| |
Office
of Research
Research
at Campuses/Labs
Undergraduate
Research
Multicampus
Research Units
Technology
Transfer
UC-Industry
Partnerships
California
Institutes
for Science and Innovation
Arts,
Humanities,
Social Sciences
Agriculture
and Natural Resources
Biotechnology
and Genomics
Nanotechnology
AIDS,
Cancer, Tobacco Research
California
Policy Research Center
Research
Home
|
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 8, 2002
Eileen Conrad
eileen.conrad@ia.ucsb.edu
Paul Desruisseaux
paul.d@ia.ucsb.edu
Carsey Foundation Gift to UC Santa Barbara to Help
Establish Center for Film, Television and New Media
UC Santa Barbara has received a leadership gift
of $2.5 million from the Carsey Family Foundation, of Los Angeles,
to support the construction of a Center for Film, Television and
New Media.
It will be one of the first facilities at a major
research university where faculty members from the arts, humanities,
and social sciences collaborate to teach and conduct research on
film, television, and mass media from a variety of cultural, historical,
and social perspectives. UCSB is known for its strong interdisciplinary
approach to teaching and research.
The new center brings together students and scholars
from UCSB's nationally renowned departments of film studies and
communication, as well as more than 15 other departments that study
film, video, television, and emerging media. It will provide state-of-the-art
facilities and equipment capable of studying everything from silent
films to the latest in digital media and satellite communications.
"We applaud Marcy Carsey and her family for
the boldness of their vision, and thank them for demonstrating their
confidence in the creativity and leadership of our faculty in a
way that will provide tremendous benefits to tomorrow's students,"
said UCSB Chancellor Henry T. Yang. "Marcy is a very special
friend of our campus. She serves as a UCSB Foundation trustee, and
we are fortunate to have her innovative thinking and guidance. We
also are truly grateful for her generosity and her friendship."
A total of $15 million in private philanthropic
support is being sought for the center, which will house a 325-seat
public theater, a 150-seat instructional theater, a production suite,
a digital media research laboratory, and climate-controlled film
and television archival space. The private gifts will augment state
funding for a new academic building complex that is scheduled to
break ground in 2005, pending voter approval of a state bond initiative.
"This important gift from the Carsey Foundation
will allow us to create the first such facility in the UC system
where humanists and social scientists collaborate to teach and study
all forms of mass media, using the interpretive powers of the humanities,
the aesthetic perspective of the arts, and the quantitative methodology
of the social sciences," said Constance Penley, director of
the center and professor of film studies.
The Center for Film, Television and New Media will
enhance the education of more than 4,500 students who each year
enroll in related programs and courses.
"It is a pleasure for us to be able to support
this extraordinary university with its outstanding programs in film,
television, and new media and its innovative interdisciplinary approach
to education," said Carsey.
An Emmy Award-winning television producer, Carsey
is a partner of The Carsey-Werner-Mandabach Company, which was responsible
for The Cosby Show, Roseanne, 3rd Rock from the Sun, That 70's Show,
and Grounded for Life. In addition, Carsey-Werner-Mandabach has
joined forces with Geraldine Laybourne, former head of Nickelodeon,
and talk show host and magazine publisher Oprah Winfrey to create
Oxygen, a multimedia company with a new television network and interactive
Internet site specifically for women.
The Carsey Family Foundation is a member of the
Lancaster Society, UCSB's premier giving society.
"This new center will place UCSB at the forefront
of research and teaching in both traditional and newer media technologies,"
said Edward Donnerstein, an authority on mass communications and
dean of social sciences in the College of Letters and Science of
which the new center is a part. "The unique collaboration of
the humanities and social sciences will make UCSB the premier place
for faculty and students to pursue the highest level of inquiry
in this new age of media technology."
Additional UCSB departments associated with the
center are art studio, Asian American studies, Chicano studies,
women's studies, black studies, media arts and technology, dramatic
art, dance, music, sociology, political science, English, anthropology,
education, and several literature departments.
Further information about the Center for Film,
Television and New Media is available from Constance Penley, director
of the center, penley@filmstudies.ucsb.edu, as well as through the
Public Affairs Office.
###
|
|
|
|
|