Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art

This is a brief slideshow intended to be delivered (by Sami Norling?) in my absence from the Linked Art: Networking Digital Collections and Scholarship event at the Victoria & Albert Museum, 1 October 2019. [slide 1] Kerameikos.org is an international project that seeks to define the intellectua...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gruber, Ethan
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463595
https://zenodo.org/record/3463595
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3463595
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description This is a brief slideshow intended to be delivered (by Sami Norling?) in my absence from the Linked Art: Networking Digital Collections and Scholarship event at the Victoria & Albert Museum, 1 October 2019. [slide 1] Kerameikos.org is an international project that seeks to define the intellectual concepts of ceramics studies following the principles of Linked Open Data. This phase of the project is funded by the US National Endowment for the Humanities and is focused primarily on creating URIs for Archaic and Classical Greek pottery concepts, which includes authoring definitions for shapes, artists, techniques, production places, etc. and linking them to equivalent entries in other LOD thesauri, such as the Getty and British Museum vocabularies and the Pleiades Gazetteer of Ancient Places. We are also aggregating vase data from partner collections as a proof of concept to facilitate new types of query and visualization. The emerging Linked Art community plays a significant role in this process. [slide 2] The Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields has a small collection of Greek vases that have served as a test case for building a harvester that integrates Linked Art-compliant JSON-LD into Kerameikos' Linked Open Data ecosystem. This vase pictured here in the IMA, represented by a URI, is a particular shape called a stamnos. It was painted by Hermonax, an Athenian artist, in the Red-figure technique in roughly the mid-5th century B.C. [slide 3] In a test of JSON-LD provided by Sami Norling at the IMA, some minor modifications were made to fill in any gaps in cataloging with the relevant Getty Art & Architecture Thesaurus, Union List of Artist Names, and Thesaurus of Geographic Names identifiers. These URIs have equivalencies in Kerameikos.org and other systems. [slide 4] The harvesting workflow parses the Linked Art JSON-LD and distills it into the most basic network graph, represented here as RDF/XML conforming to the the underlying Linked Art profile in the CIDOC CRM ontology. The human-readable labels from the JSON, which may be useful to developers working directly with that format of data, are removed, since the preferred labels in English and other languages are already inherent to Kerameikos.org's own thesaurus data model. [slide 5] After entering basic metadata about a dataset (in this case, the IMA's collection of Greek vases) and a link to the JSON-LD file on a web server (which will one day be a URL for an API response), the harvester will extract the JSON and process each human-made object into RDF/XML, replacing Getty URIs with Kerameikos ones, when applicable. After this completes, the RDF is published to the Kerameikos.org SPARQL endpoint. SPARQL is a query language for linked data, and the underlying triple database is the backbone of aggregation in this project, as well as Nomisma.org, a similar linked data project for numismatics. [slide 6] After the workflow completes, the vases will immediately become available in the pages associated with concepts connected to the IMA's vases, for example kerameikos.org/id/stamnos or kerameikos.org/id/hermonax. This user interface can accommodate multiple jpeg images per vase, as well as IIIF services and several types of 3D models rendered in the 3D Hop library or the Sketchfab viewer. [slide 7] By means of the relationship between the Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names, Kerameikos.org place identifiers, and the Pleiades Gazetteer of Ancient Places, it is possible to build a transformation process that converts Linked Art RDF into a different RDF data model required by the Pelagios Network. Kerameikos.org is now a data hub for Pelagios, and currently about 200 Greek vases from 6 partners are available in the Peripleo explorer. This number will grow into the thousands in the coming months and years as the full range of British Museum, Getty, and archaeological pottery are integrated into Kerameikos. In conclusion, as the Linked Art standard begins to proliferate throughout the museum community, harvesting will be greatly simplified by having one set of APIs and models that can be applied broadly across many museum or archaeological databases, rather than relying on intermediate processes of OpenRefine data cleaning and spreadsheet-to-RDF transformation with one-off programming scripts.
