Cataloguer Relationship Type
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This relationship type belongs to the Biographical Relationship Class.
Description
This relationship is used to link an artist to a person who has compiled a catalogue of that artist's works. A cataloguer linked using this relationship is typically one whose catalog is the, or one of the, reference lists used when referring to the works of the linked artist.
"Catalogue" intentionally follows British, rather than American, spelling conventions, as the British spelling is (slightly) more widely used.
Link Phrases
Attributes
“start date”
- The date when the Artist's cataloguing efforts first began or were commissioned. Leave blank if date is unknown.
“end date”
- The date when the catalogue was published. Leave blank if date is unknown.
“additional”
- This attribute is to be used when creating this AR for a person who significantly revised an existing catalogue, rather than creating the catalogue.
Guidelines
- A catalogue must be officially published for the cataloguer to be linked.
- Example
- Neal Zaslaw would not be valid to link to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozartas an 'additional cataloguer' for his significant revisions to Ludwig Ritter von Köchel's catalogue, as that revised catalogue is not expected to be published until at least 2010.
- For a cataloguer to be valid for this relationship type, the catalogue must be significant; it is not sufficient that someone simply wrote down a list of all the songs by a group.
- Example
- Neal Zaslaw would be valid to link to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as a 'cataloguer' for his catalogue of Mozart's fragmentary works, as that catalogue has already been published and is the definitive reference list for those works.
Examples
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was catalogued by Ludwig Ritter von Köchel
- Ludwig Ritter von Köchel catalogued the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
additional
- Alfred Einstein would be linked to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as an additional cataloguer for his significant revisions to Ludwig Ritter von Köchel's catalogue.