Metadata and the rhizome of museum practice

Andrew Yip

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    When the young Carl Linnaeus - the botanist now known as the father of taxonomy and perhaps also data architecture more generally - grew tiresome, his parents calmed him by placing a flower in his hand. As the apocrypha goes, it was perhaps these early ministrations that inspired in him the enduring fascination with the natural world that would lead him away from the career in the church that his parents intended, towards studies in medicine. Through medicine he found botany, and in 1735 published the Systema Naturae, formalising the process of defining biological nomenclatures whose roots persist today. Carl was obviously something of an original, but in Linnaean terms the apple did not fall far from the tree. His father had been a keen amateur botanist and also a product of self‑definition; contrary to the Swedish patronymic convention Nils Linnaeus had fashioned his own surname from the Swedish word for the linden tree.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number6
    Pages (from-to)34-39
    JournalArtlink: Australian Contemporary Art Quarterly
    Volume37
    Issue number1
    Publication statusPublished - 3 Mar 2017

    Keywords

    • Museums
    • Virtual Reality
    • Immersive Visualisation

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Visual Arts and Performing Arts
    • Museology

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