MCAH Columbia University Department of Art History and Archaeology
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The Visual Media Center explores material culture, vision, media, and pedagogy in the broadest sense to connect faculty research and student learning through the creative application of technology.

Our goal is to examine and extend the ways of interpreting images, objects, buildings, and sites and to reinforce Columbia’s historic strengths in core education for undergraduate students, graduate student training, and faculty research. Our specialized facilities and personnel serve the closely related fields of Archæology, Art History, and Historic Preservation. There are natural affinities with Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Teachers College, other Arts and Sciences departments, and the schools of Architecture, Engineering, Journalism, and International and Public Affairs.

Art Humanities and the Core Curriculum continue to inform and inspire what we do. Special productions focusing on individual works of art bring fresh insight from our best faculty to the broadest university audience of 1000 undergraduate students annually. These programs are also building a legacy of scholarship and teaching for future generations.

We want to maintain support for field study with faculty and students, whether at the Dakhleh Oasis in Egypt, the Bourbonnais in France, or The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Such expeditions are distinctive of the VMC’s work. We are able to open up these global opportunities, identify the means of support, coordinate scientific studies, create course materials, and distribute content.

A motivated group of faculty principal investigators work with the VMC to develop, conduct, and administer their projects in the study, interpretation, and conservation of works of art, monuments, or heritage sites. We have opened up communication for these issues through the University Seminar on Historic Sites and Monuments.

Gary Schneider, Hands, 1997.


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