{"id":2634,"date":"2013-03-04T15:23:16","date_gmt":"2013-03-04T15:23:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.soton.ac.uk\/digitalhumanities\/?p=2634"},"modified":"2013-03-04T15:58:52","modified_gmt":"2013-03-04T15:58:52","slug":"art-archaeology-and-new-techologies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digitalhumanities.soton.ac.uk\/blog\/2634","title":{"rendered":"Art, Archaeology and New Technologies"},"content":{"rendered":"
This post was originally published at the Basing House: Community, Archaeology and Technology Project blog: http:\/\/basinghousecat.wordpress.com\/<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n Photos Acknowledgements: All of the photos in this post were taken by Alick Cotterill, so a big thank-you to him for letting us include them in this post.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n Last week I travelled up to the Hampshire County Council Museums Service Headquarters in Winchester to meet with a fab bunch of people. The Winchester School of Art staff and students had come to visit the Basing House archaeology collection, housed partly at the Winchester site and partly at Basing House, in order to learn about some new technologies.<\/p>\n We were planning to try to out pieces of kit for recording the artefacts from Basing House.<\/p>\n The day was a continuation from a project that we have been working on with Winchester School of Art to identify collaborations and opportunities for Archaeology and Art students by working together. We’ve been sharing skills, swapping data, and generally getting to know one another for a few months, and you can see what we’ve been up to over on the Archaeological Computing Research Group blog.<\/p>\n Archaeology PhD students spend the day at the Winchester School of Art print workshop:\u00a0http:\/\/digitalhumanities.soton.ac.uk\/blog\/1314<\/a><\/p>\n Art students spend the day at the Archaeology Department’s Archaeological Computing Laboratory (now the Digital Humanities Distributed Laboratory) finding out about 3D technologies:\u00a0http:\/\/digitalhumanities.soton.ac.uk\/blog\/<\/a><\/p>\n The first is a set of equipment that I have been using for a year or so as part of a project to record graveyard and cemetery headstones and church memorials with local history groups. The technology is called Highlight Reflectance Transformation Imaging, or Highlight RTI for short, and is a form of computational photography which allows you to take a series of photographs of an object and then compile them together into an interactive file where the light source can be manipulated in order to get better views of the object you’ve recorded. The project I’ve been working on has a blog here, where you can read all about what RTI is and how it works.<\/p>\n OuRTI project blog:\u00a0http:\/\/ourti.org\/<\/a><\/p>\n Here is an RTI that we made during the visit. This stone is not from Basing House, but was found\u00a0at Manor Farm, Chalton and was found ‘under the lawn near the well’. Manor Farm has links back as far as the 13th century, although the provenance of this stone grafitti has not been confirmed.<\/p>\n\n
Highlight RTI<\/h4>\n
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