EYE Film Institute Netherlands
Established | 1952 |
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Location | IJpromenade 1, Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
Coordinates | 52°23′04″N 4°54′02″E / 52.384411°N 4.900594°E |
Type | Film archive National museum Art museum History museum |
Collection size | 820,000 objects |
Public transit access | North exit of Amsterdam Central Station, ferry across IJ |
Website | eyefilm.nl |
Eye Filmmuseum is a film archive and museum in Amsterdam that preserves and presents both Dutch and foreign films screened in the Netherlands. The collection includes 37,000 film titles, 60,000 posters, 700,000 photographs and 20,000 books. The earliest materials date from the start of the film industry in the Netherlands in 1895.
Location and history
Eye Filmmuseum is located in the Overhoeks neighborhood of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. It includes a cinematography museum formerly called Filmmuseum, founded in 1952. Its predecessor was the Dutch Historical Film Archive, founded in 1946. The Filmmuseum was situated in the Vondelparkpaviljoen since 1975. In 2009, Nederlands Filmmuseum merged with Holland Film, the Netherlands Institute for Film Education and the Filmbank[1] and plans were announced for a new home on the north bank of Amsterdam's waterfront, just behind the Central Station and connected to it by a free ferry.[2] It was officially opened on April 4, 2012 by Queen Beatrix.[3] [4] The EYE building was designed by Delugan Meissl Associated Architects,[5] which specializes in buildings that appear to be in motion, e.g., the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart.[6]
Projects
Eye Filmmuseum is performing a major film digitization and preservation project together with IBM and Thought Equity Motion, a provider of video platform and rights development services. The project involves scanning and storing more than 150 million discrete DPX files on LTO Gen5 Tape in the Linear Tape File System format.[7]
Collection
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The Adopted Brother by Christy Cabanne and D.W. Griffith. Silent film, 1913. Running time: 10:41
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Charlie in Turkey, silent animation by Pat Sullivan, 1916. 9:39
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Flight tests with the helicopter Pescara 2R of Raúl Pateras Pescara. Silent film 1922. 1:25.
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Poster by Cândido de Faria for the silent Pathé Frères film Les Vampires de la côte, 1908
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Nieuw Weekblad voor de Cinematografie 1, 6 oktober 1922. Dutch weekly of cinematography.
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Filmstar Lilian Harvey by Alexander Binder, 1920s
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Filmstar Truus van Aalten by Alexander Binder, 1920s
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Filmstar Greta Garbo by Alexander Binder, 1920s
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Film restoration
See also
- List of film archives
- Association of European Film Archives and Cinematheques
- List of museums in Amsterdam
References
- ^ "Nederlands Filmmuseum (NFM)". filmarchives online. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
- ^ "EYE Film Institute in Amsterdam". Amsterdam.info. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
- ^
Teffer, Peter (April 12, 2012). "Once Unfashionable, Noord District of Amsterdam Gains Cachet". The New York Times. Retrieved April 25, 2012.
Much of the river's north bank has been transformed in recent years, and the EYE Film Institute Netherlands stands out, a museum that Queen Beatrix opened officially on April 4.
- ^ Joel Weickgenant, "A New Home for Film in Amsterdam", The New York Times, November 10, 2009
- ^ Schuetze, Christopher F. (12 September 2013). A New Dutch Focus on Film. The New York Times
- ^ "EYE Film Institute Amsterdam", Architectural Digest blog, May 2012
- ^ IBM Press Release