March 21, 2016 - Comments Off on Book Club No. 7

Book Club No. 7

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Available on Amazon

Join us for our seventh reading and meeting of the LAAC Book Club — where LA-area archivists and friends read and discuss publications exploring all matters archives. Books are selected every 6 weeks by the group, and may cover topics such as archival theory and practice, historical understandings, current issues and trends in information science, informational technologies, etc....we’re open to suggestions!

Our next book selection is The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences by Michel Foucault.

Publisher's Description: With vast erudition, Foucault cuts across disciplines and reaches back into the seventeenth century to show how classical systems of knowledge, which linked all of nature within a great chain of being and saw analogies between the stars in the heaven and the features in a human face, gave way to the modern sciences of biology, philology, and political economy. The result is nothing less than an archaeology of the sciences that unearths old patterns of meaning and reveals the shocking arbitrariness of our received truths.


The group will meet on Wednesday, May 4, from 6:30-8pm at Canter’s Deli (419 N. Fairfax). Participants to the Book Club will be capped at 12. Please email hello@laacollective.org to reserve a spot.

Can’t make the meeting, but are still reading the book? Let us know!

March 8, 2016 - Comments Off on LAAC Spring Happy Hour

LAAC Spring Happy Hour

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Join us for our next happy hour! We're going Westside this time. Thursday, April 14th, 6-9pm at the Mandrake. Easy access via the Expo Line, limited street parking. Please RSVP here.

February 4, 2016 - Comments Off on LAAC Winter Community Planning Meeting

LAAC Winter Community Planning Meeting

All are invited to the Los Angeles Archivists Collective Community Planning Meeting on Wednesday, March 2nd at 7:00 PM at USC's Doheny Library, Herklotz Room. The Herklotz room is in the Music Library, which is located on the ground floor of the Doheny Memorial Library.

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Students in the catalog room in Doheny Memorial Library, ca.1950s, USC Digital Library

Doheny Memorial Library
3550 Trousdale Parkway
University Park Campus
Los Angeles CA 90089-0185

Doheny Library is located in the center of campus, adjacent to Alumni Park and across from Bovard Auditorium, on Trousdale Avenue. The closest parking available is at Gate #2 which has an entrance on Exposition Boulevard at Pardee Way.

For more information regarding parking on campus, visit the Parking Services Website.

Subcommittees will be reporting on goals for the year and upcoming events. We'll also open up the floor for feedback and brainstorming. Bring a snack or drink to share!

Meeting minutes will be posted to the LAAC Google Group. Anyone unable to attend is encouraged to email agenda items to laacollective@gmail.com.

February 1, 2016 - Comments Off on Book Club No. 6

Book Club No. 6

Join us for our sixth reading and meeting of the LAAC Book Club--where LA-area archivists and friends read and discuss publications exploring all matters archives. Books are selected every 6 weeks by the group, and may cover topics such as archival theory and practice, historical understandings, current issues and trends in information science, informational technologies, etc....we’re open to suggestions!

Our next book selection is The Big Archive: Art from Bureaucracy by Sven Spieker

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Publisher’s Description: The typewriter, the card index, and the filing cabinet: these are technologies and modalities of the archive. To the bureaucrat, archives contain little more than garbage, paperwork no longer needed; to the historian, on the other hand, the archive’s content stands as a quasi-objective correlative of the “living” past. Twentieth-century art made use of the archive in a variety of ways—from what Spieker calls Marcel Duchamp’s “anemic archive” of readymades and El Lissitzky’s Demonstration Rooms to the compilations of photographs made by such postwar artists as Susan Hiller and Gerhard Richter. In The Big Archive, Sven Spieker investigates the archive—as both bureaucratic institution and index of evolving attitudes toward contingent time in science and art—and finds it to be a crucible of twentieth-century modernism.

Dadaists, constructivists, and Surrealists favored discontinuous, nonlinear archives that resisted hermeneutic reading and ordered presentation. Spieker argues that the use of archives by such contemporary artists as Hiller, Richter, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Walid Raad, and Boris Mikhailov responds to and continues this attack on the nineteenth-century archive and its objectification of the historical process.

Spieker considers archivally driven art in relation to changing media technologies—the typewriter, the telephone, the telegraph, film. And he connects the archive to a particularly modern visuality, showing that the avant-garde used the archive as something of a laboratory for experimental inquiries into the nature of vision and its relation to time. The Big Archive offers us the first critical monograph on an overarching motif in twentieth-century art.

About the Author: Sven Spieker teaches in the Comparative Literature Program and the Department of History of Art and Architecture at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the editor of ARTMargins, an online journal devoted to Central and Eastern European visual culture.


The group will meet on Wednesday, March 16, from 6:30-8pm at Alcove Cafe & Bakery (1929 Hillhurst Ave). Participants to the Book Club will be capped at 12. Please email laacollective@gmail.com to reserve a spot.

Can’t make the meeting, but are still reading the book? Let us know!

January 26, 2016 - Comments Off on USC Digital Repository Tour

USC Digital Repository Tour

Tour is currently full. Email laacollective@gmail.com to place your name on the waiting list. 

The Los Angeles Archivists Collective is thrilled to announce a tour of the USC Digital Repository on Wednesday, February 24, 2016 at 3:00 pm.

The USC Digital Repository (USCDR) is a collaborative effort between the USC Libraries, the USC Shoah Foundation Institute (SFI), and USC’s Information Technology Services (ITS). Each of these units brings a unique portfolio of technical and content experience, supporting an unrivaled combination of research, pedagogy, preservation, and infrastructure expertise. The repository builds on USC’s strengths in technology and research to capture and preserve collections of significant educational, cultural, and research value. As a result, the USCDR is uniquely positioned to provide the professional expertise and technological resources to allow organizations to cost-effectively create, manage, and preserve sophisticated digital collections.

Website: http://repository.usc.edu

Only 10 spots available! RSVP here: http://goo.gl/forms/sU7GGzxWS2

*Please make sure to include your email - Address and parking details will be emailed.

**Everyone attending will need to bring a government issued identification.