UCLA FILM AND TELEVISION ARCHIVE
ANNOUNCES
MOVING IMAGE ARCHIVE STUDIES PROGRAM
FOR FALL 2002
February, 2002 - The UCLA Film and Television Archive, the largest university-based
collection of film and television materials in the world, has announced
the launch of an MA degree program in Moving Image Archive Studies. The
program responds to a need voiced by the Librarian of Congress, and will
be the largest of its kind in the Western Hemisphere.
Fall 2002 student applications are being accepted for this
intensive, specialized two-year course of study offered jointly by UCLA's
Department of Film, Television and Digital Media and Department of Information
Studies.
"This new program will meet a pressing demand for a
new generation of scholars and archivists in both the public and private
sector," said Peter Wollen, chair of the UCLA Department of Film,
Television and Digital Media. "We are excited about the potential
benefits for this University and academic scholarship in general, as well
as the important gains the film industry will realize."
Courses will be taught by a distinctive combination of UCLA
faculty, top-level preservationists, academic scholars and technical experts.
Subject matter to be taught includes: the history of all moving image
media, the cultural responsibilities of selection and curatorship, access
and programming for the public, collection management, cataloging and
documentation, and technical aspects of preservation and restoration.
"The MIAS program brings together the strengths of
three internationally recognized UCLA units: the Department of Information
Studies, the Department of Film, Television and Digital Media, and the
Film
and Television Archive," said Michele Cloonan, chair of the Department
of Information Studies. "The possibilities inherent in this collaboration
are quite exciting."
The new program will link a rigorous course of study to
hands-on activities both in UCLA's own Film and Television Archive and
off-campus. Extensive apprenticeship opportunities will be available at
archives, media libraries, film and television studios, laboratories,
digital post-production houses, and other facilities which are unique
to the greater Los Angeles area.
"Moving images are arguably the most pervasive and
influential media of the twentieth century. They are at once: art form,
historical document, cultural artifact, market commodity, political force
and omnipresent part of popular culture," says Steven Ricci, Secretary
General of the International Federation of Film Archives. "If we
consider the continual growth of media types and outlets, if we pay any
attention at all to the rapid expansion of new technologies, such a program
is simply crucial to our culture."
Graduates of the program will go to work in a widely diverse
spectrum of
national, regional and local archives; museums; historical societies;
research institutes; production studios; broadcast companies; stock footage
suppliers; film, video and sound transfer laboratories; digital post-production
and restoration houses; state-of-the-art vault and inspection facilities;
asset management software developers; and other preservation service providers.
The UCLA Program in Moving Image Archive Studies will be
highly selective, with a maximum of ten students admitted each year. The
development of the Moving Image Archive Studies program has been generously
supported by a number of prestigious institutions: for planning and testing,
the U.S. Department of Education's Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary
Education; for program deployment and inauguration, the National Endowment
for the Humanities; and for building the curriculum, the Academy Foundation.
For further information about the program, please
refer to the Archive website at: http://www.cinema.ucla.edu/Education/education_f.html
or contact Lynn Boyden at lynn@ucla.edu.
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