Beth Heller Conservation
Fixing paper so it lives longerArchive for July, 2008
Becoming a Film-Friendly Archivist by Snowden Becker
Yea! We’re sponsoring a workshop! Should be pretty interesting. Hope you can make it!
Friday, August 22, 2008
9am to 4pm
$50 per person (lunch on your own in Golden)
RSVP: Beth Heller, Preservation Librarian, 303.384.0112
library at americanalpineclub dot org
This workshop furnishes the practicing archivist with skills to identify, assess, and preserve history caught on film.
Upon completion of this workshop participants will be able to:
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Perform basic identification of film materials and evaluate their condition and contents;
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Set preservation priorities for film materials and get accurate estimates for preservation work;
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Identify sources of preservation funding and discuss methods for integrating motion picture materials into access, exhibition, and outreach efforts;
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Begin thinking about film as an essential and approachable part of your collection, as well as the historical and cultural record archivists work to preserve;
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Regard future acquisitions of film with confidence and a positive attitude.
Who should attend? Anyone who wants introductory experience with and knowledge of film materials.
Snowden Becker is a co-founder of the Center for Home Movies and the international Home Movie Day event. Along with her colleague Katie Trainor, she leads the “Becoming a Film-Friendly Archivist” workshop for the Society of American Archivists. Her doctoral studies at UT’s School of Information are generously supported by fellowships from IMLS and the Donald and Sibyl Harrington Foundation. Ms. Becker will be in Colorado to assess and preserve the 16mm film collection at the American Alpine Club.
This project has been generously supported by AAC Board Member Travis Spitzer and by Robert David of The Cinema Lab, Englewood, CO.
Happiness is available. Please help yourself to it. Thich Nhat Hahn
The above quote has been an essential guidepost in my life, but I seem to forget it for long stretches. When I recall the simplicity of that sentence, it leads me out of some pretty gripping self-pity. So, I thought I’d share my favorite book: Being Peace, just in case anyone else wanted a little mindfulness reminder. Learn more about Thich Nhat Hahn here.
and here’s the paper-related part: If you click here, “you will see clearly that there is a cloud floating in this paper” – page 51. A most eloquent description of the components of a sheet of paper, and therefore, the universe. Read it and then answer that infuriating grad school question “what is information?”. I dare you.
Keepers in Arequipa
Here’s a new blog about a library preservation project in Peru. The team includes Chela Metzger, the book conservation queen of the U-Texas program. An earthquake greeted them, and then they settled down to a mold hunt. Sounds fun!
A Meditation on Shell Games and Control
I’ve decided that being preservation librarian of a collection that gets a lot of use is like presiding over a shell game, leaving out the whole deception and swindling aspect. I don’t mean that I’m perpetrating a confidence game. I’m referring more to the now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t-where-it-went-nobody-knows aspect of physical collection management.
Almost everyone involved in my organization has a key to the rare book room and other storage areas, and has the code. People are excited about the stuff and like to show it to other people. Sometimes they want to borrow it and bring it home to write about it, and I’m told there are quite a few folks who have done just that – with, of course, no record of who has what and why. There’s very little oversight to curatorial rummaging, and things get moved, removed from their homes and sent off into space and whatnot. The chain of registrarial information is made of faded construction paper and brittle kindergarten paste.
Bottom line is: I don’t know where everything is, and people keep moving it anyways.
One of the key rules of a shell game is that it’s impossible to win. The grifter is in control. Thinking that you’ve watched the game enough to see how it’s done – thinking you could win – is an illusion. The only valid reason for playing is for the fun of it, to be part of the patter and clatter of some street-side entertainment.
For a control freak like me, there’s something to learn here. First, I’ve got to accept that I’m not going to know where everything is all the time, at least in the short term, until we can implement some new systems. If I think that my job means taking care of every single item in a collection of hundreds of thousands of items, oh am I gonna lose the game big time. I can only play this game, do my job well, if I keep an eye on the game, know the players, and take care of the bigger picture. Maybe I find a way to welcome the game – make the library a more welcoming place to play it, to look at the stuff, to talk to me about it, so that I can watch it come and go, and enjoy the interest people have, instead of acting the cop. I’m hoping once we’ve got some rules and people see that the rules encourage access but reduce loss, that I’ll feel a bit more sense of natural control and a less panicked need to impose it. The last key to the shell game is that nothing ever really disappears when it’s played (except the bettor’s money!)
And that’s enough of that metaphor, I think.
I used to work in this library
I used to work in this library
Originally uploaded by tapescraper
I spent the 4th in Crested Butte, the place where my library and archive career got it’s start. Ain’t it cute?