format Conference Object
author Gruber, Ethan
spellingShingle Gruber, Ethan
Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
author_facet Gruber, Ethan
author_sort Gruber, Ethan
title Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
title_short Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
title_full Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
title_fullStr Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
title_full_unstemmed Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art
title_sort linked open greek pottery: kerameikos.org and linked art
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463595
https://zenodo.org/record/3463595
long_lat ENVELOPE(165.533,165.533,-72.700,-72.700)
ENVELOPE(165.533,165.533,-72.700,-72.700)
geographic Pleiades
The Pleiades
geographic_facet Pleiades
The Pleiades
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation https://zenodo.org/communities/digital_pottery
https://zenodo.org/communities/linkeddata
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463596
https://zenodo.org/communities/digital_pottery
https://zenodo.org/communities/linkeddata
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
cc-by-4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463595
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463596
_version_ 1766186141527048192
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.3463595 2023-05-15T18:13:34+02:00 Linked Open Greek Pottery: Kerameikos.org and Linked Art Gruber, Ethan 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463595 https://zenodo.org/record/3463595 en eng Zenodo https://zenodo.org/communities/digital_pottery https://zenodo.org/communities/linkeddata https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463596 https://zenodo.org/communities/digital_pottery https://zenodo.org/communities/linkeddata Open Access Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode cc-by-4.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY Text Presentation article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463595 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3463596 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z This is a brief slideshow intended to be delivered (by Sami Norling?) in my absence from the Linked Art: Networking Digital Collections and Scholarship event at the Victoria & Albert Museum, 1 October 2019. [slide 1] Kerameikos.org is an international project that seeks to define the intellectual concepts of ceramics studies following the principles of Linked Open Data. This phase of the project is funded by the US National Endowment for the Humanities and is focused primarily on creating URIs for Archaic and Classical Greek pottery concepts, which includes authoring definitions for shapes, artists, techniques, production places, etc. and linking them to equivalent entries in other LOD thesauri, such as the Getty and British Museum vocabularies and the Pleiades Gazetteer of Ancient Places. We are also aggregating vase data from partner collections as a proof of concept to facilitate new types of query and visualization. The emerging Linked Art community plays a significant role in this process. [slide 2] The Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields has a small collection of Greek vases that have served as a test case for building a harvester that integrates Linked Art-compliant JSON-LD into Kerameikos' Linked Open Data ecosystem. This vase pictured here in the IMA, represented by a URI, is a particular shape called a stamnos. It was painted by Hermonax, an Athenian artist, in the Red-figure technique in roughly the mid-5th century B.C. [slide 3] In a test of JSON-LD provided by Sami Norling at the IMA, some minor modifications were made to fill in any gaps in cataloging with the relevant Getty Art & Architecture Thesaurus, Union List of Artist Names, and Thesaurus of Geographic Names identifiers. These URIs have equivalencies in Kerameikos.org and other systems. [slide 4] The harvesting workflow parses the Linked Art JSON-LD and distills it into the most basic network graph, represented here as RDF/XML conforming to the the underlying Linked Art profile in the CIDOC CRM ontology. The human-readable labels from the JSON, which may be useful to developers working directly with that format of data, are removed, since the preferred labels in English and other languages are already inherent to Kerameikos.org's own thesaurus data model. [slide 5] After entering basic metadata about a dataset (in this case, the IMA's collection of Greek vases) and a link to the JSON-LD file on a web server (which will one day be a URL for an API response), the harvester will extract the JSON and process each human-made object into RDF/XML, replacing Getty URIs with Kerameikos ones, when applicable. After this completes, the RDF is published to the Kerameikos.org SPARQL endpoint. SPARQL is a query language for linked data, and the underlying triple database is the backbone of aggregation in this project, as well as Nomisma.org, a similar linked data project for numismatics. [slide 6] After the workflow completes, the vases will immediately become available in the pages associated with concepts connected to the IMA's vases, for example kerameikos.org/id/stamnos or kerameikos.org/id/hermonax. This user interface can accommodate multiple jpeg images per vase, as well as IIIF services and several types of 3D models rendered in the 3D Hop library or the Sketchfab viewer. [slide 7] By means of the relationship between the Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names, Kerameikos.org place identifiers, and the Pleiades Gazetteer of Ancient Places, it is possible to build a transformation process that converts Linked Art RDF into a different RDF data model required by the Pelagios Network. Kerameikos.org is now a data hub for Pelagios, and currently about 200 Greek vases from 6 partners are available in the Peripleo explorer. This number will grow into the thousands in the coming months and years as the full range of British Museum, Getty, and archaeological pottery are integrated into Kerameikos. In conclusion, as the Linked Art standard begins to proliferate throughout the museum community, harvesting will be greatly simplified by having one set of APIs and models that can be applied broadly across many museum or archaeological databases, rather than relying on intermediate processes of OpenRefine data cleaning and spreadsheet-to-RDF transformation with one-off programming scripts. Conference Object sami DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pleiades ENVELOPE(165.533,165.533,-72.700,-72.700) The Pleiades ENVELOPE(165.533,165.533,-72.700,-72.700)