2 Day Conference on ‘3D Scanning and Documentation’
Note for INCCA readers: The conference does tend to focus on monuments and archeology, however, the techniques could also be used for contemporary sculptures and installations.
St Catharine’s College, Cambridge,
Monday 10 & Tuesday 11 December 2012
Conference website:
Programme timetable:
Day 1 [Focussed primarily on 3D scanning and its uses in Art History/Archaeology]
10-11 am Registration and coffee.
11-11.30 Welcome, Housekeeping
11.30-12.15 Lecture 1: Phillip Lindley (University of Leicester), ‘Representing Re-Formation: the search for objectivity’
Lunch 12.30-1.30
1.30-2.15 Lecture 2: Anna Thirion (Université Montpellier 3), ‘Proposal for a digital reconstruction of the Romanesque "tribune" of Saint-Michel-de-Cuxa (France): methodological considerations’
2.15-3.00 Lecture 3: Laura Bartolomé Roviras (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya), ‘The Romanesque Portals of Santa Maria de Ripoll, Santiago de Compostela and Sant Pere de Rodes: from modelling to reconstruction’
3.00-3.45 Lecture 4: Annemarie La Pensée (National Museums Liverpool), ‘The non-contact 3D laser scanning of cultural artefacts and its applications, at Conservation Technologies, National Museums Liverpool’
Tea 3.45-4.00
4.00-4.45 Lecture 5: Marcos A Rodrigues (Sheffield Hallam University), ‘3D Scanning of Highly Reflective Surfaces: Issues on Scanning the Museums Sheffield Metalwork Collection’
4.45-5.30 Lecture 6: George Fraser (University of Leicester), ‘Scanning in Space and Time’
5.30-6.00 Lecture 7: Jack Hinton (Philadelphia Museum of Art), ‘Measuring Genius: 3D scanning and Jean-Antoine Houdon's Portraits of Benjamin Franklin
Dinner 7.00 for 7.30
Day 2 [Wider 3D scanning & digitisation projects]
9.00-9.45 Lecture 8: Mike Howe (British Geological Survey), ‘Laser scanning 563 million years of evolution: the JISC GB/3D type fossils online project’
9.45-10.30 Lecture 9: Andrew S. Wilson (University of Bradford), ‘3D Bones - Digital documentation of skeletal remains’
10.30-11.00 Lecture 10: Paul Bryan (English Heritage), ‘Scanning the Stones’
11.00-11.45 coffee
11.45-12.30 pm Lecture 11: David Arnold (University of Brighton), ‘3D documentation: Current Practice and future potential’
Lunch 12.30-1.30
1.45-2.30 Lecture 12: Doug Pritchard (CyArk Europe Director), ‘The Scottish Ten Project: Laser Survey, 3D Visualisation and International Diplomacy’
2.30-3.15 Lecture 13: Stephen Gray (University of Bristol), ‘The challenges of using digital 3D tools and methodologies across different research disciplines’*
3.15-4.30 Tea and Round Table discussion. Chair: Peter Findlay (JISC).