| CARVIEW |
Select Language
HTTP/2 301
cache-status: "Netlify Edge"; fwd=miss
content-type: text/html
date: Sat, 17 Jan 2026 15:43:48 GMT
location: /tags/visualization/
server: Netlify
strict-transport-security: max-age=31536000
x-nf-request-id: 01KF6A0Z7QH5Y8ASM1WYW32HGB
content-length: 98
HTTP/2 200
accept-ranges: bytes
age: 1
cache-control: public,max-age=0,must-revalidate
cache-status: "Netlify Edge"; fwd=miss
content-encoding: gzip
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
date: Sat, 17 Jan 2026 15:43:49 GMT
etag: "649b295732bbaa953539afafc936ae29-ssl-df"
permission-policy: interest-cohort=()
server: Netlify
strict-transport-security: max-age=31536000
vary: Accept-Encoding
x-nf-request-id: 01KF6A0ZQTHT1T118JJ8VKQ16Z
visualization | María A. Matienzo
skip to content
visualization
-
A Bird's Eye View of Archival Collections
Mitchell Whitelaw is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Design and Creative Practice at the University of Canberra and the 2008 winner of the National Archives of Australia's Ian Maclean Award. According to the NAA's site, the Ian Maclean Award commemorates archivist Ian Maclean, and is awarded to individuals interested in conducting research that will benefit the archival and historical profession in Australia and promote the important contribution that archives make to society. Dr. Whitelaw has been keeping the world up to date on his work using his blog, The Visible Archive. His work fits well with my colleague Jeanne Kramer-Smyth's archival data visualization project, ArchivesZ, as well as the multidimensional visualization projects underway at the Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute at the University of Glasgow. However, his project fascinates me for a few specific reasons. First of all, the scale of the datasets he's working with are astronomically larger than those that any other archival visualization project has tried to tackle so far.