
Artemise is a pilot project initiated by the INHA (Institut national d’histoire de l’art) in partnership with the research residency program InVisu. It provides a structured, searchable catalog of visual resources centered on representations of Anne of Austria. The project involved designing a reusable UX/UI template for the CMS Arches, tailored for scholarly research and public consultation.
Working from Damien Bril’s doctoral research (doctoral candidate at INP/InVisu) on the political and visual iconography of Anne of Austria, I developed an intuitive, visual-first interface for catalog browsing and detailed item views. The Arches-based template included structured faceted filters, high-resolution image display, metadata visualization, and contextual navigation consistent with CIDOC‑CRM models.



The interface was designed to support other INHA-sponsored residencies—as part of InVisu—from 2020 onward, using the same template adapted to different research projets. Particular attention was given to data accessibility, ensuring that researchers and public users could explore complex iconographic networks with ease. The designs were articulated around a single accent color to allow easy customization between project residencies.


Client / Organization: INHA (Institut national d’histoire de l’art) via InVisu residency program
Role: UX/UI Designer & template architect for Arches CMS
Collaborators: Damien Bril (doctoral researcher / InVisu residency), INHA research curators
Platform: Arches open-source CMS; data modeled with CIDOC-CRM
Role: UX/UI Designer & template architect for Arches CMS
Collaborators: Damien Bril (doctoral researcher / InVisu residency), INHA research curators
Platform: Arches open-source CMS; data modeled with CIDOC-CRM