time he has overseen the creation
of image use guidelines for the institution. He has been a member
of CAA's Committee on Intellectual Property since 1995.
Carol Ann Hughes
Carol Ann Hughes has worked as
an academic librarian in a variety of settings for over 25 years.
She is currently employed by Questia Media, Inc., a commercial research
service designed to support students in undergraduate core courses.
She came to Questia Media from the University of Iowa where she
served as Head of Information, Research, and Instructional Services.
Other former positions include that of program officer for RLG's
interlibrary loan program, SHARES and the University of Michigan
where she was assistant to the Director. She received her MLS from
the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, an MBA from UCLA,
and a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan School of Information.
Robert Panzer
Robert Panzer is the Executive
Director of VAGA, the Visual Artists and Galleries Association,
Inc., an artists membership organization and copyright collective.
Formed over twenty years ago, VAGA was the first copyright clearinghouse
in the country to represent reproduction and related rights for
fine artists. VAGA represents over 500 American artists and estates,
and through agreements with sister organizations worldwide, approximately
2000 foreign creators. In addition to VAGA's role in administering
licenses on behalf of its members, VAGA polices for infringements
in areas of copyright, trademark and moral rights. Robert Panzer
is a member of the CAA Committee on Intellectual Property.
Jennifer Trant
Jennifer Trant is a the Executive
Director of the Art Museum Image Consortium (AMICO) an innovative
not-for-profit collaboration that shares, shapes and standardizes
museum digital documentation and makes it available for educational
use. Trant serves on the Board of the Media and Technology Committee
of the American Association of Museums (AAM), is past chair of the
Multimedia Working Group of the International Council of Museums
(ICOM) Committee on Documentation (CIDOC), is co-chair of the Museums
and the Web Conference and the International Cultural Heritage Informatics
Meeting (ICHIM), and was on the program committee of the ACM Digital
Libraries conference in 1999 and 2000.
She was the first Director of
the Museum Educational Site Licensing Project (MESL), an innovative
project to explore the use of digital museum documentation on university
campuses, participated in the Visual Images Working Group of Conference
on Fair Use (CONFU). Trant was Editor-in-Chief of Archives and Museum
Informatics: the cultural heritage informatics quarterly, a peer-reviewed
journal from Kluwer Academic Publishers, from 1997-2000.
Trained as an Historian (BA
Hons, Trinity College, Toronto) and Art Historian (MA, Queen's University,
Kingston) Trant's career has included work with the National Gallery
of Canada, the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the Getty Art History
Information Program, The Art Information Task Force (a joint project
of the College Art Association and the Getty Project that produced
the Categories for the Description of Works of Art), the Arts and
Humanities Data Service, King's College, London, England and Archives
& Museum Informatics, a cultural heritage informatics consulting
firm. Hercurrent interests center around the use of technology to
improve access to cultural heritage information, and to integrate
the culture fully into digital libraries for research, learning
and enjoyment.
Renate Wiedenhoeft
Renate Wiedenhoeft is President
and co-founder of Saskia Ltd. Cultural Documentation. Saskia was
established in 1966, amidst the dynamic forces of art history at
Columbia University in the sixties, to provide high quality images
for serious art history research and education. Quickly acquiring
the support of the ten largest research institutions in the country,
and with the partnership of Fulbright scholar Ron Wiedenhoeft, Renate
grew the company into the important archive that it is today. She
has been active in numerous organizations over the past 35 years
-- such as CAA since 1966 and VRA since its inception. Other related
organizations include ARLIS/NA, US/ICOMOS/ National Trust Organization.
Renate has overseen many transitions in the materials Saskia provides
for scholarly study -- not only in the kinds of materials offered
but also in the difficulties of acquiring those materials. From
having to help free her husband from nine months of imprisonment
in East Berlin for photographing architecture, to negotiating rights
with museums around the world, Renate's breadth of experience offers
a broad perspective on the many issues involved in providing educational
materials in an ever-changing environment.
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