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Bay Area Television Archive

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bay Area Television Archive
Typearchive
Location
Coordinates37°43′17″N 122°28′42″W / 37.7213°N 122.4783°W / 37.7213; -122.4783
Women watching a printing demonstration.
Still image from the 16mm Kodachrome film 'Art in Action', produced by Orville C. Goldner c1939.
Edited aerial views of San Francisco, taken from a 1973 Philip Greene film.[1]

The Bay Area Television Archive (BATA)[2] is a regional moving image archive.[3] It preserves and digitally restores[4] 16mm newsfilm, documentaries and other shows produced by TV stations in Northern California (1948–2005), local Emmy Award-winning programs (1974–2005) and privately donated film collections (1939–2004).[5]

BATA was established in 1982 by Helene Whitson and is part of the J. Paul Leonard Library's Special Collections Unit,[6] located on San Francisco State University's main campus.[7]

Collections

TV stations

BATA preserves over 3000 hours of 16mm newsfilm, documentaries and other shows produced by local TV stations KPIX-TV, KQED (TV),[8] KRON-TV and KTVU. This includes footage of the first TV broadcast in Northern California by KPIX-TV[9] on December 22, 1948, from the roof of the Mark Hopkins Hotel on Nob Hill, in San Francisco.

Local Emmy Award winners

The Northern California chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has donated over 300 hours of local Emmy Award-winning news footage and documentaries to BATA.

Private donors

The TV Archive curates approximately 100 hours of archival footage donated by local film makers and politicians from Northern California. These include the Willie Brown (politician) Collection, which features news reports and programs relating to the former State Assembly Speaker and Mayor of San Francisco's career and the Dorothy Goldner Collection, which features silent, color film of the Golden Gate International Exposition, produced by Orville C. Goldner in 1939-40.

Access

Bay Area Television Archive.
Image transfer suite at the Bay Area Television Archive.

Online viewing

Selected archival footage from BATA's collections is publicly available to view online for free at the website of SF State's Digital Information Virtual Archive (DIVA).

Public screenings

Former KQED producer and director Richard O. Moore introduced screenings of his documentaries Take This Hammer (1963)[10] and Losing just the same (1966),[11] at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, in August 2009.[12] Newsfilm clips featuring the Occupation of Alcatraz Island by Native American activists (1969–71), were projected onto San Francisco's Coit Tower in November 2009, as part of the official 40th Anniversary remembrance program for the occupation.

Film production

Archival footage from BATA features in Gus Van Sant's 2008 Oscar-winning biographical film of the gay rights activist and politician Harvey Milk Milk (2008 American film), in Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's 2010 Howl (2010 film) biopic of beat poet Allen Ginsberg[13] and also in David Weissman and Bill Weber's 2011 documentary film about the AIDS crisis in San Francisco We Were Here (film).

References

  1. ^ Watch the full 60 minute version of this 1973 documentary, digitally restored by John Carlson: https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/188919.
  2. ^ See the National Film Preservation Board's list of Public Moving Image Archives & Research Centers: https://www.loc.gov/film/arch.html
  3. ^ Watch a short film, produced by KPIX-TV in August 2011, about the TV Archive: https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/194703.
  4. ^ View a before/after digital restoration sample, featuring a 16mm film documentary from 1973 that has been color corrected: https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/190451.
  5. ^ Read Intelligent Television's article 'Archives for today', on the work of the TV Archive: http://www.intelligenttelevision.com
  6. ^ View a KNTV report from 2013 about the TV Archive's work to preserve and digitize local news and documentary film: http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Saving-Bay-Area-TV-History-187073821.html.
  7. ^ Read Golden Gate Express article about watching footage from the TV Archive's collections: http://xpress.sfsu.edu/archives/life/012916.html Archived 2010-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Listen to a KQED radio report about how the TV Archive works to recover lost Bay Area newsfilm: http://www.kqed.org/news/story/2012/12/18/112962/preserving_what_remains_of_bay_area_tv_news_history Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. ^ Footage of the earliest TV broadcast in Northern California, from 1948: http://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/187344
  10. ^ View the documentary Take this hammer: http://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/187041
  11. ^ View the documentary Losing just the same: http://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/187098
  12. ^ Review SF MOMA's official program for these screenings: http://www.sfmoma.org/events/1454
  13. ^ See the raw footage of Lawrence Ferlinghetti and City Light Books from 1957, used in Howl: http://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/188468

External links

This page was last edited on 20 June 2021, at 17:19
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