Wikipedia:Wikipedia Loves Art/US-UK/Smithsonian American Art Museum Rules

These are the rules and guidelines for the Wikipedia Loves Art project at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. ''For a printable version of a summary of these rules see. Printing double-sided is recommended''.

Smithsonian American Art Museum Information

 * Smithsonian American Art Museum
 * Smithsonian American Art Museum hours & directions

General Guidelines
Shoot on your own or create a small team (10 people, tops) and sign-up online. Use the scavenger hunt list posted here to take shots and cross off as many subjects on the list as possible. Upload shots to the Wikipedia Loves Art group on Flickr with the correct Creative Commons license required by Wikipedia (either Attribution Creative Commons or Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons, see here for details) and we will tally the scores. Images uploaded to the Wikipedia Loves Art Flickr group be used to illustrate Wikipedia articles and you'll get full credit when an image is used. Teams with the most points at the end of the month will get a prize. Shots must be taken and uploaded during February 2009.

Specific Guidelines for Shooting at the Smithsonian American Art Museum
Handheld photography is permitted in the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s permanent collections galleries, including the Luce Foundation Center. Flash is allowed; tripods are not. Please keep a safe distance of at least three feet from the artworks. Photography is prohibited in the Lunder Conservation Center and in the special exhibition galleries. Works on loan to the American Art Museum may not be photographed. The label identifying each artwork includes a credit line that indicates whether it is part of the American Art Museum’s collection. Ask a security officer or gallery attendant if you are not sure.

Note: The American Art Museum shares its main building with another museum, the National Portrait Gallery, so make sure the images you upload are of artworks from the American Art Museum’s collection only.

We ask that you shoot each work twice. First time shoot the object with an index card in the frame that displays the object's accession number, your team name, and category name so we can assign points. Second time shoot the object again, but this time without the card. Submit both shots to this group. Museum staff will use the information on the index card to properly caption the image with the correct object information and credit line (less work for you!) and the second, clean shot will then be used for Wikipedia.

Shots must be tagged AmArt and your.team.name and category.name so we can easily sort them. Museum staff may add other tags as needed to help keep track during the hunt.

See the Wikipedia Loves Art Flickr group for posted meetups. Questions? Contact drosenthal@wikimedia.org or contact Jeff Gates: gatesj@si.edu

Note About Museum Layout
Please note that the Smithsonian American Art Museum shares the same location as the National Portrait Gallery. Make sure that you are taking pictures of Smithsonian American Art Museum pieces and not those from the National Portrait Gallery. Most information cards will state which museum the piece belongs to; as well upon entering the building from "F" and "G" streets, you will see lateral hallways leading to the exhibits. These hallways have signs on the ceiling identifying whether they lead to the American Art Museum or the National Portrait Gallery.

Note: sides are reversed on the 2nd floor.

Qualification Notes
1) Shots submitted must be licensed with the correct creative commons license required by Wikipedia. That's got to be either "Attribution Creative Commons" or "Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons". There is no resolution requirement.

2) You can only shoot works of art in the public domain, so as a general rule, only works of art created prior to 1923 will be able to qualify. However, copyright law will differ from country to country and there is no hard and fast rule. We recommend you contact the Smithsonian American Art Museum if you have questions regarding creation date on art work. Please note, if you happen to capture something that is not in the public domain you may be asked to remove it.

3) Images must be your own work, submitted by you.

4) You must register by signing up online.

5) In order to properly score everyone's entries, administrators will be adding machine tags [they:look="like this"] to your photographs. So, please don't delete these tags, even if they look a little weird. Also, this means you need to have tagging turned ON in your Flickr account in order to qualify. To do this, go to your account settings, the privacy & permissions tab, and make sure "Add notes and tags:" is set to "Any Flickr user".

6) In order to properly score entries, the clean shot must be "public" on Flickr and in the Wikipedia Loves Art group. See this thread for more info.

Point Scoring
Score 1 point for each photograph submitted to a category. Multiple photographs can be submitted to a category as long as they represent different works of art (each photograph will earn you 1 point). At the close of the competition, User:Cary_Bass, from the Wikipedia Foundation, will assign bonus points for each photograph that he thinks is awesome. Remember, Wikipedia is looking for quantity and quality. See this thread for clarification.

Prize
The winner(s) will receive a boxed set of books from our "Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum" series. In addition they will receive a special American Art Museum tote with an imprinted design based on our Kogod Courtyard roof, a tie featuring our building, a boxed set of museum note cards, and a copy of our publication Temple of Invention, about our historic building.

List of participating Wikipedians
Wikipedia editors who will participate in this event can additionally sign below:
 * 1) &rArr;   SWAT Jester    Son of the Defender  22:58, 30 January 2009 (UTC)
 * 2) Should be able to come. --Aude (talk) 02:52, 21 February 2009 (UTC)
 * 3) if they don't close the bridges pohick (talk) 23:08, 24 February 2009 (UTC)