Getting Started: A Shared Responsibility.
Caring for Time-Based Media Artworks in Collections.


A workshop funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Organized and hosted
by The Museum of Modern Art, New York.


Workshop Dates: Tuesday, May 2 – Friday, May 5, 2017 (9am-5pm; participants
are expected to attend the full program)

Workshop Description: Does your institution have a collection of time-based
media works in need of a long-term preservation plan? Are you uncertain
where to get started? This four-day hands-on workshop will provide an
in-depth overview of the processes and workflows which can be implemented
at collections without dedicated time-based media conservators.
Participants will leave with the knowledge and tools to design and execute
action plans at their institutions.

Caring for time-based media collections is broadly acknowledged as a
pan-institutional endeavor requiring direct involvement from curatorial,
conservation, audio visual, IT, registrar and collection care staff. This
will be reflected throughout the workshop curriculum as well as in the
application itself which requires pairs of colleagues from the applying
institution.

The 4-day workshop schedule includes:

May 2, Foundations

-Group session: collections and case studies
-Time-based media art: Part 1, a history of art production
-Practical session: Media format history
-Time-based media art: Part 2, a history of technology
-Conducting a media art collection survey

May 3, Acquiring Media Art

-Acquisition, step-by-step workflows and processes. This session will cover
pre-acquisition, documentation, budgets, contracts, and rights,
deliverables, registration, artist interviews/questionnaires, policies.

-Practical session: Acquisition, four case studies. This exercise will
cover a broad range of challenges, including a range of media (analogue to
born digital), legacy and dedicated equipment, fixed and variable
parameters for installation.

May 4, Exhibition: Treatment and Decision Making

-Practical session: seeing and hearing demonstration of the effects of
different display equipment and the material characteristics of film and
video.

-Documentation critical to the preservation of media arts. The session will
cover exhibition history, artist interviews, curatorial perspective, art
historical context, assessment of media elements, and case studies.

-Practical session: preparing an artwork for exhibition 360 degrees.

May 5, Advocacy: Establishing institutional media conservation

-Practical session: Creating exhibition documentation and installation
instructions for loaning media artworks.

-Building infrastructure in-house for safe handling. Support network of
outside partners and vendors.

-Storing media artworks: physical, digital, and equipment storage, with
approaches for small to large collections.

-Roundtable: growing media conservation practice within institutions. This
will include advocacy for building capacity, priorities, external
collaborators, policy and procedures.

-Growing media conservation practice within your institution: a dialogue
with leaders in the field.


About the Grant: MoMA’s Media Conservation Initiative seeks to advance new
strategies for the field of time-based media art preservation and
restoration. Rethinking the role of the conservator in the museum setting
as well as the knowledge and skills that future media conservators should
possess, this series of media conservation workshops and future peer forums
will address these serious challenges, explore best practices, and identify
long-term approaches to the care and collection of time-based artworks.

Eligibility: This workshop is open to pairs of applicants who are
responsible for the care of a time-based media art collection. Applicant
teams must include a curator and the person directly responsible for the
care of the time-based media. This could be a conservator, audio visual
technician, collection specialist or manager, etc.  Priority will be given
to those with significant collection needs, a critical need for staff
training and demonstrable institutional desire to take action. Enrollment
is limited to allow for a collaborative working environment. Participants
will be required to conduct basic preparatory work prior to the workshop
and provide feedback in the form of a report or survey after attending the
workshop.

How to Apply: Applicants should each submit a CV, a joint letter of
interest, fill out the online Collection Data Form
<https://docs.google.com/a/moma.org/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScVIzwRR2qRxl5cI0P3VLWMHonNG7XMxusmUHlv6i2KLgv3AA/viewform?c=0&w=1>
and submit one letter of institutional support. The applicants' letter of
interest should: 1) describe why participation in this workshop is
important to their collection; 2) provide a brief history of the
collection; 3) describe the applicants' work with the collection to date;
and 4) show how this workshop directly applies to their day-to-day work.
Prior institutional action, and experience with the topic or lack thereof
should be noted as well as any relevant conferences or workshops attended
on related topics.

Travel and lodging expenses may be reimbursed, based on need. Please submit
a basic budget of anticipated travel costs as part of the application.
There is no fee for this workshop; English will be the language of
instruction. Applications should be submitted to [email protected]
no later than February 1, 2017, with notifications expected by March 3, 2017
.
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