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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Oct. 31, 2002
Contact: James Grant
Office of Communications (209) 724-4400
(209) 724-4406 or 658-4406 (209) 724-4499 FAX
e-mail: james.grant@ucop.edu
UC MERCED LIBRARY WINS FEDERAL GRANT
FOR JAPANESE ART PROJECT
Hanford’s Lee Institute Collection to be
Digitized
MERCED, CA -- The University of California, Merced
Library, in collaboration with the Hanford, California-based Ruth
and Sherman Lee Institute for Japanese Art at the Clark Center,
has been awarded a $229,276 grant to create digital copies of the
Japanese art and research collection of the Lee Institute.
The grant was awarded by the Institute for Museum
and Library Services, a federal agency that supports the nation’s
museums and libraries and funds the prestigious National Leadership
Grants for Library-Museum Collaborations. This grant will fund the
first in a series of digitization projects at UC Merced. The project
will create digital objects for 454 hanging scrolls and 46 folding
screens from the Lee Institute collection; staff from the UC Berkeley
Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive will serve as consultants on
the project.
The Lee Institute Collection is highly regarded
by art experts. Professor Samuel Morse, Professor of Asian Art,
Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, said: “The Lee Institute
Collection is easily within the top 15 public and private collections
of Japanese art within the USA. Its special strengths lie in the
broad scope of the collection, covering almost 1,000 years of Japanese
art, and the high quality of many pieces as well as bringing together
the largest amount of Nanga research material.”
Added Bruce Miller, founding librarian for the
University: “This unique partnership will enable audiences
far beyond California’s San Joaquin Valley to experience the
significant intellectual resources that are housed at the Lee Institute.
Both scholars and the general public will be able to easily access
this permanent digital archive.” Access to the online images
will be provided by the University of California’s Online
Archive of California (OAC).
As part of the OAC, the Lee Institute Collection
will add content to other digital California museum collections,
including those from the Japanese American National Museum and the
Japanese American Relocation Digital Archive. John Y. Tateishi,
national executive director of the Japanese American Citizens League,
said the online integration of these collections enriches each collection
and will enable viewers to reach a broader understanding of Japanese
art, culture, and history and its intersection with American society.
“We find ourselves searching for
the markers of our culture that have given us such strong values,”
said Tateishi. “The artworks at the Lee Institute help us
understand more fully who we are by understanding from whence we
came.”
Those wishing for more information on the digitization
project may utilize the following web sites and contacts:
Websites
www.ucmerced.edu
www.shermanleeinstitute.org
www.imls.gov
R. Bruce Miller
University Librarian
University of California, Merced
P.O. 2039
Merced CA 95344
209.724.4443
bruce.miller@ucop.edu
Rob Herman
Executive Director
Lee Institute for Japanese Art
15770 Tenth Avenue
Hanford, CA 93230-9533
559.582.4915
rherman@shermanleeinstitute.org
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