VHS Archives: End of the Year Party, Workshop, and Demo

Tue, May 21, 2019

6:30 PM–8:30 PM

Room 9204

Please join the VHS Archives Working Group for a public unveiling and participatory party where our light-weight video archiving tool will be demoed and then played with by all.

We will screen clips from two videos through our ANALOGUE ARCHIVES tool built by Partner & Partners:

We will add material items to a paper timeline that will then be digitized in front of our eyes!

There will be a critical making project sponsored by 3Text Studio, a Doctoral and Graduate Students’ Council (DSC) Chartered Organization.

To prepare (suggested but not required):

Watch these clips:

Or, feel free to bring an item that reminds you of the Gay 90s, or the feminist 70s, including but not limited to fliers, letters, photos, books, buttons, or feelings.

The VHS Archives Working Group brings together scholars, students, librarians, archivists, technologists and community members interested in discussing questions, concerns and best practices about the use, preservation, digitization, and research of VHS collections currently held by organizations, scholars, artists, and activists. For two years member of the working group have presented their archive and the questions, difficulties, surprises, losses and bounty it holds. The group has used each test case as a fertile opportunity to better frame their own video archives, the broader questions raised by holdings of media nearing format-obsolescence, and the building of a tool that will allow others to work with the vulnerable analogue archives of political people.

Click below to read the PDF of “Women Videomakers in the Women’s Video Festival, NYC 1976”

“Women Videomakers in the Women’s Video Festival, NYC 1976”


The VHS Archives Working Group is supported by the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY, and is in partnership with Visual AIDS, Interference Archives, and the Transfer Collective.

https://vimeo.com/341400050

Participants

Tags
Moving Image Archives Digital Culture