Ceramic Archivists
An on-going commission for the Internet Archive
San Francisco, California
An on-going commission for the Internet Archive
San Francisco, California
Founded in 1996, the Internet Archive is a nonprofit library offering free public access to a vast — and growing — collection of digital cultural artifacts. Its headquarters are a former Christian Science church in San Francisco while primary access to the Archive is through its website.
Now with over 450 library and other partners worldwide, the Archive is a leading advocate of a free and open Internet.
Free tours every Friday 1pm
Grand Room open for viewing Ceramic Archivists Fridays 1-2 pm
300 Funston Ave., San Francisco, CA
Call (415) 561-6767 with inquiries.
In about 2008, the founder and director of the Internet Archive, Brewster Kahle, traveled to China. There, he saw the famed Terra-cotta Warriors at the tomb of the first Emperor of China and it gave him an idea.
Returning to San Francisco, he commissioned ceramic sculptor Nuala Creed to create a sculpture of every staff member who has dedicated at least three years of service to the Archive.
To date, Nuala has made over 140 sculptures of Archive staff. The sculptures are on display in the Great Room of the Internet Archive, in San Francisco, California, and more are on the way.
One of the most challenging sculptures I have made was Aaron Swartz. Aaron was a computer programmer, writer, political organizer, Internet activist, and archivist. His work focused on civic awareness and activism and he was a proponent of free public access to the web. Sadly he took his own life in 2013 after a harrowing situation in which the U.S. government pursued him for downloading data from MIT.
His statue has become a shrine for people who know about him and visit The Archive.
Among the people represented are Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive; Ted Nelson, pioneer of information technology who coined the terms hypertext, hypermedia, and hyperlink; and two luminaries who have passed: Aaron Swartz, Internet activist, and John Perry Barlow, founding member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Also included are custodians, book scanners, programmers, and other everyday luminaries in the life of the Internet Archive.
Michael Grecco
January 29, 2013
A time-lapse video showing the making of the photograph featured in the book The Human Face of Big Data.
Chris Jones, Carolyn Peter, Scott Oller
Janurary 23, 2016
Video created for the art exhibition Cloud to Clay at the Laband Art Gallery, Loyola Marymount University, 2016.
The Internet Archivists features interviews about the project with Internet Archive staff.
Internet Archive
May 30, 2014
Video documenting an event celebrating the completion of the 100th Ceramic Archivist.
Internet Archive Presents
December 22, 2015
An interview by Jason Scott with Nuala about the commission at the Internet Archive during a fundraising telethon.
Internet Archive Presents
February 10, 2016
Talk by Nuala Creed and Brewster Kahle in conjunction with the opening of the exhibit From Clay To The Cloud at Loyola Marymount College's Laband Gallery.
Archive Productions
October 17, 2016
A short interview with Nuala Creed about the Ceramic Archivists.
Tom Foremski. “CultureWatch: Internet Archive Celebrates Nuala Creed's 100 Ceramic 'Archivists'.“ Silicon Valley Watcher, June 10, 2014.
Chris Higgins. “Into the Labyrinth“ The Magazine, #34, January 16, 2014.
Susannah Israel. “Nuala Creed: Ceramic Archivist” (PDF). Ceramics: Art and Perception, #92, Mansfield Ceramics Pty Ltd, 2013, pp. 76-77.
Carolyn Peter. “Archiving the Archivists: A Ceramic Commission by Nuala Creed“ (PDF). Ceramics Ireland.
Claire Richard. "Steve Jobs, Wikipedia, Snowden: des statues en hommage a Internet." L'Obs avec Rue89, November 5, 2014.
Nan Smith. 500 Figures in Clay, volume 2, Lark Books, February 04, 2014, p. 414.
Venkat Srinivasan. "The Internet Archive — Bricks and Mortar Version." Scientific American, Guest Blog, April 13, 2016.
Wikimedia. Images of Archivists featured in Wikimedia.
Chuck Jones. “From Clay to the Cloud." The Camera Forum, January 26, 2016.
Carolyn Peter. “Reflections on From Clay to the Cloud: The Internet Archive and Our Digital Legacy, a.k.a. The Internet Archive – The Exhibition!” Internet Archive Blogs, April 29, 2016.
Annelisa Stephan. “Clay Sculptures of Archivists Show the Human Face of Big Data.“ The Iris: Behind the Scenes at the Getty, March 8, 2016.
Katherine Wallace. “EXHIBITION OPENING: From Clay to the Cloud: The Internet Archive and Our Digital Legacy.“ Internet Archive Blogs, January 23, 2016.
What I really love is that this collection is art in context — it is not made for a museum or fine art gallery but rather for the employees and visitors to the Internet Archive. It is a tribute to the labor and human ingenuity in the making of our high tech world.