Popular Culture Review Vol. 26, No. 1, Winter 2015 | Page 101

Selective Collection Composition One issue that eventually museums will have to address is the limited way they shape their “digital exhibits” as they race to present and curate their collections on the Internet. Most typically, they only allow access to collection information through the interpretive frameworks they provide, which reinforces earlier attitudes about collections and viewing. This does not appear to be shifting yet in the ongoing digital revolution (Keene 139). Almost all of the virtual tours and collections available literally reproduce the physical experience as closely as possible. While this is potentially exciting and e ducational for those who cannot travel—and arguably only scholars “care" about the way collections are framed and presented for consumption— it does replicate the formulaic interpretation of history that recent scholarship across disciplines are struggling to reevaluate. In other words, museums must guard against technological determinism—the key issues become not the capabilities of technologies, but the politics, cultural effects, and moralities of how we use them (140). Digitizing collections is gaining traction quickly, but varies pretty widely by museum and type of collection. Most digitized collections are limited to an individual museum’s well-known pieces or specific collections, like the Louvre, which has one of the least sophisticated online presences. Often works appear as lists or as slide-show type features. Search functions include special exhibits, categories like painting, architecture, or sculpture, and searching for artistic movements or artist. Background information on individual pieces is fairly limited on most sites. Despite the limitations of this type of presentation, which is largely one dimensional, the opportunity for collaboration and wider general access to images and histories on the Internet are increasing. Google’s Art Project is an interesting and ambitious project that appears to be a onestop site for browsing art. Launched just four years ago (in February 2011) and with initial collaboration agreements with 17 major museums, it is rapidly expanding. Of course, copyright and permission issues entailed by endowments, gifts, and collections or pieces on loan make this project expensive. It has the advantage of allowing museums to avoid the costs associated with creating their own virtual museums, but instead it seems that most museums working with this project are allowing Google only partial access to their already developed digital collections. One can browse specific collections, like those at the Acropolis Museum, but only 24 pieces and seven artists are represented here. On the Acropolis Museum web site, 97