French Paintings Catalogue and NAMA Quire theme #43
Replies: 4 comments 7 replies
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This is so exciting! I know the tremendous amount of work that's gone into this and really love the customizations the Nelson-Atkins team has made here. For anyone not familiar with this project already, be sure to check out one of their enhanced catalogue entries like for Edouard Manet’s, The Croquet Party to see some of the special features they've built.
And more! And they're way ahead of the curve on this one, but it's perhaps even more exciting that they're releasing their theme on GitHub for others to reuse! The Quire team will be looking at how we can best help pass that shared work on to the community. Really great! |
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This is a fantastic project @mgray4 and you've put so much work in to your customisations. I'm really interested in the Material Icon you've used to mark texts published with scholarly research, and would like to implement something similar to mark peer reviewed articles in our project. Thank you! |
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Hi all - Newbee here, so apologies for not entirely understanding how everything works! I've been scouring Quire pubs looking for examples of timelines and the Nelson-Atkins epub has a nice one. I went into the Layouts folder and found a file called Timeline, but it's an HTML file. Is there a MD file somewhere that I can borrow/steal to try our in the epub I'm working on? Or is that even what I need to incorporate at timeline into my project? |
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Hi! I am working on a new project and was wondering if anyone can help me make accordion menus work! I tried adding the js to the _assets> javascript >/*custom.js page, but it won't read it, and if I add it directly under the content it breaks the preview! I am not a developer so this is were I got the instructions: https://www.w3schools.com/howto/howto_js_accordion.asp Thanks! |
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The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, MO, recently launched its first digital catalogue. It features 106 French paintings and pastels, including the 29 Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterpieces from the Marion and Henry Bloch Collection given to the museum in 2015. The French Paintings Catalogue can be found on the museum’s website, www.nelson-atkins.org/fpc, where high-resolution images and rich historical context about each painting are freely accessible to all. We launched the catalogue with four paintings, an essay on the history of collecting, and a fun timeline that highlights significant historic events in Kansas City and at the museum. We will add more painting entries each month, sharing new insights and discoveries.
At the core of our digital publication is the Getty’s Quire framework, upon which we built a more robust, searchable platform for an extensive catalogue. Through the incorporation of an adjustable reading space and image viewer, along with enhanced footnotes and glossary terms, we have created an accessible publication. Collection-wide and individual essays and our custom-built timeline guide the reader through the museum’s French paintings collection. We hope by offering our NAMA theme on GitHub that we can help Quire become an institutional standard for the digital humanities.
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