About Curationist

Curationist is a free tool that makes millions of digital images of artworks and artifacts from around the world easy to access. We connect curious minds to the history, stories, and ideas these works inspire.

Princesses Gather at a Fountain, ca. 1770 Source: The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Curationist enables users and communities to seek, find, and reimagine cultural heritage through our vast archives of open access images, radical work with metadata, and editorial features shining light on marginalized histories of art and objects.

Despite sharing a commitment to open culture, many institutions face significant limitations in their ability to broaden public access to their collections through digitization. Obstacles include lack of funding, limited staff resources, and limited capacity to implement digitization initiatives.

Curationist enables users to search across institutions, large and small, to find open access digital heritage.

Since its launch in 2022, Curationist enables global users to search more than 4.4 million images of works from the open access collections of museums and archives worldwide, thus connecting curious minds to the history, stories, and ideas that these works inspire.

Users can explore Curationist’s extensive database through:

Works - targeted searches with the faceted search tool

Collections - browse curated collections for a more guided experience

Editorial Features - our essays expand on the relationships between objects, cultural themes, and critical perspectives.

We are champions of open access

Curationist is a nonprofit project of Curationist Foundation.

Curationist Foundation’s mission is to connect people with global cultural resources and perspectives through open knowledge. The foundation, formally known as the MHz Foundation, launched Curationist in 2019 to create a radically collaborative online platform to enrich and champion global content curation, so people can learn, share, and better understand our world.

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Metadata is not neutral

Although it may sound technical, metadata is simply information about an artifact or artwork. It could be an item's title, the name of the person who made it, the date it was created, or what it's made of. This descriptive information enables you to find all the works by a particular artist, or all the pictures of cats on our site. In most cases, this metadata comes directly from the institution where the object is held, like New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, or the Art Institute of Chicago. For select items, the Curationist team enhances the metadata, adding more information or providing a different perspective, which is often rooted in a concern for social justice.

Although it may appear to be “just facts,” metadata is not neutral. It has traditionally reflected Western, Eurocentric, white supremacist values and worldviews. By providing more inclusive and respectful metadata, Curationist both makes items easier to find and expands and diversifies the ways we access and understand cultural heritage.

Our community

Meet our peers, partners, and allies.

Our team

We are a team of artists, educators, critics, archivists, and curious minds who help expand open knowledge about cultural heritage.

Critics of Color

The residency pairs critics of color with curators and archivists to amplify diverse voices and perspectives in arts and culture.

Curationist Fellows

This program that builds a community of educators and knowledge seekers working together to learn from and expand open access content.

Museums and Archives

Curationist brings works and artifacts from the open access collections of nine world renowned museums together in one place.

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Curationist connects people to cultural knowledge from all over the world.

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