January 20, 2016 - Comments Off on Visit to the LA Art Book Fair

Visit to the LA Art Book Fair

Join LAAC on Sunday, February 14th for a visit to the LA Art Book Fair held at The Geffen Contemporary, MOCA. We will meet to attend a talk entitled, “The Dynamic Library: Organizing Knowledge at the Sitterwerk - Precedents and Possibilities”, located in Gallery D from 12:00 - 1:00.

After the talk, let’s walk over to Far Bar for food & drinks!
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The Dynamic Library: Organizing Knowledge at the Sitterwerk - Precedents and Possibilities.
12:00 - 1:00 Gallery D

At the Sitterwerk in St. Gallen, Switzerland, an unusual system that relies on RFID technology was developed to turn an idiosyncratic collection of art books into a publicly accessible library. What are some of the collections that presenters have created and/or manage, how do they organize them, and how do they make them accessible? This event will explore the challenges and pleasures they’ve encountered, as well as the role played by digital technology. Presented by Soberscove Press.

And, if you’re still around at 3:00, there is an interesting talk organized and moderated by UCLA MLIS graduate, Nicoletta Beyer, as part of the Contemporary Artists‘ Books Conference coordinated by local arts library and archives professionals.

Contemporary Art and the Occult
3:00 - 5:00 Theatre (Gallery V)

A panel of practicing contemporary artists discuss their work relating to alchemy, astrology, chaos magic, Gnosticism, shamanism, and occultism at large; manifested and documented in the printed form.

January 13, 2016 - Comments Off on Velaslavasay Panorama Event Meetup

Velaslavasay Panorama Event Meetup

Join LAAC for an informal meetup at the Velaslavasay Panorama on Saturday, January 30th at 7pm. We'll be attending their event In India - 1903 to 1949: The 78rpm Phenomenon, an illustrated lecture with Robert Millis featuring musical demonstrations by Jonathan Ward.unnamed

From the event description: The lecture is a result of Millis' year spent in India photographing record collections, interviewing collectors, and visiting archives and record markets: photographs of shelves groaning under the weight of unimaginable titles, beautiful label and sleeve designs from long gone eras, wind up talking machines, crammed antique shops, forgotten artists, and more that somehow survived the difficult "archival" issues of India.

This presentation will feature several short Sublime Frequencies films, rare music from 78rpm discs, glimpses of the city of Calcutta, the shellac industry, and 78rpm record collectors.

Tickets are $15 or $12 for VPES Members. No need to RSVP to LAAC.

November 30, 2015 - Comments Off on ARLIS/SC + LAAC 2015 Holiday Gathering

ARLIS/SC + LAAC 2015 Holiday Gathering

Please join LAAC and ARLIS/SC on Wednesday, December 16, 2015 from 6:30 to 9 pm at the Red Lion Tavern in Silver Lake (2366 Glendale Blvd.) for a holiday get-together. It's the end of the semester/quarter/year, let's celebrate!

Long Beach Christmas, [ca. 1920], Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Long Beach Christmas, [ca. 1920], Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Archival students and professionals, librarians, and friends are all invited to come together to socialize, reflect and commiserate on the year, or even plan for the coming year.

The party will be held on the second floor/middle bar dining area of the Red Lion. Appetizers will be provided, thanks to the Society of California Archivists' Member Initiated Events program, with drinks available for purchase at the bar.

Please RSVP here: http://goo.gl/forms/0D1yryKc8f

Questions? Email us - laacollective@gmail.com

November 20, 2015 - Comments Off on Book Club No. 5

Book Club No. 5

Join us for our fifth 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 Archiving the Unspeakable: Silence, Memory, and the Photographic Record in Cambodia by Michelle Caswell

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Publisher’s Description: Roughly 1.7 million people died in Cambodia from untreated disease, starvation, and execution during the Khmer Rouge reign of less than four years in the late 1970s. The regime’s brutality has come to be symbolized by the multitude of black-and-white mug shots of prisoners taken at the notorious Tuol Sleng prison, where thousands of “enemies of the state” were tortured before being sent to the Killing Fields. In Archiving the Unspeakable, Michelle Caswell traces the social life of these photographic records through the lens of archival studies and elucidates how, paradoxically, they have become agents of silence and witnessing, human rights and injustice as they are deployed at various moments in time and space. From their creation as Khmer Rouge administrative records to their transformation beginning in 1979 into museum displays, archival collections, and databases, the mug shots are key components in an ongoing drama of unimaginable human suffering.

