University of Salford, MediaCityUK, UK.
September 6-9, 2020
Digital Curation has become ubiquitous on a scale ranging from large
digital preservation programmes to individual citizen curation projects that
often involve collaborations between professionals and enthusiasts. Extending
Joseph Beuys’ controversial assertion that everyone is an artist, now everyone
is a (digital) curator. Curation in the context of Contemporary Art is closely
aligned with Digital Curation skills; while a grounding in contemporary art
marking is essential, of course, the ability to understand the contemporary
media ecology within which the works are created, exhibited, documented, and
preserved is equally relevant for contemporary art curators. Similarly, in
Performance there’s an interest in curation of emerging formats, or immersive
documents including social media and augmented/virtual reality, as well as
perspectives relating to the motivations, needs and aspirations of readers or
audience members who might engage with such document. More broadly, Digital
Curation aligns with interest in Digital Heritage, Digital Forensics, Digital
Preservation, and Digital Archives.
In focusing on this evolving area, DHRA 2020 mirrors the purpose of the
Digital Curation Lab at the University of Salford in its theme of ‘Situating
Digital Curation: Locating Creative Practice and Research between Digital
Humanities and the Arts.’ The Digital Curation Lab was established at
MediaCityUK in 2019 to facilitate research on the collection, preservation,
analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of digital assets and technologies
of memory at The University of Salford.
Submission Guidelines
We would like to extend a call for proposals for papers, presentations,
provocations, workshops, and other interventions on this theme for the 2020
DRHA conference. Individual 20-minute slots will be made for proposals selected
through a peer-review process. Other formats will be considered on a
case-by-case basis.
Conference Strands
- Digital arts and design
- Digital humanities
- Creative and cultural industries
- Digital libraries and archives
- Citizen science
- Documenting performance*
* The Documenting Performance strand is coordinated by Dr Joseph
Dunne-Howrie and Dr Lyn Robinson (Department of Library & Information
Science, CityLis, at City, University of London) who will be running this
strand as a DocPerform symposium throughout the parallel sessions of DRHA 2020.
This follows on from three previous DocPerform symposia that have been held in
London since 2016. Further information available on the DRHA 2020 website.
Publication
Selected DRHA2020 proceedings will be published in an affiliated issue
of the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, following
blind peer-review on the final submission for publication.
Submissions and Contact Information
All proposals must be submitted through EasyChair.
Abstracts sent via email will not be processed.
Questions about submissions and general queries about the conference
should sent through the DRHA 2020 website.
Submissions deadline: 31 January 2020
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