Spelling suggestions: "subject:"museums"" "subject:"emuseums""
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The urban environmental parkChan, Chi-keong, Johnson, 陳志強 January 1995 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
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Museum of Classical Chinese FurnitureFung, Chi-yip., 馮志葉. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
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Transport Museum (Hong Kong) a sign-[nature] of the cityWong, Yiu-keung, Will, 黃耀強. January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
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Museum of archaeology in Tai Po (Wun Yiu)Cheng, Chuen-fung, Dara., 鄭傳峰. January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
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The traditional Chinese medicine centre: at the Hong Kong Museum of Medical SciencesKong, Oi-yan, Isabella., 江藹茵. January 2001 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Architecture / Master / Master of Architecture
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Viewer tagging in art museums: Comparisons to concepts and vocabularies of art museum visitorsKellogg Smith, Martha January 2006 (has links)
As one important experiment in the social or user-generated classification of online cultural heritage resources collections, art museums are leading the effort to elicit keyword descriptions of artwork images from online museum visitors. The motivations for having online viewers - presumably largely non-art-specialists - describe art images are (a) to generate keywords for image and object records in museum information retrieval systems in a cost-effective way and (b) to engage online visitors with the artworks and with each other by inviting visitors to express themselves and share their descriptions of artworks. This paper explores the question of how effective non-specialist art keyworders can be in capturing ("tagging") potentially useful concepts and terms for use in art information retrieval systems. To do this, the paper compares evidence from art museum visitor studies which describe how non-specialist art viewers react to and describe artworks and use museum-supplied information in their initial encounters with artworks. A theoretical model of artwork interpretation derived from art museum visitor research provides a framework with which to examine both the activity and the products of artwork tagging for image and information retrieval.
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Mediating and negotiating culture in an art museumDent, Sandra 05 1900 (has links)
Cross cultural education in art museums is an interesting and complex issue.
While cultural exhibitions have received attention in research, studies have usually
focused on the nature of the exhibitions and have not explored the audience's
understanding about culture in relationship to the exhibition.
This qualitative study explores how and what First Nations cultures have been
mediated by a civic art museum and negotiated by the museum audience, and the
relationship between the two. Observations of the exhibition and audience and
interviews with 99 adults in the museum were collected and analyzed to identify patterns
and relationships. Analysis of the exhibition found the mediation of culture was
distinguished by a partnership of the museum and First Nations cultures which reflected
both their languages and voices. Audience responses illustrated a range of affective,
factual and conceptual responses. Positive affective responses reflected the stimulation
and satisfaction with learning which occurred. Visitors indicated enlightenment, exposure
and revision of previously held ideas and assumptions, similarities and differences among
cultures, and insight into perspectives of others.
Partnership between the museum and the exhibition of masks from Northwest
First Nations cultures is seen as a complex undertaking requiring reflection and
examination of these two cultures. Visitor responses to the exhibition indicates learning,
thinking and innumerable ways individuals construct meanings and understanding from
art museum experiences.
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Tracing the Last Breath / Movements in Anlong VengWood, Timothy Dylan January 2009 (has links)
Anlong Veng was the last stronghold of the Khmer Rouge until the organization's
ultimate collapse and defeat in 1999. This dissertation argues that recent moves by the
Cambodian government to transform this site into an “historical-tourist area” is
overwhelmingly dominated by commercial priorities. However, the tourism project
simultaneously effects an historical narrative that inherits but transforms the
government’s historiographic endeavors that immediately followed Democratic
Kampuchea’s 1979 ousting. The work moves between personal encounters with the
historical, academic presentations of the country’s recent past, and government efforts to
pursue a museum agenda in the context of “development through tourism” policies. / Department of Anthropology Rice University Wagoner Scholarship for Study Abroad Center for Khmer Studies
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The spatial structure of exploration and encounter in museum layoutsChoi, Yoon Kyung 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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The experience of progression through architectural space as related to art museumsThomson, David Frederick 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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