Art Security & RFID Asset Tagging  Customer Support Login
Home Products & ServicesSupportNews & PressResellersAbout ISISContact Us
ISIS Protection for your business, and it's assets with 'intelligent asset control' from ASPECTS(tm)
Article...

Back To News & Press

Home > News & Press > Article: RFiD Journal 2007
RFiD Journal 2007 : RFID and the Arts
Feb 2007

AspectsARTS™ features in this article from the Feb 2007 edition of RFiD Journal highlighting how "Arts organizations are turning to RFID as a flexible and cost-effective way to track and safeguard precious objects"...

By John Edwards : © 2007 RFiD Journal

On New Year's Day morning 2000, a smoke canister crashed through a skylight at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, England. Fire alarms sounded at the world's oldest public museum, and as security guards rushed from the building, a thief dropped a rope ladder through the skylight, lowered himself into a gallery and helped himself to a Cezanne painting entitled "Auvers-sur-Oise". The thief-and the £3 million ($5.9 million) artwork-were gone well before police and firefighters arrived.

The theft-one of the largest art heists in recent U.K. history-delivered a wake-up call to the National Gallery, a London-based institution maintaining one of the world's greatest collections of European paintings. "After the theft of the Cezanne, we decided we needed to reinforce our security," says Jon Campbell, the gallery's head of visitor services and security. Pondering its options, the museum decided that RFID technology, which helps eliminate the need for costly and intrusive wiring, should play a key role in its overall security strategy...

National Gallery

To help it develop an RFID-based security system, the National Gallery contacted ISIS, a London-based developer of RFID asset-tracking technologies. ISIS has installed systems at several historic royal palaces, as well as the Victoria and Albert Museum, The Royal Academy and many other U.K. and global venues. The company recommended using its Aspects ARTS active tag system, which enables artworks to continuously signal their presence to interrogators covertly placed on the museum's ceilings.

ISIS tag

Over the past several years, credit-card-sized tags have been installed on the artworks in the National Gallery's main exhibit areas and reserve collection. Every tag includes a unique ID, as well as a sensing feature able to detect both vibration and tilting. "Each tag has a lifetime of over six years," says Rob Green, ISIS's managing director. Interrogators receive a signal from each tag every 15 seconds. If a reader misses a signal, or if the system is compromised in any way, the Aspects ARTS software sounds an alarm. A computer and display system kicks into action, showing the endangered artwork's exact location and displaying and recording nearby CCTV video streams for visual identification and evidence. "The system also sends a message to the guards' pagers," says Green, "telling them what's being touched and activating a sounder."

Campbell says the security system presented a substantial learning curve to the museum's staff. Workers had to figure out, for example, how to mount the tags onto artworks without causing any damage. Employees also had to be educated about the technology's operation. "Early on, we did see a pretty high level of false alarms," he says. "If you start moving works of art around in the galleries without telling anybody, people will start assuming that something is perhaps in the process of being stolen."

Still, Campbell is pleased with the technology overall. "What we got is very much what we asked for," he says. "I would say that it has worked well for us..."

To read the full article please click here (note that a subscription to RFiD Journal is required)

Related Information:

RFiD Journal

PrivacyLegalSite Map © Copyright 1996 - 2008 ISIS Limited. All rights reserved.