With the generous support from last year's Kickstarter campaign the archiving process has hit full force! We have been able to start the Herculean feat of moving a quarter million 4x5 black and white negatives from Bob Mizer’s original paper storage sleeves to new archival poly pages. In addition, the new database is constantly growing and we are learning new ways everyday to propel the process even faster to get Mizer’s work to its new home. Along the way we’ve come across artifacts such as letters to and from Mizer and of course hundreds of models who've been unseen for decades.
By buying in enormous bulk, we were able to save over half the retail price on these expensive pages. We used roughly 60% of the funds to purchase these materials alone, another 20% on filing furniture, 10% on other supplies including the new hanging system and barcode labels, and the rest went to canned air, white gloves and Amazon's fees.
These developments are all moving toward one of the main goals, to create an online digital archive of the Foundation's collections using an open-source [ie: free] software called CollectiveAccess, a collections management and cataloguing system for museums and archives. Already in use by institutions such as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, New York's New Museum and White Columns, and many universities. Each negative artifact and its accompanying sleeve are photographed and entered into the database one by one, with a unique image code so that in the future there will be an amazing and complete reference for models, images and films.