Educacción
(La información sólo
está disponible en inglés)
Programme
FILM RESTORATION SUMMER SCHOOL
FIAF SUMMER SCHOOL - BOLOGNA 2007
The training is conceived for an international target group,
and will be taught by an international panel of the best experts
from different countries. The Film Restoration Summer School
/ FIAF Summer School is conceived both for archivists and
staff working at FIAF archives, and students. The aim is to
foster a shared knowledge in the field for current and future
generations, and film archives worldwide. Special attention
will be given to participants coming from countries with less
developed traditions of restoration. Classes will be in English
and French.
Where and When
Training will take place at the Cineteca di Bologna’s
screening theatres and library, while the internship will
be organized at the laboratory L’Immagine Ritrovata
in Bologna. Training will last 3 weeks, from Monday 9 July
through Sunday 29 July 2007, and will be preceded by the Cinema
Ritrovato film festival [30 June to 7 July 2007 – 1
week, optional], and a two-month online distance learning
experience on restoration technologies with a weekly update.
Training programme
The Immagine Ritrovata laboratory’s highly specialized
staff will be closely involved in the intensive 3-week training
programme and internship. Participants will be divided into
six groups, and will work in each department of the laboratory:
1. analog restoration
2. printing and processing
3. sound restoration
4. digital restoration (part 1)
5. digital restoration (part 2)
6. video format
The Film Restoration Summer School / FIAF Summer School is
structured along three main lines of interest:
1. Theory Lessons on Film Restoration
(distance learning, 2 months, 2 May – 29 June
2007)
2. Introduction and attendance at the Cinema
Ritrovato festival (1 week, optional)
3. Restoration Practice
(3 weeks, compulsory)
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1. Theory Lessons on Film Restoration
(distance learning, 2 months, 2 May – 29 June 2007)
For 2 months preceding the classes in Bologna,
participants will be provided with theory lessons, downloadable
weekly on their computer at www.immagineritrovata.it. This
distance-learning preparation will include lessons on new
digital film restoration, access, and conservation. These
online lessons will run from 2 May until 29 June 2007.
2. Introduction and
attendance at the Cinema Ritrovato festival (1 week,
optional)
The first week will be entirely devoted to the XXI edition
of the Cinema Ritrovato film festival, which is the Cineteca
di Bologna’s main international event. Since 1987, the
festival has investigated the most obscure territories of
cinema history, screening the best of “Recovered and
Restored Films” from archives around the world.
Students will be free to attend the festival at their discretion.
Some screenings will be compulsory.
Daily meetings of 2 hours or more with international specialists
will be organized for all participants.
During the week of the festival, these meetings will analyse
in detail restoration practice from a theoretical point of
view, dealing in particular with film courses in a film restoration
laboratory. These theoretical meetings will be an introduction
and an in-depth study preceding the 3 weeks of internship;
daily topics will therefore reflect laboratory stages.
Basically, the two main directions to be
followed will consist of:
1. Analog and digital processing, for both
picture and sound, will form an in-depth course in theory,
supported by study cases. A brief section dedicated to fundamental
principles of film restoration will introduce specific topics,
such as film and its treatment in printing and processing.
An extensive theoretical schedule will be proposed on digital
restoration, with the presence of main experts in this field.
2. Partnership with the audio-visual industry
plays a key role in the project, and will be developed through
both the direct involvement of the main companies in the production
of software and equipment for digital and analog restoration,
and an internship at the restoration laboratory L’Immagine
Ritrovata.
During the classes, several representatives from the main
companies manufacturing software and restoration equipment
will be invited to present their strategies.
3. Restoration Practice / Internship
(3 weeks, compulsory)
During the internship, participants will
be supervised by international experts and laboratory staff
to put into practice what they have learned during their first
week of theory.
A considerable amount of time will be devoted to restoration
practices. For 3 weeks, students will be offered hands-on
experience, working in each department of the laboratory.
During the internship, the laboratory L’Immagine Ritrovata
will suspend all restorations in order to follow completely
all the activities scheduled by the Film Restoration Summer
School / FIAF Summer School 2007, to allow participants to
benefit fully from its staff and facilities.
For the 3 weeks of the internship, participants will occupy
the premises of the laboratory L’Immagine Ritrovata
for 8 hours per day for 15 days. Participants will have access
to all departments of the laboratory.
Each department will accommodate a maximum of 5 participants.
This is considered the right ratio of students per piece of
equipment, so that each student will be able to interact directly.
Analog Restoration: Film
handling and inspection; repairing film to prepare it for
cleaning and printing.
Printing and Processing:
Principles of optical and contact printing; study of different
printers, film sensitivity, printer loading and use.
Rudiments of development and parameters analysis of mutual
relations between printing and development. Use of Video Colour
Analyser to set printing parameters from negative to positive
copy; application of Lad, Strip, and other quality-control
tools to check the correct operation of printing and development.
Desmet colour and its use. Quality control.
Sound Restoration: Soundtrack
restoration, with dedicated plug-in for editing.
Digital Restoration 1: Scanning
a motion picture image to a digital file, and digital treatment
by computer programmes in order to restore a film.
Digital Restoration 2: The
computer processes data for film reconstruction and restoration.
The final aim of this stage will be the transfer of data onto
film base or digital support, using special software for digital
restoration.
Video Format (DigitalBetacam,
DVD, etc.): digitalization and data processing to make a copy
of a film on digital support.
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