Content area
Academic research libraries that build and steward collections in support of art research are always developing and executing strategies for their physical and virtual spaces, preservation, and access. NYU Libraries’ Institute of Fine Arts Library welcomes readers of a wide range of expertise, subject focus, and languages and works to make the library collections easier to discover and use in more creative ways in the pursuit of research, teaching, and learning. This work raises the question, whom do librarians turn to when they are responsible for subject areas or languages they may not know?
This article concerns collection development at NYU Libraries’ Institute of Fine Arts Library focusing on the African American and Black Diaspora, Asian, and Latin American & Caribbean art collections as distinct collections within a larger art library setting. In addition, it provides ways libraries can implement collection development policies that prioritize materials by underrepresented groups and offer community engagement with partners focused on inclusion, diversity, belonging, equity, and accessibility.
Details
Art history;
African Americans;
Trends;
Academic libraries;
Books;
Initiatives;
Art libraries;
Interlibrary loans;
Library collections;
Fine arts;
Librarians;
Library materials;
Approval ordering;
Library resources;
Library staff;
Collection development;
Library catalogs;
Diaspora;
Libraries;
Research;
Teaching;
Languages;
Preservation;
Development policy;
Art;
Collections;
Access;
Arts
1 Head, Institute of Fine Arts Library New York University 1 East 78th Street, New York, NY 10075 USA
2 Librarian for Research Services, Institute of Fine Arts Library New York University 1 East 78th Street, New York, NY 10075 USA