www.smb.museum/veranstaltun...
πΊποΈπ Thanks to Emma Southon's ASTONISHING new book #Servus*, when I look at these objects (and pretty much everything else made "by" Romans), what I see are layers upon iayers of enslaved labour
*out in May, pre-order it, you will not be disappointed
This is a fun romp, lots of ethics chat! Provenance book club? Let me know if you want to borrow it!
Email header: testing chatgpt on the Beazley archive pottery database
Iβm so tired.
If theyβre going to make accounts mandatory at least they could offer single user FirstSearch premium options or an upgrade model where the search options/info available in FS is accessible, because basic WC is just deprived of useful search facets
ILL listserves used to have whispered stories about the dark ages when you got charged by the search in OCLC (or something like that) and I used to be so glad that the system was now open, inviting, for all of my patrons.
I use FirstSearch almost exclusively so I missed this but what a terrible move. Being able to cite and link to WC records is a boon for museum bibliographies, publication biographies, much more. How is that sustainable with a system like this? How much less discoverable is all of the data now?
Reading this counts as an academic study about reception of provenance right
Book on a pillow- jack mcdevittβs SEEKER with a classic space opera cover
When your dad sends you a SPACE OPERA about an ANTIQUITIES DEALER and PROVENANCE in SPACE
This is something we should think about across all writing intensive fields. Even if you're using the AI to turn notes into drafts, you are offloading the kinds of creative and epistemic decisions that drive the organization of your writing to a machine.
If you mistakenly didnβt get deep sea puns to amaze your loved ones, you can fix that here: squidfacts.bigcartel.com
V day card of an anglerfish with heart shaped light: youβre my light in the darkness
perfect V-day cards from @sarahmackattack.bsky.socialβs shop π¦
Kiem, P., & Donaldson, J. (2026). The Centurion and the Sapper: Did Australian Soldiers Souvenir Roman Artefacts While Training at Brightlingsea During World War I? Journal of Australian Studies, 1β17. doi.org/10.1080/1444...
@cairojim.bsky.social sorry forgot to tag you!
Thoughtful look at soldier souvenirs and reconstructing faint traces of their experiences with the ancient world in training from James Donaldson
and Paul Kiem: doi.org/10.1080/1444...
This should be delightful: www.asor.org/news/2026/01...
Katherine McDonaldβs truly marvelous βFour footprints, two languages, one tileβdeserves your time: βTwo slaves, working in conditions that were no doubt very difficult, taking a little time to mess about as friends and enjoy each otherβs company.β katherinemcdonald.net/2016/01/14/f...
People often think provenance is like Indiana Jones but realistically it is more like sticker collections crossed with a sprawling game of Memory
Not one but TWO emails this morning resolving mystery stickers on objects, an absolute treat
Odysseus had his crew lash him to the mast to keep him from doing an interview with Chotiner.
Fresh punnets of gooseberries, strawberries, raspberries, etc with a price sign and the heat of 75 degree sun making everything glow
I am very sorry about all of you who do not live in southern California
French senate adopts a bill to ease the return of colonial-era artifacts to their countries of origin
my son is five, same age as Liam Ramos. you don't need to have a child the same age to be fucking horrified by the violence we are doing (and HAVE BEEN doing) upon immigrant children in this nation. but that he keeps asking for his spidey backpack is the kind of detail that rips my heart in two.
I have such good news for you:
archaeotees.square.site/product/i-go...
(She does a lot of custom options so you could always ask about other versions! Super nice!)
I wish Iβd kept the ones with a menacing ear of corn (might have had a FEAR THE EAR tagline?) ILL is the best.
Happy #FossilFriday. Did you know Diplodocus skin glows orange under UV light? π¦π
Large brick wall with a tiny white signat the base of the wall that says "Slavery was real"
"Slavery was real"
Tiny sign at the base of a brick wall that, until yesterday, held panels about the people enslaved by George Washington.
Presidents House, Philadelphia.
An amazing 5th C bronze cauldron now going on display after 10 years of restoration and research
france3-regions.franceinfo.fr/grand-est/au...
More images and a link to the video of the press conference last Monday (in Italian) here. #archaeology πΊ #architecture #Vitruvius
www.centrostudivitruviani.org/studi/la-bas...