"In 2007 NZ On Air initiated the NZ On Screen project as an integral part of its digital strategy. Since 1989 NZ On Air has funded over 15,000 hours of local television production. Much of this content, as well as thousands more hours supported by broadcasters, film investors and other funding sources, is not easily accessible to the public.
NZ On Screen is unlocking the treasure chest, providing access to the wealth of television, film, music video and new media produced in NZ, along with knowledgeable background information."
(New Zealand on Screen)
Fig.1 Murphy, G. (1981). Goodbye Pork Pie. Aotearoa New Zealand, NZ Film.
Fig.2 Tamahori, L. (1994). Once Were Warriors. Aotearoa New Zealand, New Zealand Film Commission
Fig.3 Ballantyne, A. (2009). The Strength of Water. Aotearoa New Zealand, NZ Film.
"This vivid account of how sound and action reels are made lays bare for you the secrets of a new industry."
(Popular Science Monthly, Aug, 1930)
"Welcome to monstermedia10.com, here you can find out more about the 2010 Nottingham Trent Multimedia Summer Exhibition and it's graduates. ...
Jonathan Hearn has produced this fantastic time lapse video of multimedia students preparing the exhibition space."
(Wil Thomas)
[The 3 RGB monsters represent the Multimedia pathways of: Moving Image (red), Interactive Media (green) and Virtual Environments (blue).]
"FIAF, the International Federation of Film Archives, brings together the world's leading institutions in the field of moving picture heritage.
Its affiliates are the defenders of the Twentieth Century's own art form. They are dedicated to the rescue, collection, preservation and screening of moving images, which are valued both as works of art and culture and as historical documents. When it was founded in 1938, FIAF had 4 members. Today it comprises more than 140 institutions in over 77 countries - a reflection of the extent to which preservation of moving image heritage has become a world-wide concern."
(FIAF, Belgium)
"Animate Projects Limited is a UK-based, not-for-profit arts organisation, developing initiatives that explore the relationship between art and animation, and the place of animation and its concepts in contemporary art practice. We offer artists a unique space to create work and develop initiatives that allow an international audience to engage with the work via broadcast, gallery, cinema and online.
Animate Projects is supported by the National Lottery through Arts Council England and by Channel 4. "
(Abigail Addison, Jacqui Davies, Gary Thomas)