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There was a
time when the use of multimedia presentations and interactive
kiosks were features that only big museums could afford. However
new technologies now make it possible for all museums to utilize
these enhancements in their exhibits.
Mattingly Productions
-- with more than thirty-five years of experience in the production
of video-based presentations -- now provides museums with consultation
and production services that allow the inclusion of multimedia
and interactive elements in exhibits, something museum visitors
have come to expect and appreciate.
Mattingly Productions
began recording video-based oral history in 1973 with the Smithsonian
Institution's Folk Life Festival on the Mall. In 1976, as part
of the U.S. Bi-Centennial Project, we directed a project that
resulted in the establishment of the first Native American Videotape
Archives which is now housed at the Institute for American Indian
Art in Santa Fe, NM. Later video-based oral history and documentary
projects include work for the U.S. Supreme Court, the Shelburne
Museum in Shelburne, VT, the Reedville Fisherman's Museum in
Reedville, VA, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels,
MD, and the Steamboat Era Museum in Irvington, VA.
Mattingly Productions
has the expertise to help your organization set up a cost-effective
video-based oral history archives or multimedia presentation.
This includes scripting, recording methods and techniques, archiving
and indexing tasks, editing strategies, display systems, and
outreach programs. |