Museum of the Moving Image
Museum of the Moving Image advances the
understanding, enjoyment, and appreciation of the art,
history, technique, and technology of film, television, and
digital media by presenting exhibitions, education programs,
significant moving-image works, and interpretive programs,
and collecting and preserving moving-image related
artifacts.
Leadership
Carl Goodman, Executive Director
Herbert S. Schlosser, Co-Chairman of the Board
of Trustees
Ivan L. Lustig, Co-Chairman of the Board
of Trustees
Screenings
Each year the Museum screens more than 400
films in a stimulating mix of the classic and the
contemporary. With live music for silent films, restored
prints from the world's leading archives, and outstanding
new films from the international festival circuit, Museum programs are
recognized for their quality as well as their scope. The
Museum’s diverse screening program presents a panoramic view
of the moving image, from the global discoveries presented
in the annual showcase First
Look to
the popular ongoing series See
It Big!, which celebrates the excitement and
immersive power of big-screen moviegoing.
Public Discussions
The Pinewood
Dialogues, an ongoing series of conversations with
creative professionals in film, television, and digital
media made possible by the Pinewood (now Pannonia)
Foundation, has brought to the Museum’s stage such leading
figures as Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese, Sidney Lumet,
David Cronenberg, Charles Burnett, Tim Burton, Todd Haynes,
Daniel Day-Lewis, Paul Thomas Anderson, Glenn Close, Jim
Jarmusch, Terry Gilliam, David Mamet, Bill Cosby, Joan Ganz
Cooney, and Frank Oz. Many of these conversations are
available online.
Core Exhibition
The Museum’s core exhibition, Behind
the Screen, immerses visitors in the creative
process of making moving images. It features over 1,400
artifacts, from nineteenth-century optical toys to video
games, as well as an array of interactive experiences,
audiovisual material, and artworks.
Changing Exhibitions
The Museum presents an ambitious slate of
large- and small-scale changing exhibitions, video and art
installations, and unique live events. In the third-floor
Changing Exhibitions Gallery, the Museum has hosted a range
of exhibitions from Jim
Henson’s Fantastic World, which drew
record-breaking crowds to the Museum, to Spacewar!
Video Games Blast Off, an interactive exhibition
which celebrates the 50th anniversary of the first digital
video game. It has also featured the work of artists like
the Dutch-Belgian digital art duo JODI and
the experimental filmmaker Phil
Solomon. The Museum's Amphitheater Gallery has been home
to exhibitions and installations about the work of legendary
Czech animator Jan
Svankmajer, the making of the DreamWorks Animation film, Rise
of the Guardians, and much more. In the Museum's
lobby, visitors have been greeted with video installations
by artists like Chiho
Aoshima and Ming
Wong and
digitally-curated projects such as We
Tripped El Hadji Diouf on
the panoramic 50-foot media wall.
Education Programs
The Museum’s curriculum-based education
programs are
an unparalleled resource for middle- and high-school
students and their teachers. Many student visitors are from
the New York City public schools and surrounding area,
though the Museum regularly provides programs for students
traveling from around the country and around the world.
Through guided tours of its exhibitions, educational
screening programs and hands-on workshops, the Museum serves
approximately 50,000 students each year in the new Ann and
Andrew Tisch Education Center. The Museum also offers
professional development seminars and workshops for
teachers, and after-school programs that develop academic
and technical skills. The Museum serves thousands more
children, teens, and families in weekend and summer studios,
workshops, hack jams, courses, and camps.
The Collection
The Museum maintains the nation's largest and
most comprehensive collection of artifacts relating to the
art, history, and technology of the moving image—one of the
most important collections of its kind in the world. Begun
at the Museum's inception in 1981, today the collection
comprises more than 130,000 artifacts from every stage of
producing, promoting, and exhibiting motion pictures,
television, and digital media, from pre-cinema optical toys
to 21st-century digital technology. The collection also
includes significant works of art by such artists as Red
Grooms and Nam June Paik. More than 1,400 collection
artifacts are currently on display in the Museum's core
exhibition, Behind
the Screen, and thousands more can be seen on the
Museum’s on-line collection database
www.collection.movingimage.us |