Visualizing Networks: Approaches to Network Analysis in Art History.
Artl@s Bulletin vol. 6, 3 (Fall 2017)
Guest Editor : Miriam KIENLE
Sommaire / Content :
Between Nodes and Edges: Possibilities and Limits of Network Analysis in Art History
Miriam Kienle
Continuity and Disruption in European Networks of Print Production, 1550-1750
Matthew D. Lincoln
Keeping Our Eyes Open: Visualizing networks and art history
Stephanie Porras
Workshop as Network: A Case Study from Mughal South Asia
Yael Rice
Network Analysis and Feminist Artists
Michelle Moravec
The Computer as Filter Machine:
A Clustering Approach to Categorize Artworks Based on a Social Tagging Network
Stefanie Schneider and Hubertus Kohle
Enriching and Cutting:
How to Visualize Networks Thanks to Linked Open Data Platforms
Léa Saint-Raymond and Antoine Courtin
What You See Is What You Get: The “Artifice of Insight.”
A Conversation between R. Luke DuBois and Anne Collins Goodyear
Anne C. Goodyear
Digital Art History “Beyond the Digitized Slide Library”:
An Interview with Johanna Drucker and Miriam Posner
Miriam Kienle
The Artl@s Bulletin (ISSN 2264-2668) is a peer-reviewed, transdisciplinary journal devoted to spatial and transnational questions in the history of the arts, published by the ENS and the CNRS in partnership with Purdue Publishing at: http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/artlas/
For more information on the aims and scope of the Artl@s Bulletin, please see the About the Journal page, and feel free to contact the editors, Catherine Dossin (cdossin@purdue.edu) and Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel (beatrice.joyeux-prunel@ens.fr).

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