Review of Robert A. Baron's Website
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ILLINOIS HERITAGE ASSOCIATION ONLINE
January 25, 1998

Table of Contents:

1. ROBERT A. BARON WEBSITE
[2. ERROR MESSAGES]
[3. EXHIBIT IDEAS]

1. ROBERT A. BARON WEBSITE. Arts information consultant Robert A. Baron has a website full of interesting information about arts management. The site is also a good demonstration of how to utilize existing information and put it together in a web format, primarily using text. There are five sections to the site: Papers on Copyright, Scholarship, and Images; Papers on Museum and Art Computerization; Guides to Museum and Arts Computerizing; Divertimenti; and E-Mail Musings. Baron makes use of various presentations and articles he has prepared and prints the full text online. One of the presentations in Section One is from a Town Meeting in Portland, OR, September 22, 1997, "Copyright Law in the Digital World. Fair Use, Education, and Libraries after CONFU" [Conference on Fair Use]. Baron's paper, "Trying Out the Guidelines," details a number of drawbacks for educators in the proposed guidelines.

In Section Two an interesting article by Baron on "The Computerized Accession Ledger" addresses the function of the Registrar's paper log book in the age of computers. The article was printed in *Registrar*, vol. 8, no. 2 (Fall 1991): 41,ff. Section Three is a reference section. It contains a glossary of collection management terms, and outlines of procedures such as a systems needs analysis and a flow chart for deaccessioning. Section Four offers food for thought, but in a lighter vein. Especially intriguing is "Giocondaphiliac's Delight: Mona Lisa's Images in the Modern World." There are links to depictions of Mona Lisa in a Charles Adams cartoon, a postcard, wrapping paper, and a cookie jar. Baron suggests what it all means. Section Five cleverly integrates email postings of Baron and others on current topics. One subject, "On National Myths in Museums and Theme Parks" addresses some of the differences between museums and theme parks and why people go to them. Baron is meticulous in citing the origins of images, written material, and Internet sources. The url is:
[http://www.studiolo.org/index.htm].

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