Galleries, museums and archives
Expand community access and support long-term digital stewardship
Ensure equitable access to knowledge and create engaging lifelong learning experiences for all communities with your digital collections.
As an essential cultural repository, it’s vital your patrons can access and study your collections digitally, as easily as they can in person. Enhance digital access to your most important assets that document the lives, places and events of your community. Create digital exhibits that celebrate local milestones, showcase oral histories, and invite further contributions of memories and assets to create living archives.
Improve access to your most important digital assets
The Congregational Library & Archives (CLA) has been on a journey to digitise and transcribe the records of Colonial and Early American Era Congregational churches and Congregationalists as part of its New England's Hidden Histories project.
With AM Quartex, these 170 collections, containing more than 4,000 individual items and a new digital exhibit, are more accessible and easier to find than ever before.
The community forum at Quartex was a big help [...], and the knowledge base and customer support mitigated a lot of our migration challenges.
Access and discovery
Enhance engagement and discovery with OCR, HTR and audio transcription, full-site search, digital exhibits, and interactive timelines.
Digital asset management
Easily manage digital assets your way with customisable settings and workflows for metadata, controlled vocabularies and access controls.
Build and migration
Create and publish your new digital collections portal with support from AM's dedicated Site Creation and Customer Experience teams. From planning your migration to full design and build services.
Cape Ann Museum
"The flexibility is wonderful, because it’s not just a straight DAM system. We’ve really enjoyed that."
Congregational Library & Archives
"Where Quartex shines [...] is how it lets users find exactly what they are searching for through display features."