Digital Innovation of the Year – Shortlist – Apollo Awards 2019 | Apollo Magazine

In May 2019 the Arab Image Foundation completed its $255,000 digitisation initiative (launched in 2017) ahead of the reopening of its building in Beirut. It launched an online platform that makes more than 10,000 images available for the first time. More are coming – and some interactive features are also in the pipeline.

Courtesy Arab Image Foundation

In February 2019 Art UK launched the world’s first freely accessible digital database of public sculpture, with 1,000 initial entries (the number now stands at nearly 11,000). The three-year project aims to catalogue works in public collections or in outdoor settings across the country, many of which have never been documented in any way until now.

Courtesy Towner Art Gallery

This project by artist Trevor Paglen, together with the AI researcher Kate Crawford, went viral in September, when their ‘Training Humans’ exhibition opened at the Fondazione Prada in Milan. It asked users to upload photographs of themselves and find out how the machine-learning dataset ImageNet would classify them – often with disturbing results.

Courtesy Fondazione Prada, Milan

The British Museum and Samsung have upgraded and reopened the digital learning centre in Bloomsbury, and expanded the ‘Virtual Visits’ programme for schools unable to make the trip. There are sessions on prehistoric Britain, Roman Britain and the Indus Valley, with more in development.

Photo: © Josh Redman

In January 2019 Watercolour World, an online project to catalogue documentary watercolours made before 1900, was launched. Works can be searched by location depicted on a map, as well as by keyword, and a series of accompanying articles provide more detailed analysis about individual artists and broader themes.