- Multimedia preparation of historic collection
- arvato Systems digitizes music library collection as a gift to the German city of Leipzig
Thanks to arvato Systems’ gift to mark the 1,000th birthday of the city of Leipzig, the history of the collection and the Hinrichsen family will be visually brought to life by presenting photos, documents, and digital copies of valuable works on a wide-screen display in the city library and online in a fun and interactive style. This will also include audio excerpts.
“We have selected and digitized the most important documents and photos of the 24,000 publications in the Peters Music Library,” says Susanne Metz, director of the Leipzig City Libraries, explaining the project. “Now arvato Systems has prepared all of the multimedia and designed the presentation for the wide-screen display and the website.”
For example, the presentation includes an excerpt from the guest book of the Peters Music Library. Numerous exponents from both the German and international music world, such as the composers Edvard Grieg, Johannes Brahms, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler, have been immortalized in this collection since it was founded in January 1894.
The goal is to educate the residents of Leipzig and visitors to the city on the close ties between the city’s Jewish history and its music and publishing traditions by means of a multimedia presentation. “The young audience is especially important to us. We hope that this modern presentation format will allow us to reach out to school pupils as well. This will help us to fulfill the responsibility of carrying our cultural heritage into the future,” emphasizes Susanne Metz.
The story of the Hinrichsen family and the Peters Music Library is a moving one. The music publisher Dr. Max Abraham founded and opened the public library in 1894 in Leipzig. After his death, his nephew, Dr. Henri Hinrichsen, a German-Jewish music dealer, publisher, and patron, assumed responsibility for the upkeep and expansion of the library. During National Socialist rule, Dr. Henri Hinrichsen was banned from working and the Peters Music Library was expropriated. Many members of the Hinrichsen family were killed but some were able to escape Germany in time. In 1942, Dr. Henri Hinrichsen was deported to Auschwitz, where he was murdered. The eventful history of the Peters Music Library continued after the war. The city of Leipzig finally acquired the collection from the Hinrichsen estate in 2013. Since then, it has been possible to order, view, and study its valuable works in the Leipzig City Library reading room, which is named after Henri Hinrichsen.
“The history of the Peters Music Library and the Hinrichsen family had a deep impact on me,” explains Matthias Moeller, CEO of arvato Systems perdata GmbH in Leipzig, Germany. “Citizens of Leipzig began collecting real treasures for the public over 100 years ago. More people should know about this, so it was an easy decision for us to implement this digitization project together with the Leipzig City Libraries. We are delighted to help with the visualization of these highly valuable documents and their unique history. We want to express our special connection to the town and location of Leipzig with this long-term project in honor of Leipzig’s 1,000th birthday.”
The presentation will be created in English and German. It will be available to view on a wide-screen display on the third floor of the city library at the end of this year, and it will also be published on the Leipzig City Libraries website. The gift is to be presented to the city of Leipzig at an official event in November.