Along with being a LAAC Advisory Board Member, Michelle Caswell is an assistant professor of archival studies in the Department of Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, where she is also an affiliated faculty member with the Center for Southeast Asian Studies.

The group will meet on Wednesday, January 13th from 6:30-8 pm at Canter’s Restaurant (419 N. Fairfax 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!

November 17, 2015 - Comments Off on In Process | When History is What Hurts

In Process | When History is What Hurts

In Process is a blog series that highlights the activities and experiences of current archival studies students in the Los Angeles area. Check in every two weeks, for grad students’ insights and fresh perspectives on new and emerging trends, issues, and events in the field.

By Noah Geraci

I’m always glad to see Howard Zinn’s “Secrecy, Archives and the Public Good” recommended by archives people I know– mostly because it’s a great piece that makes important points about our profession (that I would argue we still haven’t fully digested or acted upon almost 40 years later), but also because I am pleased and grateful for Zinn’s recurring role in my life. I first heard Zinn’s name when I was 12 or so, in a line from a song by embarrassing punk band NOFX, on one of the first CDs I bought myself. The line in question, “I read some Howard Zinn, now I’m always depressed,” is not an entirely inaccurate summation of my life from that point to the present. By the time a lefty history teacher assigned A People’s History of the United States in late high school, I already had my own well-worn copy, and had gotten my grade lowered in a previous history class for “making America look bad” in a research paper on the U.S. role in Central American human rights abuses.

I was asked recently, by someone friendly, well-meaning, and supportive of archives, if I do the work that I do because I “love history.” I was caught off-guard, and stammered something about “yes, well, I suppose, I’m interested in history.” But, if I am being frank, of course, I do not love history at all: I don't actually know how to think about it as something that can be loved. I am Jewish, living in diaspora, assimilation and the long shadow of Nazi genocide. I am queer, post-AIDS epidemic. I am a white person raised on colonized land. When I think about “history” as any sort of discrete concept, I mostly think about violence, loss, and disconnection; about the blood that rushes out of the elevator shaft in The Shining; and about Fredric Jameson’s graceful phrasing that “history is what hurts.”

I’m very grateful for the opportunity to study at UCLA, where there are fellow students and faculty who create space to discuss critical ideas and complex relationships to our work. I’m also grateful for the opportunities I’ve had to connect with like-minded colleagues in other places, through social media and working on projects like A People’s Archive of Police Violence in Cleveland.

But I know that in many archives work settings, there can be serious pressure to cater to nostalgia, and to preserve a history that presents a generally sunny view of the institution or community you are working in. Ultimately, in many settings, especially smaller, nonacademic archives, people who “love history,” whose take on it is more Colonial Williamsburg than Howard Zinn and may consider historical or genealogical research a hobby, are some of our biggest supporters, as users, volunteers, donors and advocates. Even in university archives and special collections, which tend to think of their primary users as academic researchers, I hear anecdotally that university communications departments are some of the most frequent archives users, looking for “cool old photos” for marketing materials.

My partner is from a small town in Arizona, with a long history of mining that has had devastating environmental and health impacts there. Having access to records about specific mining practices and policies could probably have tangible legal and healthcare implications in the lives of current and former residents. Yet the town’s current economy, and thus people’s immediate livelihoods, is propelled by historically themed tourism, which requires the preservation and exhibition of a positive, nostalgic history of mining. So this is what the local archives and other historical organizations do.

As a student gaining practical experience in a variety of settings, I struggle to navigate all of this. While it’s easy enough to be polite to someone even when we may disagree about the purpose or value of archives, it’s harder to make peace with being in a field that sometimes feels like it is kept afloat by being valued and viewed in ways that are very much not the values I bring to it. To figure out how to serve marginalized communities and the broader public interest within a professional context, without acting like a petulant teenager lecturing their family about smallpox and colonization at Thanksgiving dinner (been there, done that). I know these are not always conversations that can be had with any specificity in public forums, but I’d always like to know more about how others navigate and cope.

Noah Geraci is an MLIS student at UCLA who works at UCLA’s Digital Library Program. Born and raised in San Diego, in other lives he has been a mental health counselor, home care worker, elementary educator, writer, and punk musician.