Title :
Ten years of art imaging research
Author :
Martinez, Kirk ; Cupitt, John ; Saunders, David ; Pillay, Ruven
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Comput. Sci., Southampton Univ., UK
fDate :
1/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper describes a decade of work on digital imaging for museums. From 1989 to 1992, the visual arts system for archiving and retrieval of images (VASARI) project produced a digital-imaging system that made color-calibrated images of up to 20000×20000 pixels directly from paintings. It used seven color-separation bands in the visible region, resulting in an average color error of around 1 ΔE*ab unit. These images have since been used to monitor the condition of paintings, document paintings during conservation treatment, including predicting appearance after cleaning, reconstruct the original appearance of paintings in which pigments have faded, and assess whether paintings have been damaged during transportation, in estimations of the surface reflectance spectra and in the printing of high-quality reproductions. We have applied similar techniques to museum infrared and X-ray imaging. To manage the images produced by the VASARI system, an image-processing package has been developed that is tailored for very large colorimetric images. This package has since been used in several other projects, including a remote image viewer designed to provide internet access to high-resolution images. The paper explores these developments and gives details of the current generation of VASARI-derived systems, set in the context of the state of the art for museum imaging
Keywords :
CCD image sensors; art; colorimetry; image colour analysis; image resolution; image retrieval; image scanners; image segmentation; reviews; visual databases; 20000 pixel; CCD; CD-ROM; MARC project; VASARI project; VIPS image file format; appearance after cleaning; art imaging; color-calibrated images; color-separation bands; conservation treatment; digital imaging; high-quality reproductions printing; high-resolution images; image archiving; image retrieval; mosaicing techniques; museums; original appearance; paintings; scanner lighting system; surface reflectance spectra; very large colorimetric images; visual arts system; Art; Cleaning; Condition monitoring; Digital images; Image reconstruction; Image retrieval; Packaging; Painting; Pigments; Pixel;
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE