The website OpenBibArt - A century of western bibliography on art history
allows the user to query more than 1.2 million bibliographic records summarizing literature in the fields of art historical and archaeological research published between 1910 and 2007. When possible, links to full-text sources are provided.
In accordance with France’s Open Science Policy, data on this website is in open access, for all audiences under a CC BY 4.0 license.
History
OpenBibArt - A century of western bibliography on art history
aggregates the records of four related databases:
Project motivation and outcome
Between 2009-2021, the four databases were only available in various configurations on three different platforms :
However, none of these platforms provided access to all four databases.
OpenBibArt - A century of western bibliography on art history
is a new website developed to facilitate research and access to all four databases simultaneously.
Features
Bilingual interface: French and English.
Three search modes: simple, advanced and expert. A query builder facilitates the formulation of complex queries.
The historic BHA thesauri (BHA Authorities) were originally created by the Gettyindependently of the Getty Vocabularies. Where possible, historic BHA Authority terms have been aligned with Getty’s Art and Architecture Thesaurus (AAT) and the Thesaurus of Geographic Names (GN).
The six BHA thesauri may be consulted to identify and link to controlled vocabulary terms used in bibliographic records. Alternately one can search by the same terms listed within the records. Various filters allow one to refine one’s results.
In some cases, artist names are enriched through links to the corresponding records in Agorha (INHA), BNF, Dbpedia, Library of Congress, ISNI, Getty Research Institute, Idref and Wikidata.
Export formats
The website offers export of records in Extended MODS, Dublin Core and RIS formats. A summary text list of short records is also available.
Technical Aspects
OpenBibArt - A century of western bibliography on art history
was designed and produced by Inist-CNRS. It is based on “VIBAD” (Visualisation Indexation de Bases Documentaires/Visualization and Indexing of Documentary Databases) a fully configurable platform, designed in coordination with the search engine, Elasticsearch.
It is an adaptive website, compliant with “responsive web design” allowing easy reading and navigation on any device
Metadata is expressed in the Library of Congress Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) format, adapted and extended by Inist-CNRS to include metadata not covered by the format.
The “communication” area of the website utilizes the open-source content management system, WordPress.