The Contemporary Gets Its LibraryThing Going
March 24th, 2010
I’m Michael Goodwin, and I have been working as an intern at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Recently, I began the detailed project of revamping the Contemporary’s library. My goals were to catalog the museum’s book collection, marking each publication with CAMSTL’s stamp, and then categorize the diverse subject areas for ease of use. And when I started, I was concerned about whether or not everything could be accomplished before summer began and my internship ended.
Enter: LibraryThing.com. LibraryThing is an online book community, a cataloging tool, a social network of book lovers, and a nexus for book reviews, local book events, and book discussions. LibraryThing welcomes both personal and organizational catalogs, and a number of likeminded museums are already part of its network.
Twenty-first century technology and new fields of social networking have made the process of cataloging and searching for books a breeze. What once may have been a long, monotonous process is now as simple as using Facebook, which is second nature for any college student.
Adding a book into our personal catalog is easy: enter its ISBN number. Searching for a book is just as easy. LibraryThing is able to search hundreds of global catalogs in order to correctly determine the book, an ideal feature for the Contemporary’s international collection of reference books, gallery guides, and monographs.
Unable to find a certain book in one place? Users are also able to quickly click onto another catalog to search. Resources like the catalog of the Helsinki Metropolitan Libraries, the National Library of Taiwan, or the University of Botswana catalog, to cite a few fascinating examples, are immediately available.
One of the huge benefits of LibraryThing is that the catalog is viewable from any computer, with or without a LibraryThing account. Visitors to the Contemporary’s presence on the site, http://www.librarything.com/catalog/CAMSTL, can browse and search the Contemporary’s catalog. And you can visit the books in person, too; they’re housed in the museum’s second-floor Exhibition Lab.
A site visitor can enjoy all of the benefits of this unique social network by joining LibraryThing for free. If you choose not to join, the browsing and searching aspects of the site are still available. The incredible accessibility and digitalization of the collection will certainly improve the Contemporary’s library experience for all. If only there was a way to digitally stamp the books as well … but who knows what the Internet will yield next?









