Establishing, Managing and Sharing of the Museum Information: Examples of the Taiwan Museum of Art and the Yuyu Yang Art Research Center

碩士 === 臺南藝術學院 === 博物館學研究所 === 90 === Confined to limited manpower, material resources, and lack of consensus, the museums have their own way in the administration and information circulation without an integrating instruction. National Science Council have come up with the 「Digital Museum Project」,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: 潘美璟
Other Authors: 葉貴玉
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2002
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/79948156182403922237
Description
Summary:碩士 === 臺南藝術學院 === 博物館學研究所 === 90 === Confined to limited manpower, material resources, and lack of consensus, the museums have their own way in the administration and information circulation without an integrating instruction. National Science Council have come up with the 「Digital Museum Project」, trying to create a better online condition to boost the information circulation. However, what is the link between the establishment and management of the sharing collection information? The research hereby analyzes the experience and result accumulated from western museums. Through it, I try to inspect the difficulties and shortage that the two famous museums, Taiwan Museum of Art and the Yuyu Yang Art search Center had encountered in this field. The research result indicates that the establishing, managing and sharing of collection information is a serial consequence. As to the establishment of collection information, the standards of collecting operation concerned should be regulated as early as possible, for those are also related to the management and share of collection information. Though the MICI-DC in the project of National Science Council digital museum can be functioned as a foundation of information exchange among various museums, the item alone is still deficient to the establishment and management operation. Besides, the pan-nation, inter-institute, and cross-nation cooperation is the non-stop trend in the future. All domestic museums ought to open their arms for obstacle-free access and form consensus, moving toward the full share of information.